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President of Ireland Mary McAleese Intervention of
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A Foretaste of Heaven What unites a university professor, a physician, and the president
of a country? That which unites all men. In the center of Dublin, on the
evening of November 13th 2001, the presentation of the first book
of the Trilogy BY PAOLA
RONCONI It was a spectacular day, crystal-clear,
even though cold, as rarely happens in these parts, people tell me. The
setting was one of the most elegant (perhaps the most elegant) in Dublin: the
Shelbourne Hotel, a central, historic hotel overlooking St Stephen’s Green,
the city’s “green lung.” The hall, full of mirrors, chandeliers, and
decorative rugs, was crowded with an audience of about 500 people, much
larger than the organizers could have expected. They were awaiting the
speakers on the theme “The Religious Sense in the Modern World,” the
presentation of the English version of Fr Giussani’s book The Religious Sense. Waiting for the guest of honor,
President of Ireland Mary McAleese, to arrive, the evening program began.
Sitting in the front row were ambassadors (Mexico, Belgium, Italy, Finland,
Egypt, Cyprus, France, Romania, Morocco, and Pakistan), figures from the
Irish cultural world, the head of international relations at Trinity College,
Catholics, Muslims, and Protestants. And then, farther back, “ordinary”
people, students, friends of friends, mere acquaintances, and co-workers. Fr
Ian Ker, on the faculty of theology at Oxford, was the first speaker. He is
one of the leading scholars of the life and work of Cardinal John Henry
Newman. Chance would have it that on the other side of the park, a few
hundred yards from the Shelbourne, stands the Catholic university of which
Newman was a great supporter, as well as rector, a hundred and fifty years
ago. Ker is familiar to Traces readers after the London event on this same theme. He
could not avoid making a parallel between Newman’s thought and Giussani’s.
What struck him, Ker said, when he read The Religious Sense in 1997, was above all the concept of reason, a reason
that was open. Ker spoke of a “holistic sense of human mind,” common to both
Giussani and Newman: man is not simply the sum of the factors making him up,
but something that goes beyond. “It is not mere logic that moves us,” Ker
continued. “Man moves with his whole being and cannot get away from his
background. And it would be very unfair not to take it into consideration,
like a scientist not basing his work on the discoveries made before him.” Point of convergence The floor passed to Giancarlo Cesana,
who provoked his audience: “Christianity is not a religion,” he stated, “but
a faith. We believe and we follow an historical event.” His talk was
structured on the book’s three premises: realism, reason, morality, and ended
with the invitation Fr Giussani extends to his readers at the end of the
book, “Love the truth more than yourself.” A murmur ran though the crowd,
especially among the people standing at the back of the room. The crowd split
into two wings to make a wide path up the steps into the hall. Finally, Mary
McAleese made her entrance, and her expression plainly revealed that she was
not expecting such a large group and such a warm welcome. Protocol required
that she be alone on the speaker’s platform. “Dia dhaoibh a cháirde. Is mór an
chuis…” These were her opening words, and many of her listeners were a bit
astonished. But after a few seconds she started speaking English. This was simply
Gaelic, the official language for the beginning of her speeches, but
thankfully only for the beginning. Twenty years ago in
Belfast |