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A Real Guinness Beer A brief history of the Movement in
Ireland St Patrick evangelized the island in the fifth century.
In 1980, three Italian university students started the first CL community.
Then the encounter with Margaret, Owen and many others. And the challenge, in
a moment of economic depression, to set up an English school for foreigners.
From this has sprung a series of encounters and adventures by PAOLA
RONCONI If you wet your fingertip with a bit
of Guinness beer and hold it out to watch it drip down, you will find that
the drop does not fall. The trick works, though, only with the beer in
Ireland, maybe in a pub outside the city with Irish music and a view of the
sea; they say it is denser. But really, if you stop to think about it,
everything here in Ireland is denser, more intense. From the green of the
grass to the fog you can slice with a knife; from “Bloody Sunday” of 1972 to
the red of the women’s hair; from the civil war, which by now has very little
to do with religion, to the sunsets that seem to last forever. Bland,
colorless middle grounds are not possible. Patrick of Armagh must have
intuited this himself, when in the fifth century he went all over the island,
preaching Christianity. He got to know his people and founded churches,
schools, and monasteries, leaving the imprint which gave the country an
identity. Special
correspondents They began to meet people, and in
fact went to live in an apartment with other students from Dublin (“To tell
the truth,” Mauro says, “in the beginning, Guido lived in a student dorm, but
he organized a pillow fight and was kicked out”). Studying Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice and the international relations of
Northern Ireland, they came together for School of Community or for the
chapel choir of the university, and in this way met other students: Marion,
Maria, Robert, and Margaret. Despite the fact that at the time the Irish were
convinced that in order to live Christianity truly, it was necessary to take
vows (“A somewhat limiting view of Christianity! And today the seminaries are
empty,” Mauro declared), after a few months Mauro and Margaret had become a
couple. The little community in the capital of Ireland never stopped, thanks
also to the presence of other Italian students, but especially of Gerry, who
later became a priest in the Fraternity of the Missionaries of San Carlo
Borromeo. Mauro returned to Catania, to fulfill
his military duty and receive his university degree. Fr Ciccio, his priest
friend in Catania, goaded him: “Where will you and Margaret live, in Italy or
in Dublin?” “Oh, Fr Ciccio, we’ve only been together a month!” “So,” Mauro recounts,
“I wrote to Fr Giussani, who answered me: ‘Certainly, it would be wonderful
if a seed of CL were transplanted into Ireland, merging with the land, except
in the clarity and passion for the faith that was there in the past and is
not there now.’ This was 1982, but you see, he had already understood what
would happen to Irish society a few years later,” to the point that Giussani
himself, talking about Ireland, called it paradoxically “a frontier land.” With an invitation like this, all
Mauro could do was pack his bags. “Margaret and I were married in Catania and
left for our honeymoon in Dublin.” A honeymoon that has not ended yet. There are all kinds
of schools The Emerald Cultural Institute is in
a Victorian building in one of the most beautiful residential areas of the
city. It is on three immaculately kept floors. In the summer months, when the
temperature rises as high as 70°F and there are little patches of sun, the
school has up to 2,000 students, both young people and adults. Language
lessons in the morning, homework, films, language labs, and field trips to
the Aran Isles or Connemara in the afternoon. Some students work in pubs in
the evening to pay for their lessons and learn English better. In a little
room on the first floor of the school, next to the office where Owen’s
brother Lee, Eithne, and Eleonor work, I met Jennifer, a bright girl with a
light blond short-crop and blue eyes. She moved about as if she were at home.
She’s Irish and works here, I thought to myself. “Are you new here?” she
asked in Italian. “But aren’t you from here?” I asked her. “I’m from
Florence,” she said, with typical Florentine pronunciation. “I study, and I
work in the school lunchroom. I meet a lot of people. Everybody comes through
here.” Jennifer was a tornado of ideas; she told me she wanted to organize a
party to propose to all the students and teachers at the Emerald Institute:
“I and other kids from the Movement have already organized a previous one. Everyone
had a good time, they told us, but at the next one we would like to invite
them to the School of Community we do each week. We have to make it clear
that we are not party planners and that the fascination that they can feel in
festive moments is given by an Other.” The school is like a seaport; the
students come from a great many nations. “Can you think of a better place to
be on mission?!” Jennifer exclaimed. Mauro told me that most of the
students find hospitality in Dublin families. “We started out by asking our
neighbors if they would like to take in foreign students as paying guests.
