Upcoming Events View All
11
SSND Summer Service Week

Sunday, 06/11/2023 at 12:00 PM -
Saturday, 06/17/2023 at 12:00 PM

11
Corpus Christi Procession

Sunday, 06/11/2023 at 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM

11
North County Deanery Corpus Christi Procession

Sunday, 06/11/2023 at 7:00 PM

16
Archbishop Fulton Sheen Pilgrimage

Friday, 06/16/2023 at 8:00 AM - 6:00 PM

16
Solemnity of the Most Sacred Heart Celebration

Friday, 06/16/2023 at 4:00 PM - 8:30 PM

19
Icon Studio

Monday, 06/19/2023 at 8:00 AM -
Friday, 06/23/2023 at 4:00 PM

23
Pack the Pool!

Friday, 06/23/2023 at 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM

24
Old Mines, Missouri Celebrates 300th Anniversary 1723-2023

Saturday, 06/24/2023 at 11:00 AM - 7:00 PM

5
Awaken to the Divine: A 5-Day Silent Retreat Guided by Paul Coutinho

Wednesday, 07/05/2023 at 9:00 AM -
Sunday, 07/09/2023 at 4:00 PM

People gathered in front of the landmark Trevi Fountain after its 2015 restoration in Rome. While millions of tourists throw a coin over their shoulder into the fountain hoping to return to Rome one day, the money scooped out of the fountain each week offers more concrete hope to the city’s poor.
People gathered in front of the landmark Trevi Fountain after its 2015 restoration in Rome. While millions of tourists throw a coin over their shoulder into the fountain hoping to return to Rome one day, the money scooped out of the fountain each week offers more concrete hope to the city’s poor.
Photo Credit: Alessandro Di Meo | EPA

Trevi Fountain coins to continue bringing fortune to Rome’s needy

VATICAN CITY — While millions of tourists throw a coin over their shoulder into Rome’s Trevi Fountain hoping to return to Rome one day, the money scooped out of the fountain each week offers more concrete hope to the city’s poor.

Rome’s city council extended an agreement March 29 with Caritas Rome to entrust it with the tourists’ coins to provide food and shelter to the city’s poor and needy.

Each day countless tourists from around the world squint their eyes, make a wish and toss thousands of dollars’ worth of coins into the fountain; the money is then collected by city workers using high-powered vacuums.

According to Caritas Roma, an estimated 1.4 million euros ($1.7 million) worth of coins were tossed into the famed fountain in 2016.

Although the Catholic charitable organization has been entrusted with the fountain’s profits for 20 years, the city council was considering canceling its agreement and instead using the money to help fund various projects in the financially strapped city.

However, the city council delayed its decision and the charity will continue receiving the fountain’s revenue stream at least until Dec. 31, Caritas Roma stated in press release April 3.

Msgr. Enrico Feroci, director of Caritas Rome, welcomed the decision, saying it “concretely expresses the solidarity of the whole city of Rome toward those who suffer and are disadvantaged.”

By entrusting Caritas Rome with the money collected from the Trevi Fountain, he added, the Rome city council has recognized that the Catholic charity has a special and unique history in the city in “reaching out and encountering the most diverse forms of poverty,” particularly in serving the homeless, the elderly, migrants and struggling families.

“Responsibility, transparency, a spirit of service and witness: These are the attitudes that have guided us in these years in which the city of Rome has entrusted the proceeds of the Trevi Fountain coins to Caritas,” Msgr. Feroci said.

While many tourists make a wish to return to the Eternal City one day, Msgr. Feroci said the funds they unknowingly contribute allow them to join the Catholic charity in becoming “protagonists of change” for the city’s poor.

“This is the spirit with which Caritas will continue the management of the Trevi Fountain coins,” he said.

Trevi Fountain coins to continue bringing fortune to Romes needy 2

Must Watch Videos

Now Playing

    View More Videos