Focolare Movement

May 1st in Loppiano

Feb 15, 2017

Live Streaming from Loppiano - 1 Maggio 2017 10:00-12:30 (CET, UTC 1) - Worldwide appointments to inaugurate the 2017 edition of United World Week

1 maggio 2017The worldwide appointment which inaugurates this year’s edition of United World Week is an event whereby young people from over 40 nations come together in unity in order to have the finger on the pulse on humanitarian issues. The program includes choreographic expressions, life experiences and spaces for dialogue on politics, economy, art, religion, culture, social commitment for peace. 1st MAY EVENT PROGRAM 10.00 am -3.15 pmWelcome and start of program 

Workshop: Peace and … Religion – Economy – Politics – Art – Education – Nature

3.30 – 4.30 pm – Many pulses in the one world: stories of peace 4.45 pm –  Explosion of peace: music4peace Information and bookings: www.primomaggioloppiano.it FB primomaggioloppiano https://www.facebook.com/primomaggioloppiano/videos/1391995820874604/

___

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to Newsletter

Thought of the day

Related post

Brotherhood

Brotherhood

Brotherhood, being children of the same Father, can be the root of every kind of pacifism. In this excerpt from the “Catholic Revolt”, Igino Giordani wrote almost an invocation, a poetic appeal that compels us to look up and opens our eyes to who our brother is, that brother who may be labelled as an enemy, as a foreigner, as a migrant, but is always a brother. It is an appeal written back in 1925, that still touches our deepest chords and challenges us to be builders of peace.

Christians protagonists of dialogue

Christians protagonists of dialogue

29th June is the feast of Saints Peter and Paul and is a significant day in the ecumenical sphere. On this date we publish some interviews with Christians from various Churches

This curse of war

This curse of war

Igino Giordani, when writing his memoirs, reflected on the terrible period of the First World War, in which he himself had to enlist, saying, “I saw the absurdity, the stupidity and above all the sin of war…”, as Benedict XV called it, the ‘useless massacre’. His words challenge us to think about how history could teach us to work for peace today, by opposing the new, absurd, useless massacres of our century.