Colombia: dialogo con la cultura
‘I got to know the Focolare through some members of Youth for a United World who were in my class at school in Rome. When the time came that I felt the need to deepen my spirituality and my ideals, I asked the advice of my friend who is a gen. I liked the Movement and I really wanted to love concretely, but I was scared I would be unable to live up to the Ideal of unity, because I was far from having any religion. ‘I don’t like being called an atheist, because nowadays atheism is seen a position of aggressive opposition to the Church and to religion. But I try to respect everyone and everything. For this reason I prefer being called a ‘non-believer’. ‘I have never accepted evangelizing people; it’s always seemed to me to be about putting pressure on them. But I try to ‘shine’ as much as I can, so others may be struck by my light. Living each moment as love is what makes me feel I’m really following this ideal, that I’m a person with something extra because I love everyone and love what I do. ‘Living among a lot of people who are always ready to love has made me understand that it’s not necessary to be heroes to save the lives of others. If you love in the present moment wherever you are, people change. A small act of kindness can make someone smile and can set off a chain reaction of positive events – it creates a piece of united world. ‘One day, during a trip to the mountains, a man decided to join our party, even though his climbing boots were broken, because he was suffered from vertigo and was frightened of using the chair lift. I decided to swap boots with him, and go on with one bare foot and one foot in a broken boot. It was easy to get to the second chair lift, where he thought he could manage to use it and give me back my boots. If an action is inspired by a love that doesn’t seek to gain anything, perhaps it doesn’t change the day much for us personally, but it does for lots of others. ‘My choice of living as a person who follows this Ideal isn’t easy. Every day I live trying to do the right thing. To everyone who has doubts about faith or who thinks that being a non-believer is to be branded for life, I’d like to say that it’s not like that. Above all here, in this environment, I have always felt myself welcome as in a family. At worst… you risk having to talk about yourself on stage like I’m doing now!’ A.O. Italy Recounted at the event ‘Chiara Lubich and the New Generations’, Rome, 11 March 2012
Bathed by two oceans and crossed by the Andes, Colombia is like a garden of 1, 141, 748 square kilometres in the far northwest of South America. Beaches on the Caribbean, Amazon rainforest, modern cities, flowers, gold, oil, emeralds, energy exports, culture and the arts make it a nation overflowing with richness. But its people, tough, filled with joy and initiative, are the real treasure of this nation which took its name from Christopher Columbus.
The history of the Focolare in this land begins in Bogota, a modern and cultivated metropolis of more than 9 million inhabitants, which lies on a magnificent plateau at 2, 600 metres. During the Eucharistic Congress in 1968 Lucero – a young Boy Scout who was doing community service at the Congress – met Fr Sotelo, a Franciscan friar who gave him a book that Chiara Lubich had written for youths of the Movement entitled, “Tappe Gen” (Gen Steps). Fascinated by what what he found written there, he began with other teenagers to live the adventure that the book proposed. Soon other people were drawn by the way they lived.
Meanwhile, in the industrialized and ever-changing city of Medellin, Salesian Father Luis Bonilla discovered in the pages of Ciudad Nueva, a Focolare magazine from Argentina, that vibrant Gospel life he had always been looking for. He began to visit the houses in the quarter where he was living, sharing the “Ideal” he had found. He began a correspondence with the publisher, and a few months later Anna Sorlini, an Italian focolarina arrived. She would then continue to visit the fledgling community on a regular basis.
The first “focolare” was opened in 1976 and a second in 1976. From these this Gospel spirit began to spread to 12 Latin American countries – from Mexico to Peru – finding an enthusiastic response. Two of the main players in this story are Marita Sartori, one of the early focolarina from Trent, Italy, who lived in Colombia from 1973 until 2002 and Carlo Casabeltrame from Piemonte, Italy.
During those years Bishop Libardo Ramirez attended one of the first gatherings of Bishop Friends of the Focolare and brought the spirituality of unity to his diocese in Armenia, Colombia. With the arrival of Fr Agostino Abate, a focolare of diocesan priests was begun. Men and women religious spread the spirituality and gave life to Focolare communities as they transferred from place to place in the Huila Valley, Santander, Narino, Atlantico, Choco, Antioquia and Cundinamarca. A Columbian edition of Ciudad Nueva magazine was also published.
From a socio-political and economic point of view the situation of the country becomes more and more difficult. Besides the poverty of more than 48% of the population that has generated armed struggle and guerrilla warfare, there is also the problem of drug trafficking violence and forced migration.
The Focolare communities find themselves continually called upon by these situations. In response to this, in 2002 Chiara Lubich suggested that the Focolare in Colombia work particularly at developing the new law and politics that emerge from a spirituality of unity. And this was an important development for the Movement in this land.
Currently the headquarters of the Movement are located at the “Gioia Mariapolis Centre” in Tocancipa (50 km from Bogota). It is a centre of formation in the spirituality of unity and of its spreading in the region. There are two “focolares” in Bogota and two more in Medellin. Several social projects have begun, such as “Unity Social Center” in the south of the capital, “Rising Sun School” in Tocancipa, solidarity-at-a-distance programs in Medellin and Bogota and some academic and development projects grounded in fraternity in politics.
It is estimated that there are 6,500 Focolare adherents in Colombia.