Focolare Movement

Social relations: paradox or sustainable model? A perspective of the social sciences

Feb 12, 2005

Sociology

 

Many participants of the Sociology Congress were of the opinion that in this period marked by rapid changes, there is an urgent need for social scientists to focus their attention not only on contradictory and conflictual social relations but also on relations of concord and communion currently operating in society. This concept was highlighted by Chiara Lubich in her message to the assembly, in which she affirmed that “fraternity” is a spiritual principle which, at the same time, is also an anthropological, sociological and political category, capable of unleashing a process of global social renewal.” Such a proposal is the fruit of decades of experience on the personal level as well as on the level of political institutions and economic structures.

The Congress was particularly characterized by dialogue – in the sociological discipline this is the typical relationship between theory and practice – as illustrated by experiences made in the most varied social and cultural contexts. The experiences shared were those of representatives from the La Pira Cultural Center in Florence (Italy), which welcomes foreign students of different cultures and religions; from an Italian drug rehabilitation center; from the international center for families at the Focolare little town of Loppiano (Incisa Valdarno, Florence). The experience of integration between Europeans and Africans was also presented through the life of Fontem, a little town situated in a forest in the Cameroon, and home of the Bangwa tribe, a people deeply rooted in its traditions.

A sociological analysis of the different experiences put into evidence possible new models, new schemes of application such as the “paradigm of unity.” This was the subject matter of the talk offered by Polish professor, Adam Biela, former Dean of the Faculty of Sociology of the University of Dublin and now senator. The same sociological category was elaborated on by Brazilian sociologist, Vera Araujo, who called it the paradigm of unity-fraternity, which is capable of recognizing relations of unity and distinction, reciprocity, gift and communion. At the end of the Congress, as Vera Araujo remarked, an “initial scientific community was created. It has adopted these paradigms, these new strategies of research, in its common search of new perspectives for the sociological sciences.”

___

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

Maria Voce has returned to the house of the Father

Maria Voce has returned to the house of the Father

The first President of the Focolare Movement, after the foundress Chiara Lubich, Maria Voce passed away yesterday, 20th of June 2025, at home. Margaret Karram and Jesús Morán share some memories. The funeral will be held on the 23rd of June at 3:00pm at the International Centre of the Focolare Movement in Rocca di Papa (Rome).

Thank you Emmaus!

Thank you Emmaus!

Letter from Margaret Karram, President of the Focolare Movement, on the occasion of the departure of Maria Voce – Emmaus.

What is the point of war?

What is the point of war?

At this time when the world is torn apart by brutal conflicts, we share an excerpt from the famous book written by Igino Giordani in 1953 and republished in 2003: The uselessness of war. “If you want peace, prepare peace”: the political teaching that Giordani offers us in this volume can be summarized in this aphorism. Peace is the result of a plan: a plan of fraternity between peoples, of solidarity with the weakest, of mutual respect. Thus a more just world is built, this is how war is set aside as a barbaric practice belonging to the dark phase of the history of mankind.