Jan 1, 2022 | Non categorizzato
In his message for the World Day of Peace on 1 January Pope Francis issues a strong warning to politicians who invest in armaments rather than education. What can be done to give young people hope and reverse this trend? We asked Prof. Buonomo, Rector of the Pontifical Lateran University. Today, according to the World Bank, there are almost 100 million more people living in a state of impoverishment because of the Covid-19 pandemic and world military expenditure in 2020 has risen, despite Covid, to almost 2 trillion dollars (in 2019 it was 1650 billion) according to a report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri). Data that prompted Pope Francis to issue a tough yet hopeful message for the 55th World Day of Peace, which falls today, 1 January 2022. The Pope proposes three elements – dialogue between generations, education and work – as tools for building lasting peace. How can this message be contextualised amid the challenges facing society today? We asked Prof. Vincenzo Buonomo, Rector of the Pontifical Lateran University. How can dialogue between the generations be initiated to build peace? On what trust is it based today, given that both the pandemic and the development of technology have created so much loneliness and indifference? “First of all, the Pope’s message presents dialogue not only as a goal for building relations between the generations but as a method. This, I believe, is the most important aspect to be grasped, and it is the aspect that also enables us to make dialogue an effective instrument for peace because very often we only link the element of dialogue to the possibility of communicating. In reality, dialogue presupposes something more. There is a pact between generations, a pact in which the given word has its own meaning. Very often we have made of dialogue nothing more than a technical tool rather than something we share which therefore becomes a method or a daily action’. In recent years, education and training have been regarded as expenditures rather than investments, and military expenditures have increased. What steps should politicians take to promote a culture of ‘care’ rather than ‘war’?
“The relationship between the educator and the one being educated is one that has to be built every day on the basis of renunciation of both parties. This type of educational methodology should also serve the great issues facing humanity. The problem of the arms race and the consequential diversion of resources for other areas, is that armaments are linked above all to a concept of power. So it is by means of education that we have to try to promote shared values. This is the aspect the Pope’s message is highlighting because if there are shared values – peace for example – this becomes a way to overcome conflict. Conflict is overcome by eliminating armaments, so it’s a concept that has a chain reaction”. Work is the place where we learn to make our contribution towards a more liveable and beautiful world and is an indispensable factor to preserve peace but job insecurity and exploitation have increased because of the pandemic. So what can be done to give hope to young people to combat insecurity and exploitation? “Work is not simply something that guarantees peace in society as is traditionally said. Work is something that guarantees peace. Without the prerequisite of work, there is no education, no intergenerational relationship, no dialogue because the person is not only sustained by work, but also expresses their dignity. We find this in the Magisterium of the Church and from Pope Francis who has stressed this on several occasions. Consequently, today politicians, or rather those with responsibilities, the so-called ‘decision-makers’, need to make work a priority and not just one of the many items on the political agenda. I believe that the younger generations don’t just need a job but a job that manages to express their qualifications and, above all, makes them feel that they are protagonists in the decision-making process at work. The element that links the three headings – dialogue, education and work – is therefore the word pact. The pact between generations, the educational pact, the work pact – this is the key word putting them in the function of peace. Otherwise they would simply be three scattered elements not linked together”. Clicca qui to read the Pope’s message for the 55th World Day of Peace.
Lorenzo Russo
Dec 29, 2021 | Non categorizzato
An initiative that combines the desire to provide practical help with the many needs that exist in the world. These are the aims that, in 2016, generated “Milonga”, an international intercultural and fraternal volunteer programme.
