Category: Vatican City

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Audience with members of the Italian Financial Police on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of its founding

    Source: The Holy See

    Audience with members of the Italian Financial Police on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of its founding, 21.09.2024
    This morning, in the Vatican Apostolic Palace, the Holy Father Francis received in audience the members of the Italian Financial Police on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the Corps, to whom he delivered the following address:

    Address of the Holy Father
    Mr. Minister,
    Mr. General,
    Your Excellency and dear Chaplains,
    Dear Members of the Financial Police,
    I welcome you with pleasure: I saw you this morning when you were entering here. I greet the Minister of Economy and Finance, the Commander General and all the officials. I greet and thank the Bishop Military Ordinary and the chaplains.
    “In tradition, the future”. This is the motto of your 250th anniversary. In tradition there is the future. It refers to the roots that led to the founding of the Italian Financial Police, and gave a direction for growth. Born as a special Corps for financial surveillance and border defence, it has taken on the tasks of tax and economic-financial police, and sea policing, with an important mission in the field of rescue, both at sea and in the mountains. A historical reminder of this commitment is the help offered to Jewish refugees and the persecuted during the two great world wars.
    A vast sphere of intervention, therefore, which aims to respond to problems with the tangibility of presence and timely action, while at the same time conveying a cultural alternative to certain evils that threaten to contaminate society.
    Your Patron is Saint Matthew – today is his feast day – apostle and evangelist. Indeed, he was a “publican”, a tax collector, an occupation doubly despised in Jesus’ time, because it was subservient to imperial power, and because it was corrupt. I like to go to the church of the French to see that painting by Caravaggio, “The conversion of Matthew”, which symbolizes this so deeply. He represented a utilitarian and unscrupulous mentality, devoted only to the “god of money”.
    In our times too, a similar logic affects social life, causing imbalances and marginalization: from food wastage – but this is a scandal, food wastage is a scandal! – from this waste, to the exclusion of citizens from benefiting from some of their rights. Even the State can end up a victim of this system; including those States that have vast resources but remain isolated in terms of finance or the global market. How does one explain hunger in the world today, when there is so, so much waste in developed societies? It is terrible. And another thing: if the production of weapons were to cease for a year, world hunger would end. Better to have weapons than solve hunger… Even the State can fall victim to this system: even those States which, despite having resources, as I said, remain isolated.
    In this panorama, you are required to contribute to the justice of economic relationships, verifying compliance with the rules that govern the activities of individuals and businesses. Therefore, you oversee the duty of every citizen to contribute to the needs of the State according to equitable criteria, without favouring the strongest, and you counter the inappropriate use of the internet and social networks. With regard to both tax collection and the fight against undeclared and underpaid work – this is a scandal – or in any case work that is detrimental to human dignity, your action is of paramount importance.
    And all this is your concrete and daily way of serving the common good, of being close to the people, of fighting corruption and promoting legality. That corruption that takes place under the table, no?
    The word ‘corrupt’ “is reminiscent of the broken heart, stained by something, the ruined heart. […] Corruption reveals an anti-social conduct so strong that it dissolves the validity of the relationships and pillars on which a society is founded”. Therefore, the answer, the alternative does not lie in norms alone, but in a “new humanism”.[1] To re-found humanity.
    The gaze of Jesus, placed on the young Matthew, says that the dignity and the life of man are the heart of the life of a people. You can contribute to the emergence of this new humanism also through your work in the service of the young people who apply to enter the Financial Police Corps and attend its schools. Initially they are perhaps looking only for a job, but they then find a specific training, which not only provides them with indispensable knowledge and experience, but also becomes education for life and the common good.
    Matthew, in a certain sense, moved from the logic of profit to that of equity. But, in the school of Jesus, he also went beyond equity and justice and came to know gratuitousness, the gift of self that generates solidarity, sharing, inclusion. Gratuitousness is not just a financial dimension, it is a human dimension. Entering into the service of others, freely, without seeking profit for oneself. Because while justice is necessary, justice is not enough to fill those gaps that only gratuitousness, charity and love can heal.
    You experience this, for example, when you organize the reception and rescue of migrants in danger in the Mediterranean: thank you for this, thank you. Or in your courageous interventions in the event of natural disasters, in Italy and elsewhere. But think of the fight against the scourge of drug trafficking, the merchants of death. Your service does not end with protection of the victims, but includes the attempt to help the rebirth of those who do wrong: indeed, by acting with respect and moral integrity you can touch consciences, showing the possibility of a different life.
    In this way to one can and must construct an alternative to the globalization of indifference – the globalization of indifference: provide an alternative to this – this globalization of indifference, which not only destroys with violence and war, but also neglects social care and the environment. In effect, the wealth of a nation is not solely in its GDP; it resides in its natural, artistic, cultural and religious heritage – and in the smile of its inhabitants, its children. Once, a head of State said to me: “I have a special measurement: the smile of children and the elderly. When both of them smile, things are not going too badly in a society”. It is curious, this … and this favours creativity, openness to the world. You yourselves are citizens who safeguard this “wealth” of Italy, but are ready to go on international missions. There is a need for this impetus to solidarity towards the other as a way to peace and as a hope for a better future!
    Brothers and sisters, I congratulate you, because you cooperate to foster the confidence and hope of the people. This people, that is all of us. And to nurture confidence, hope, smiles. I come back to this: the thermometer is, do the children smile? Do the elderly smile? Don’t forget. And this important anniversary fits well with the theme of the Jubilee that the Church is preparing to celebrate, which is “Pilgrims of Hope”. I bless you from my heart, I bless your work and families. Please, do not lose your sense of humour, please! This is healthy! And I ask you, please, to pray for me. Thank you.

