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Traces No. 3, march 2008
Fr. Giussani A fullness that overflows


Education
A fullness that overflows

The Berchet High School has decided to remember “its” teacher, Fr. Giussani, with a plaque. An evening of deep reflection on his passion for education

Alberto Savorana


On February 12th, various generations of Berchet students gathered  in the Aula Magna of the Milan high school in via Commenda. All told, they covered fifty years of history. They had gathered in the name of Fr. Giussani. On the third anniversary of his death, “The Management Committee decided unanimously – the school’s Principal, Innocente Pessina, underscored –to remember, by means of a plaque, this important personality who taught here.” Introducing the speeches by a student from the early days, Claudio Risé, a present-day student, Marco Pisa, and of Fr. Carrón, Pessina said, “Today, it is even more meaningful to remember a master like Fr. Giussani, because what some have defined as an “educational emergency” is before everyone’s eyes; even the Pope spoke about it some days ago, and those who work with young people can confirm it. Every day I meet parents who declare that they are powerless before such frailty and unease, and even some resignation.” His appraisal of teachers was also very acute: “I see many teachers content to pass on some information, some disciplinary norms, and some skills—all these are important, and quite right, but I believe that the school’s task is more ambitious: the task of educating. In order to educate you have to believe in the things you do and say, because education passes through a personal relationship in which the adult offers himself as a witness, with his own beliefs; if the educator is empty, he will teach only emptiness”
So what is education? Pessina answered with an image which would have won Fr. Giussani’s enthusiastic approval, for sure.” Education is a fullness that overflows, like a vessel that is too full brimming over; the overflow of what you have inside, that convinces you so much that you cannot keep it for yourself, but must give to someone else, so as to “infect” him. I didn’t know Fr. Giussani but I think of him as a person so rich, so full, so convinced of his own values that he could not but communicate it to others.

The seed and the oak tree
Words of greeting were offered by Roberto Formigoni, at the time a student in Lecco: “I had never seen the Berchet High School, but by means of Fr. Giussani’s words, his stories, and his emotions, we saw these classrooms, these walls, those steps, the teachers, the students, the debates and the life, the explosion of something unexpected and surprising that moved us and won us over, too. Fr. Giussani never forced anything on me, his was always a provocation of our freedom and to the use of reason.” Bishop Luigi Negri was his student in the mythical section E. He told us, “As I climbed the steps, I said to myself, ‘Look what a powerful intuition Fr. Giussani had! The oak tree is already wholly present in the seed. In those years, the daily dialogue between  a great master and our adolescence, a miracle happened of the passing of the faith from his heart to ours, in such a way that our whole life came to be marked and we gave our contribution to the oak tree born of his heart, which now challenges the ravages of time and looks courageously to the future.”
Then was the turn of Claudio Risé to speak, a student of Fr. Giussani’s since 1955; the proposal of the plaque in memory of Fr. Giussani came from him. “He was a true educator, impassioned with the two basic movements of an educational action: to nourish with knowledge and to make grow; to bring out, extract what risks remaining hidden and inactive in the lazy and rather sleepy personality of us adolescents. He trained us to recognize what he called the deepest needs of the heart with which man lives everything, and which he called “elementary experiences,” the deepest meaning of which I recognized clearly only much later in my work as a therapist.” What was his method? “That of freedom, which he saw as being composed of intelligence and willpower. Then, in his vision of education, reason played a central role. He rescued us from the temptation of taking refuge in a cold intellectualism, thanks to his proposal of reason understood in a broad sense. Partly because he associated it with something which at that time (it was long before the days of Benedict XVI ) few did, that is to say, with faith: faith, he said, is a method of knowledge and what knows is my reason. And faith comes to know something of the object by means of a witness: Christ, He who breaks the prison in which the “I” is closed up and opens it to the world, to knowledge. As a psychiatric practitioner, I say that a witness of reason in faith is someone who frees you from the psychosis of adolescent omnipotence and brings you to the full psychological and affective development of a young adult.”

Familiar and a friend
Then Marco Pisa spoke, an eighteen-year-old student of the Berchet today: “I have never seen Fr. Giussani, except in photographs, but for me to think of him is different from thinking of other educators and charismatic personalities, because he is in some way familiar and a friend. His charism, the human drive with which he lived Christianity, reached me indirectly, through my parents, and in a more evident way through the Movement of people he began in this school. I have been changed by the encounter with these people in a way I never expected. What I have received from Fr. Giussani is not a philosophy of life, but a wound, that is, an inability to be satisfied, the desire for a greater intensity of life, which I have seen in some people to whom I have become attached. In this way even study becomes an opportunity of growth for me, and not only something I do to get good credits, or a place in university; then my commitment in the scholastic elections is a way to improve the situation we are living in. This education to perceive reality more deeply and intensely is the wound I spoke of ,and that is what I received from Fr. Giussani. This makes me freer and more certain of the road I have set out on and I am grateful to Fr. Giussani for this.”
In presenting Fr. Julián Carrón, the Principal noted, “He has had the courage to take over the exacting role that Fr. Giussani left three years ago.” Here alongside is the text of his address.


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