A new opportunity, a renewed proposal to bring help where it is needed. This is the mission that “Milonga” is still pursuing today, 5 years after its inception. It developed thanks to the contribution of New Humanity, Youth for a United World and the Latin American Network of Social Organisations Inspired by the Charism of Unity, with the collaboration of Sociedade Movimento dos Focolares-Brazil, Sumà Fraternidad and Promoción Integral de la Persona. It is an international volunteering platform that meets the needs of an increasingly widespread desire among young people to have global social experiences. The first volunteers left in 2016 with destinations in Bolivia and Brazil. Subsequently, more than 200 young people have followed in their footsteps, crossing borders to offer their time, talents and professional skills. This is a small but important contribution to overcoming inequalities in the world. But what is distinctive about “Milonga” compared to other volunteer programmes? For Virginia Osorio, Uruguayan member of the Coordination Team, “Milonga was the opportunity to network with a broad range of people and thus generate a different system of international cooperation which puts fraternity at its heart. In Milonga, service is enhanced by interculturality and training in global and local citizenship, weaving links not only between the north to the south, but in all directions.” This is how young people aged between 21 and 35 are working in synergy with the NGOs and are engaged in projects in areas of need all over the world. Marco Provenzale, from Italy, says: “For these reasons, the programme is named after a Latin American dance with African roots and plays upon the NGO acronym. In Italian this would read “Mille ONG in Azione” – “A Thousand NGOs in Action”. Communities and little towns belonging to the Focolare Movement also support the initiative. It offers significant opportunities for action and training for young people who are motivated and want to contribute to society. In these five years, “Milonga” has made a great impact upon the lives of many young people. “The experience they have with each other reflects upon the role each plays as a citizen of the world,” continues Virginia Osorio, “and stimulates them to want to act wherever there is suffering.” In addition to the many volunteers who have worked in person in these initiatives, during the pandemic more than a hundred have had a virtual intercultural experience online. This enabled them to support actions such as fundraising, helping school children, preparing for exams, practising different languages and much more. Antonella, a young woman from Argentina, did virtual volunteering in Brazil and is now preparing to finally do it in person: “Before, I didn’t participate in things like this. Today, if I don’t do something concrete, I feel empty. My experience with Milonga has given me this new awareness.”
Janeth Lucía Cárdenas and the MilONGa team (social worker, involved with Milonga and the global communication project)
Dec 28, 2021 | Non categorizzato
Through the Incarnation, God revealed to Mary that her small, fragile humanity served his plan of salvation. Advent can be an opportunity for us all once again to live the most beautiful experience of all: to feel ourselves watched over by God and be led by him, as Mary did. We can then face each day with a deep joy in our hearts and a song of praise on our lips. Back to life A friend of ours who is involved with rehabilitating ex-convicts proposed to our religious community that we take in one who was nearing the end of his sentence for a few months. Pietro, as he was called, turned out to be an expert in home maintenance and tirelessly repaired whatever was needed. It was a true blessing for us, since we lack economic means and struggle to find the time for certain jobs. One evening after dinner, in the garden, Pietro began to open up. “I’m grateful not only for the hospitality I’ve received, but also for your respect. Ex-prisoners are often treated like plague victims, and people keep them at a distance. Yet being included is the only medicine that can heal certain wounds.” Before leaving, he left a note. “Thank you. Now I can come back to society because I know that I have something to give.” (O., Italy) Like the prodigal son When a homeless man named “A.” confided in me, explaining why he had been reduced to that state of misery, I saw in him the prodigal son from the parable, who yearns to regain his freedom. When I asked him to reach out to his family, he refused at first, because it was so difficult to show them what he had been reduced to. The mere idea of presenting himself to his brothers and sisters, who were all “successful” with fulfilled lives, only increased his humiliation. And yet – I reminded him at that point – they had not stopped loving him, waiting for him. He did not reply, staying silent. He showed up again after a few days. This time he asked for my help to buy a plane ticket to return to his homeland. Without hesitation, I