    _____________________________________________________
    [1] Preface in Peter Turkson, Corrosion: combatting corruption in the Church and in society, Bologna 2017.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: AMERICA/PUERTO RICO – Appointment of the Special Envoy for the celebration of the VI American Missionary Congress (CAM 6)

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Saturday, September 21, 2024

    Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) – The Holy Father Francis has appointed His Eminence Cardinal Baltazar Enrique Porras Cardozo, Archbishop Emeritus of Caracas, His Special Envoy to the celebration of the VI American Missionary Congress (CAM6), which will take place in Ponce (Puerto Rico), from 19 to 24 November 2024. (Agenzia Fides 21/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Letter of the Holy Father to the Special Envoy to the Fifth Eucharistic Congress of Taiwan (5 October 2024)

    Source: The Holy See

    Letter of the Holy Father to the Special Envoy to the Fifth Eucharistic Congress of Taiwan (5 October 2024), 28.09.2024
    On 3 August 2024, the Holy Father appointed His Eminence Cardinal John Tong Hon, bishop emeritus of Hong Kong, as his Special Envoy to the concluding celebration of the Fifth Eucharistic Congress of Taiwan, to take place at the Exhibition Center of the diocese of Kaohsiung on 5 October 2024.
    The Special Envoy will be accompanied by a Pontifical Mission composed of the following ecclesiastics:
    1. The Reverend Francis X. HUANG, parish priest of the parish of the Most Holy Trinity, Pingtung;
    2. The Reverend Giovanni Battista BERGAMO, prefect of studies of the Redemptoris Mater Seminary, Kaohsiung.
    The following is the Holy Father’s Letter to His Eminence Cardinal John Tong Hon:

