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Rome (Fides Service) - The second volume of the history of Communion
and Liberation Movement has just been published with the title
"La ripresa" (St Paul Editions) which concerns the years
1969-76. The author Mons Massimo Camisasca, describes the path
of the Movement's re-birth under the guidance of don Giussani
and its definitive affirmation in the Church in the Italian society
crossed by marches shouting revolutionary slogans, shaken by bombs
and attacks. "Today, like thirty years ago, men, faced with
injustice, poverty, discrimination ask themselves: is war and
violence all that is left to us? In March 1969 don Guissani says:
"We are vexed, inevitably wounded by evil in its most clamorous
version, the social version, that is injustice. Although we must
not forget another type of evil, structural to our life, such
as for example death, disease, betrayal". Fides Service put
some questions on the theme to Mons. Massimo Camisasca.
Monsignor Camisasca if you were to use an image to describe
this second lap of the history of the Communion and Liberation
Movement which would you choose?
If I were to express with one image the path described in
this volume, I would choose the wandering in the desert. We think
of the people of Israel: the years spent between Egypt and the
Promised Land, under the guidance of Moses, allowed its formation
and represented also the definitive discovery of its vocation
in the world. Years marked by adversity, but also by many gifts.
And by no few rebellions against their leader. At times the Jewish
people had the impression that it would all end there, then the
journey resumed as if by miracle. The years 1969-76, only seven,
represent, under the guidance of don Guissani, the path of the
movement's re-birth, after a period of crisis in which its numbers
were reduced to the minimum, and its definitive affirmation in
the Church and in Italian society.
What are the main differences between this volume and the
previous book?
The climate, the colours of this second volume are profoundly
different compared to the first. That one was concerned with the
happy infancy of an adult; with the laborious and fecund years,
of meetings and prospects, which he lived in the seminary; with
the glorious decade of the Gs (Student Youth). Here instead there
is the fatigue of re-birth, a new start, in a Milan and an Italy
crossed by demonstrations, shaken by revolutionary slogans, by
bombs, by the dead. Don Guissani in these years draws gradually
closer to the official leadership of the Movement, from which
he had been divided in June 1965, when he was sent to study in
the United States from where he returned a few months later. The
American months really represent for him a pause: although in
actual fact he never ceased generating the Movement, it is also
true that he will only progressively take again in hand effective
leadership of CL.
What were the most interesting and demanding challenges posed
by those terrible years? And how did the CL position fit in with
the Church and the world?
First of all one question shook the Church in those years:
from whom will salvation come? Much of Italian Catholicism, although
necessarily without denying in theory that Christ is the Saviour,
trusted concretely in the Marxist analysis as a path to liberation,
when not in the revolutionary praxis. Here lies the centre of
the teaching of don Guissani; the reply to the question: who is
the Saviour, who can free us from evil? In those years there was
confrontation on the one hand between human wisdom and human morality,
vivaciously and at times violently proposed by those who preached
salvation through revolution, and on the other Christian communion
lived as an absolutely original way of understanding human existence,
which comes from on high, is born of faith and from faith draws
its vision of men and the world, constituting a unique rule of
life.
For Giussani it remains supremely true that "God is everything
and is within the human" because the eternal has become modality
of life for the human. "The great Christian word is the Incarnation,
but what this God, who is within all things, brings to the surface
is not human wisdom, it is lived communion." In these years
he struggles for " a new city which must be born". But
the city is an absolute gift, a gift born of conversion. These
are the terms of the tremendous question, a question of life or
death for Christianity, which poses itself in those years. For
don Guissani the decision is absolutely not ideological or partisan.
Again in those years he says: "The decision we must make
is to be within the one Christian tension we know, tension between
cross and resurrection". Immanence in the world, then, but
immanence of Christian communion, presence of man conscious of
the novelty he carries.
In that period what answer does don Guissani suggest for the
question of evil, violence and injustice in the world?
The problem of evil and how to face it was the central problem
of those year. It is also today. Here lies, in fact, the profound
present day importance of this volume. Today, as thirty years
ago, men, in front of injustice, poverty, discrimination, ask
themselves: is war and violence all we have left? In March 1969,
don Guissani says: "We are vexed, inevitably wounded by evil,
in its most clamorous version, the social, that is injustice.
Although we must not forget another type of evil, which is structural
to our life, such as for example death, disease, betrayal. How
is the problem of evil usually faced? With analysis and historical
action. We feel the need to analyse situation and structures and
then to act, we come together because alone we can do little or
nothing, and what we cannot do together will be done by history
and posterity". But don Guissani adds: "I see that all
the positions assumed by man with the will to eliminate evil in
the world start out from the presupposition that evil is in the
structures, they are unilateral, they are forced to affirm themselves
to forget or renounce something, and one violence is followed
by another".
Evil is in man of today and alone he cannot free himself: this
was the cry of don Guissani in those times and the heart of his
educational method. Evil has its roots in human liberty. "The
concept of original sin is at the basis of all this and clarifies
it. Evil in me can be won only by another, by another who is like
me but greater than me, by God made man, who died and is risen".
Hence don Guissani's insistence that the event of Christ, the
new man, must be recognised. "The problem is one - he says
on another occasion - that we take that event seriously."
Only when Jesus comes again will evil be completely taken way.
But the life of the Church, at the same time, is an anticipation
of this liberation from evil. In this life, continuity of the
Risen Christ, man is granted to live in time the experience of
life finally and definitively liberated. (Fides Service 7/4/2003
EM lines 88 Words: 1237)
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