provided him with the necessary amount of money. Not long afterwards, I received word from him. “It was just as you told me. The joy of embracing me again was a true gift I could give my parents. Thank you for reminding me why I’m here.” (G., Spain) By the hand Due to a stroke, I found myself paralyzed on the left side of my body. Suddenly my life changed. I was disheartened by the turmoil I was causing in the small business I had just started, in the running of my family, and in my teenage children. I had to practice for a long time and accept a new way of life. However, as one world collapsed, I saw dimensions opening up that had been neglected and unappreciated before: my life of faith. For years in fact, I had not prayed. Since I recognized my fragility, it was spontaneous for me to start praying again, not with words learned in catechism, but in dialogue. I learned to converse with God again. Meanwhile, my treatments continued. At one point, I was surprised to recover all motor functions. Now that I am recovering, I can say that God’s love wanted to immerse me in life fully, not superficially. He took me by the hand, and I held on. (A., Argentina)
Compiled by Maria Grazia Berretta
(from “Il Vangelo del Giorno”, Città Nuova, year VII, n. 4, November–December 2021)
Dec 27, 2021 | Non categorizzato
In this Christmas season, December’s Word of Life invites us to live words that refer to Mary: “And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfilment of what was spoken to her by the Lord. (Lk 1:45). The following text is also dedicated to the mother of God. In it Chiara Lubich invites us to live like Mary in her complete readiness to believe and put into practice what the Lord had announced. There is a close link in Mary between faith and motherhood, as a fruit of listening to the Word. Here, Luke suggests something that also concerns us, because later in his Gospel Jesus says: “My mother and my brothers are those who hear the Word of God and put it into practice” (Lk 8:21). By almost anticipating Jesus’ words, Elizabeth, moved by the Holy Spirit, announces to us that every disciple can become the “mother” of the Lord. The condition is that we believe in the Word of God and live it. (…) After Jesus himself, Mary is the one who knew how to say “yes” to God best and most perfectly. Her holiness and greatness are found there, above all. And if Jesus is the Word, the Incarnate Word, Mary, by her faith in the Word, is the Word lived, while being a person like us, equal to us. Mary’s role as Mother of God is sublime and great. But God does not only call the Virgin to generate Christ in herself. In a different way, every Christian has a similar task: that of incarnating Christ to the point of saying, like Saint Paul: “It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me”(Gal 2:20). How can this come about? By having Mary’s attitude towards the Word of God, which is one of complete availability. To believe, therefore, with Mary, that all the promises contained in the Word of Jesus will be fulfilled and to face, if necessary, as Mary did, the risk of encountering the absurd that his Word sometimes entails. Wonderful things, that are both great and small, happen to those who believe in the Word of God.
Chiara Lubich
(Chiara Lubich, in Parole di Vita, edited by Fabio Ciardi, Opere di Chiara Lubich, Città Nuova, 2017, p. 610-612)
Dec 25, 2021 | Non categorizzato
Igino Giordani summed up Christmas in a few significant words: “Our welcoming the child Jesus into the cold grotto of our hearts; giving hospitality to that Light which had found no place elsewhere and decided to shine on us, making all things new. “Jesus was born in a stable, to show us that he can be born in our hearts too, which are not unlike a stable. And when he is born in our heart, as in the grotto, the angels sing, the light shines in the night, and peace rains down on earth. Jesus, with his Birth, began a Revolution: he took humanity from the stable and raised it to the stars. He made even those strong men who enslaved him become his brothers, his equals. Christmas cannot be reduced to carols and candles. God is not to be made fun of. Our Father in heaven calls for our bread on earth. It is clear: those who want to make us slaves again, to take back our freedom, remain active. And this is done with various kinds of pressure (…). We lose our freedom, we lose our charity: and so we live according to the flesh. Instead of being willing servants of our sisters and brothers, we exploit them. And yet the law, justice, is this: treat others as you would have them treat you. Mutual service, where justice and charity are one. It is God who lives in us: the Word – Reason – who becomes flesh among us and makes the stars shine on the stables.
Igino Giordani, “La Via”, [The Way] 24.12.1949.
Dec 22, 2021 | Non categorizzato
When the Focolare president met the gen, the younger members of the Movement, she shared greetings for the Christmas season
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bBadtgrCDwg