    Letter of the Holy Father
    Venerabili Fratri Nostro
    IOANNI S.R.E. Cardinali TONG HON
    Episcopo emerito Sciiamchiamensi
    «Haec est vera fraternitas, quae numquam poterit violari certamine nec frangi labore nec vinci gravamine, quia caritas Dei diffusa est in cordibus nostris per Spiritum sanctum, qui datus est humilibus, contritis, egenis, mansuetis, pacificis et ad omne opus bonum et laudem Dei die ac nocte paratis» (Thomas a Kempis, De resurrectione orationes in duas partes sectae V, 2, 6). Talis fraternitas quidem mundum ad sanitatem sanctitatemque perducere potest, ita ut unusquisque hominum hac in semita pacem et reconciliationem incarnatam inveniat. Cuius enim exemplum iam in Lucae Evangelio vidimus, dum post sua beata e mortuis resurrectione Dominus Scripturas explicans, iter cum discipulis fecit et una cum eis eodem tempore tum fraternitatem tum Eucharistiam celebravit (cfr Lc 24, 13-35), valide demonstrans id quod in alio loco promisit: “Ego vobiscum sum omnibus diebus usque ad consummationem saeculi” (Mt 28, 20).
    Novimus autem ex litteris Venerabilis Fratris Ioannis Baptistae Lee, Episcopi Hsinchuensis, Praesidis Sinensis Regionalis Conferentiae Episcoporum, proxime V Nationalem Eucharisticum Congressum celebraturum esse, qui, sicut speramus, in cordibus christifidelibus verum cultum et Eucharistiae dilectionem excitabit itemque enutriet necnon altiore usque modo hanc piam devotionem perscrutari adiuvabit.
    Ideo, memoratus Praesul humanissime quaesivit ad sollemniorem efficiendum hunc eventum, ut Nos Patrem Purpuratum eligeremus, qui inter Missarum liturgiam personam Nostram gereret fratresque in fide de Christi pace, reconciliatione et eiusdem ineffabili dilectione erga homines praeciperet. Te quidem, Venerabilis Frater Noster, qui peculiari cultu ac devotione erga Dominum Pastorem bonum eiusque Ecclesiam emines, ad dictum Congressum fidenter comiterque destinamus. Itaque, hisce Litteris virtute te Missum Extraordinarium Nostrum nominamus ad memoratum Nationalem Eucharisticum Congressum, qui proximo die V mensis Octobris in Aula exhibitionis dioecesis Kaohsiungensis celebrabitur. Sollemni Missae conclusionis praesidebis, de necessitate verae fraternitatis ad mundum sanandum in luce Evangelii locuturus.
    Nostram benignam istic adstantibus significabis salutationem, praesertim Kaohsiungensi diligenti Pastori omnibusque Fratribus in episcopatu, presbyteris, diaconis, cunctis vitae consecratae membris et christifidelibus laicis. Deinde omnes congregatos ferventer hortaberis ut sanctam Eucharistiam semper fraterno spiritu sinceraque et mutua dilectione celebrent atque pie colent, sese committentes una cum vitae sollicitudinibus intercessioni Beatae Mariae Virginis, quae tota sua vita est mulier “eucharistica” (Ioannes Paulus II, Ecclesia de Eucharistia, 53).
    Nos profecto tuam missionem precibus comitabimur, dum iam nunc enixe te, Venerabilis Frater Noster, committimus amantissimae tutelae Beatae Mariae Virginis eiusque Sponsi sancti Ioseph. Nostram denique Benedictionem prolixe tibi imprimis elargimur, cum omnibus ad quos nunc mitteris communicandam, vicissim pro gravi Nostro Petrino ministerio exercendo preces postulantes.
    Ex Aedibus Vaticanis, die XV mensis Augusti, in sollemnitate Assumptionis Beatae Mariae Virginis, anno MMXXIV, Pontificatus Nostri duodecimo.
    FRANCISCUS

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Translation: APOSTOLIC JOURNEY – Pope in Belgium: Synodal process should be a return to the Gospel, not a pursuit of “trendy” reforms

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Saturday, September 28, 2024