Through the grapevine, we reached about a thousand families, to whom we
propose gestures and initiatives. And the encounters–you have no idea how
many encounters! For the larger foreign groups, we take over the management
of other structures, like schools that would normally be closed in the
summer.” One of these belongs to the Handmaids of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
“Years ago, the number of religious was much higher. They lived here and ran
the school. Now only a few of them are left, and they are very happy to work
with us and to entrust to us some of their structures, like the university
dormitory.” Catechism, songs,
and tents In 1990, Raffi and Owen were married.
They live just a few steps from the Emerald Institute, in a house like
something out of a home decorating magazine. They have four daughters, the
little ladies, Sara, Laura, Cristina, and Annalisa. Together with Margaret,
Raffi organizes catechism lessons. What about the parish? “You have to
understand,” Raffi explained, “that here in Ireland Christianity used to
permeate every context. Thus, there was no distinction between the school and
the parish, to the point that preparation for the sacraments was the task of
all the school teachers. Today, if you’re lucky, you get a teacher who is a
practicing Catholic. Otherwise, it is a subject like math, and your children
do Communion or Confirmation together with the whole class just like they
were doing a history assignment. How sad! This is why we tried to come to the
rescue of our children.” These enterprising mothers have asked the parish
priest for a room, and weekly they teach their children and classmates who
Jesus is, His life, and all the rest. At times there is even a Sunday
afternoon spent playing with the children or taking them to see The Capture of Jesus by Caravaggio at the National
Gallery in Dublin. Anyone walking down Grafton Street in
downtown Dublin around Christmas would most probably come upon the choir that
Raffi has been directing for years now; in December it offers its services
for the AVSI fundraising “tents,” while during the rest of the year it sings
at Monday Mass in the Rathgar parish church. Chocolate at the
port Naas Anna told us about the time in 1993
when Fr Agostino, a priest in the San Carlo Fraternity who lives in Dublin,
gave a lesson in the class where she taught religion–a sort of summary of The Religious Sense. Anna was struck by it. “A few weeks
later,” she said, “Giorgio Vittadini came here to Dublin for a meeting, and
Fr Agostino invited me and my colleagues. I was thunderstruck, and my
colleagues scandalized, by how he talked about Christianity. ‘This guy can’t
tell us how to be Christians,’ they would argue with me.” Hilda was also one
of Anna’s colleagues, or better, one of her friends. “Something happened to
her after that encounter,” Hilda told us, speaking of Anna. “She was changed.
And when I too started spending time with these people I understood that they
were talking about what I had learned in college when I was younger, but with
them it became real.” Jimmy and Sean are their respective husbands. They saw
their wives come home “changed” and for a while, they just watched. “I
thought that if I remained an ‘outside observer’ of my wife’s new behavior,”
Jimmy put in, “I wouldn’t risk making a mistake. But, in effect, ‘these
Italians’ talked about the Church that I had known as a child but that with
the passage of time did not interest me any more.” There was also Deirdre, the wife of
Stefano whom we met at the chocolate factory. She told us her own story: “I
worked for more than four years in Milan, as a nurse at San Raffaele
Hospital. I met Stefano, who was not in the Movement, as well as people in
the Movement. Stefano had put me on my guard, saying, ‘Watch out, it’s a
political movement.’ We became engaged and I returned to Ireland. When he
joined me, something had happened to him about which I wasn’t quite sure.” In
short, while he was working for the Region of Lombardy in the meantime,
Stefano had had a chance to get to know that “political movement” better, and
in the end it had convinced him, because it was not so political after all. A people of
“travelers” The Irish community had been greatly
anticipating this past November 13th, when the President of the Irish
Republic, Mary McAleese, officially participated in the presentation of The Religious Sense in one of the most prestigious
hotels in Dublin. Already in 1998, this woman born in Northern Ireland had
visited the exhibition “From the Land to the Peoples” when it was in Dublin,
and since then has kept up a friendly and close contact with Margaret. Clearly, everything here possesses a
special density, starting with the Guinness. |