VATICAN CITY — A custom-built 2018 Lamborghini Huracan coupe
autographed by Pope Francis raised nearly $1 million at a Sotheby's auction May
12 in Monaco.
The Italian luxury carmaker donated the white vehicle with gold
stripes — to match the white and yellow of the Vatican City flag — to the pope
in November. The pope put his diminutive signature on the car's hood, then put
the vehicle up for auction to raise money for charity.
The final selling price of 809,000 euros (US $970,000)
outstripped its pre-auction estimated price range of $300,000 to $450,000.
However, it wasn't the biggest sale off the car lot that day. A
sleek black 1999 Lamborghini Diablo GT with only 617 miles on the odometer went
for a few thousand more at $977,000. Dubbed "the wildest iteration of the
Diablo," Lamborghini's "devil" was built to reach a top speed of
215 mph, outrunning the "hurricane," which was built to reach 200
mph.
Sotheby's also listed the upcoming sale of St. John Paul II's
1975 Ford Escort GL. In an online slideshow of papal cars put up for auction
over the decades, it showed the powder blue car then-Cardinal Karol Wojtyla
bought new in 1975.
The vehicle, which has no hubcaps, air conditioning or radio, was
first bought by a U.S. restaurant owner at auction in 1996 for $102,000 and was
sold again just a few months after the pope's death in 2005, when a
multimillionaire in Texas paid $690,000 at auction.
The car, which has 60,000 miles on the odometer, is scheduled to
be auctioned by Sotheby's Aug. 30-Sept. 2 in Auburn, Ind. The auction house
listed an estimated price range at $150,000 to $300,000.
Of the money raised at the May 12 auction, the bulk of the
proceeds, 70 percent, will go to the Iraqi city of Ninevah, which had been
occupied and raided by Islamic State in the mid-2010s.
Ten percent each will go to: "Amici per il
Centrafrica," an Italian nonprofit that helps children in the Central
African Republic and surrounding nations; "Groupe International
Chirurgiens Amis de la Main," a Swiss charity that funds mobile surgical
teams to operate on hands that are disfigured, mutilated or wounded to give
patients a chance to regain some use of their limb; and the Pope John XXIII
Community Association, which runs day centers and family homes all over the
world to serve those most in need