    Vatican Media

    Brussels (Agenzia Fides) – “The synodal process must be a return to the Gospel; it must not have among its priorities some ‘fashionable’ reform, but ask: how can we bring the Gospel to a society that no longer listens to it or has distanced itself from the faith? Let us all ask ourselves this question”. On the penultimate day of the Apostolic Journey to the heart of Europe, Pope Francis meets the Bishops, priests, deacons, consecrated men and women, seminarians and pastoral workers of Belgium in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Koekelberg, offering the local Catholic community, and the entire Western Church, a profound reflection on what he himself defines as a “crisis of faith” that the West itself is experiencing. A crisis, the Pontiff underlines, which is pushing the Catholic community “to return to the essential, that is, to the Gospel, so that the good news that Jesus brought into the world may be announced again to everyone, making all its beauty shine”. But Christ, he points out, is not a negative experience, on the contrary it is “a time that is offered to us to shake ourselves, to question ourselves and to change. It is a precious opportunity – in biblical language it is called kairòs – to be awakened from torpor and to rediscover the paths of the Spirit. When we experience desolation, in fact, we must always ask ourselves what message the Lord wants to communicate to us”. This “crisis of faith”, underlines the Bishop of Rome, shows us how the West has passed “from a Christianity placed in a hospitable social framework to a Christianity ‘of minority’, or rather, of testimony”. And this, he continues, “requires the courage of an ecclesial conversion, to start those pastoral transformations that also concern the customs, the models, the languages of faith, so that they are truly at the service of evangelization”. In this perspective, “this courage is also required of priests. To be priests who do not limit themselves to preserving or managing a heritage of the past, but pastors in love with Jesus Christ and attentive to grasping the questions of the Gospel, often implicit, as they walk with the holy People of God, a little in front, a little in the middle and a little at the back”. Hence the reflection on the synodal process, which in a few days will see a further step forward with the celebration of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly in the Vatican. Finally, the Pope recommends to the Church of Belgium to be merciful: “In the face of the experience of evil, we simply apply earthly justice that says: ‘whoever makes a mistake must pay’. However, the justice of God is superior”. And, dwelling on the concept of justice, the Pontiff also speaks of abuse (last night in the Apostolic Nunciature he met 17 victims of abuse by the Belgian clergy, ed.) thanking the Catholic community “for the great work” done “to transform anger and pain into help, closeness and compassion. Abuse generates atrocious suffering and wounds, also undermining the path of faith. And there is a need for so much mercy, so as not to remain with a heart of stone in the face of the suffering of the victims, to make them feel our closeness and offer all the help possible, to learn from them to be a Church that serves all without subjugating anyone”. In greeting those present, Francis recalls a work by Magritte, an illustrious Belgian painter entitled “The Act of Faith”. The canvas represents a door closed from the inside, which however is broken in the center, it is open to the sky: “It is a gash, which invites us to go beyond, to turn our gaze forward and upward, to never close ourselves in. This is an image that I leave you, as a symbol of a Church that never closes its doors, that offers everyone an opening to the infinite, that knows how to look beyond”. “Walk together, you and the Holy Spirit, to be a Church like this. Without the Spirit, nothing Christian happens,” concluded the Pope, who at the end of the meeting went to the royal crypt, beneath the church of Our Lady of Laeken, where the tombs of many members of the Royal House of Belgium are gathered. Welcomed by the King and Queen, the Pope stopped in front of the tomb of King Baudouin in silent prayer. Subsequently, in front of the King and those present, he praised his courage, when he chose to “leave his post as King so as not to sign a murderous law”. In 1992, in fact, the sovereign abdicated for 36 hours so as not to sign the law on the legalization of abortion. Finally, the Pope urged the Belgians to look to him at this time when criminal laws are making their way, hoping that his cause for beatification will proceed. (FB) (Agenzia Fides 28/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Translation: AFRICA/KENYA – Resignation and succession of the Bishop of Isiolo

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Saturday, September 28, 2024

    Vatican City (Agenzia Fides) – The Holy Father Francis has accepted the resignation from the pastoral care of the Diocese of Isiolo presented by HE Mgr. Anthony Ireri Mukobo, IMC. He is succeeded by HE Mgr. Peter Munguti Makau, IMC, until now Coadjutor Bishop of the same Diocese. (Agenzia Fides 28/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Translation: APOSTOLIC JOURNEY – Pope in Belgium: May the synodal process be a return to the Gospel and not a pursuit of “trendy” reforms

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Saturday, September 28, 2024

    Vatican Media

    Brussels (Agenzia Fides) – “The synodal process must be a return to the Gospel; it must not have among its priorities some ‘fashionable’ reform, but ask: how can we bring the Gospel to a society that no longer listens to it or has distanced itself from the faith? Let us all ask ourselves this question”. On the penultimate day of the Apostolic Journey to the heart of Europe, Pope Francis meets the Bishops, priests, deacons, consecrated men and women, seminarians and pastoral workers of Belgium in the Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Koekelberg, offering the local Catholic community, and the entire Western Church, a profound reflection on what he himself defines as a “crisis of faith” that the West itself is experiencing. A crisis, the Pontiff underlines, which is pushing the Catholic community “to return to the essential, that is, to the Gospel, so that the good news that Jesus brought into the world may be announced again to everyone, making all its beauty shine”. Christ, he points out, is “a time that is offered to us to shake ourselves, to question ourselves and to change. It is a precious opportunity – in biblical language it is called kairòs – to be awakened from torpor and to rediscover the paths of the Spirit. When we experience desolation, in fact, we must always ask ourselves what message the Lord wants to communicate to us”. This “crisis of faith”, underlines the Bishop of Rome, shows us how in certain areas of the world we have gone “from a Christianity placed in a hospitable social framework to a Christianity ‘of minority’, or rather, of testimony”. And this, he continues, “requires the courage of an ecclesial conversion, to start those pastoral transformations that also concern the customs, the models, the languages of faith, so that they are truly at the service of evangelization”. In this perspective, “this courage is also required of priests. To be priests who do not limit themselves to preserving or managing a heritage of the past, but pastors in love with Jesus Christ and attentive to grasping the questions of the Gospel, often implicit, as they walk with the holy People of God, a little in front, a little in the middle and a little at the back”. Hence the reflection on the synodal process, which in a few days will see a further step forward with the celebration of the XVI Ordinary General Assembly in the Vatican. Finally, the Pope recommends to the Church of Belgium to be merciful: “In the face of the experience of evil, we simply apply earthly justice that says: ‘whoever makes a mistake must pay’. However, the justice of God is superior”. And, dwelling on the concept of justice, the Pontiff also speaks of abuse (last night in the Apostolic Nunciature he met 17 victims of abuse by the Belgian clergy, ed.) thanking the Catholic community “for the great work” done “to transform anger and pain into help, closeness and compassion. Abuse generates atrocious suffering and wounds, also undermining the path of faith. And there is a need for so much mercy, so as not to remain with a heart of stone in the face of the suffering of the victims, to make them feel our closeness and offer all the help possible, to learn from them to be a Church that serves all without subjugating anyone”. In greeting those present, Francis recalls a work by Magritte, an illustrious Belgian painter entitled “The Act of Faith”. The canvas represents a door closed from the inside, which however is broken in the center, it is open to the sky: “It is a gash, which invites us to go beyond, to turn our gaze forward and upward, to never close ourselves in. This is an image that I leave you, as a symbol of a Church that never closes its doors, that offers everyone an opening to the infinite, that knows how to look beyond”. “Walk together, you and the Holy Spirit, to be a Church like this. Without the Spirit, nothing Christian happens,” concluded the Pope, who at the end of the meeting went to the royal crypt, beneath the church of Our Lady of Laeken, where the tombs of many members of the Royal House of Belgium are gathered. Welcomed by the King and Queen, the Pope stopped in front of the tomb of King Baudouin in silent prayer. Subsequently, in front of the King and those present, he praised his courage, when he chose to “leave his post as King so as not to sign a murderous law”. In 1992, in fact, the sovereign abdicated for 36 hours so as not to sign the law on the legalization of abortion. Finally, the Pope urged the Belgians to look to him at this time when criminal laws are making their way, hoping that his cause for beatification will proceed. (FB) (Agenzia Fides 28/9/2024) Share:

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Europe: APOSTOLIC JOURNEY – Pope in Luxembourg: “What drives us to mission is the joy of encountering Christ”

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Thursday, 26 September 2024

    Vatican Media

    Luxembourg (Agenzia Fides) – Service, mission, joy. These three words are the focus of the second and final speech delivered by Pope Francis in Luxembourg, the first stop on this Apostolic Journey to the heart of Europe, the 46th foreign trip for the Argentine Pope.In the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, a masterpiece of late Gothic architecture dating back to the 17th century, the Bishop of Rome, echoing the words of the young people present, recalled that “the Church of Jesus Christ, who came not to be served, but to serve”, because “the spirit of the Gospel is a spirit of welcoming, of openness to everyone; it does not admit any kind of exclusion”.On the subject of mission, Pope Francis repeated the words of Cardinal Archbishop Jean-Claude Hollerich, who, when welcoming the Pope in the Cathedral, had spoken of the “evolution of the Church in Luxembourg in a secularized society”. “I like this expression,” said the Pope, “The Church, within a secularized society needs to evolve, mature and grow”. “It cannot close itself off in sadness, resignation or resentment. On the contrary, it must accept the challenge while remaining faithful to the its perennial values, going beyond an approach of simple pastoral care to one of missionary proclamation,” he stressed.In this context, the Pope said: “What drives us to be missionaries is not the need to meet quotas or to proselytise, but rather our desire to make known to as many brothers and sisters as possible the joy of encountering Christ”. And he quoted Pope Benedict XVI: “Remember what Pope Benedict said: ‘The Church does not grow by proselytism but by attraction’.“Thus, as we overcome difficulties, the living power of the Holy Spirit is at work within us! Love moves us to proclaim the Gospel, which opens us to others. Accepting the challenge of this proclamation allows us to grow as a community,” Pope Francis continued.Referring to Saint Gregory the Great, the Pope moved on to the theme of joy: “This is what our faith is like: full of joy, it is a “dance”, because we know that we are children of a God who is our friend, who wants us to be happy and united, who rejoices above all in our salvation.”And finally, the Pope recalled a “beautiful tradition” in Luxembourg, namely the procession “which takes place in Echternach at Pentecost. This procession commemorates the tireless missionary efforts of Saint Willibrord, who evangelized these lands. The entire city pours out onto the streets and dances through the city squares, accompanied by the many pilgrims and visitors who join you. Moreover, the procession becomes a great unified dance.””The mission the Lord entrusts to us is beautiful. Let us console and serve, following Mary’s example and with her help,” concluded the Pope. Before arriving at the airport to fly to Belgium, he inaugurated the Marian Jubilee on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the veneration of Mary in Luxembourg under the title “Consoler of the Afflicted.” Francis then paid homage to the statue of Our Lady with the golden rose. And in the meantime, the time has come to say goodbye: the plane to Brussels awaits him. (F.B.) (Agenzia Fides, 26/9/2024)
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  • MIL-OSI Translation: ASIA/SOUTH KOREA – “Resurrection”: The spiritual legacy of missionary John Lee Tae-seok in a film

    MIL OSI Translation. Region: Italy –

    Source: The Holy See in Italian

    Friday, September 27, 2024

    Rome (Agenzia Fides) – “Certain realities can only be seen with eyes cleansed by tears.” These words spoken by Pope Francis during the meeting with young Filipinos in Manila well represent the key to understanding the documentary film “Resurrection” which on Saturday 28 September 2024, at 11 am, will be screened in the Aula Pio XI of the Pontifical Lateran University to close the Korean Culture Week, an event organized by the Embassy of the Republic of Korea to the Holy See to celebrate the day of the “Foundation of Korea” which is celebrated every year on 3 October. The feature film collects what is the spiritual legacy of Fr. John Lee Tae-seok, a Korean Salesian missionary who carried out his pastoral and professional activity (he was already qualified as a doctor when he became a Salesian, ed.) for almost a decade, from 2001 to 2009, in the community of Tonj, in today’s South Sudan. In Africa he devoted himself to such intense pastoral activity that he profoundly influenced the lives of the people he helped. Those people at the time were children or young people. Today they are adults and some, following his example, have wanted to follow in his footsteps, retracing his steps not only in their profession, but also in their training, some even studying medicine at his own university. And they are precisely them, students of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Busan, in South Korea, the protagonists of this film by director Goo Soo Hwan, the same director of the famous film also dedicated to Don Lee and entitled “Don’t cry for me, Sudan”, which was an extraordinary success in his homeland (it was also screened in the Vatican in December 2011). “Resurrection” can be defined as the sequel to “Don’t cry for me, Sudan”: the new cinematic work by Goo Soo Hwan, in fact, starts from the death of Don Lee, which occurred in 2010. Those who tell the story of those moments are his students, young people who fell into despair at the news of his passing. A desperation that did not last long: they soon realized that their task was to continue, albeit in different ways, his mission. Here lies the key to understanding the entire film: in South Sudanese culture, crying in public is a cause for embarrassment, but the students cannot hold back their tears when they think of their teacher. And by sharing the love he had given them, the tears soon give way to joy and today the gratitude towards Don Lee shines through in the gestures of his students. “Certain realities can only be seen with eyes cleansed of tears”. The director is keen to point out that the film is not just a story of the path that the missionary’s students have undertaken to become doctors: “They have become people who give: what matters here is how they are living their lives. And they are living exactly the life of their ‘father’. They have shown me what happiness is and what authority really is”. “I wanted to know if the students’ tears had changed them. Well, their lives have changed a lot!”, adds the director, known for his critical and harsh interventions, who has over 30 years of experience as an investigative journalist. (FB) (Agenzia Fides 27/9/2024)

    The poster of the movie “Resurrection”

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    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: ASIA/SOUTH KOREA – Documentary on the spiritual legacy of missionary John Lee Tae-seok

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Friday, 27 September 2024

    Rome (Agenzia Fides) – “Certain realities of life can only be seen with eyes washed by tears”. These words of Pope Francis during the meeting with young people in Manila are the key to understanding the documentary entitled “Risurrection” which will be screened on Saturday 28 September 2024 at 11 a.m. in the Pius XI Hall of the Pontifical Lateran University at the end of the Week of Korean Culture, a series of events organized by the Embassy of Korea to the Holy See to celebrate the “Day of the Foundation of Korea” which falls every year on October 3.The documentary shows the spiritual legacy of Father John Lee Tae-seok, a Korean Salesian who worked as a missionary and doctor in the community of Tonj in what is now South Sudan for almost a decade, from 2001 to 2009 (he was already a doctor when he became a Salesian, ed.). In Africa, he had a profound impact on the lives of the people he accompanied. At the time, these people were children or teenagers. Today they are adults, and some have followed his example and wanted to follow in his footsteps, not only in their profession as doctors, but also in their medical training, some even studying medicine at his university in Korea.And it is precisely these students from the Faculty of Medicine at Busan University in South Korea who are the protagonists of the film by Korean director Goo Soo Hwan, who also directed the famous film “Don’t cry for me, Sudan”, also dedicated to Father Lee and which was an extraordinary success in his own country (it was also shown at the Vatican in December 2011).”Risurrection” can be described as a sequel to “Don’t cry for me, Sudan”. Goo Soo Hwan’s new work begins after the death of Father Lee in 2010. These sad moments are narrated by his students, young people who were plunged into despair by the news of his death. A despair that did not last long, however: they soon realized that their task was to continue his mission, albeit in different ways.This is the key to the whole film: in South Sudanese culture, it is embarrassing to cry in public, but the students cannot hold back their tears when they think of their teacher. And it is precisely by sharing with him the love he gave them that tears soon give way to joy, and today gratitude towards Father Lee shines through in the gestures of his students. “Certain realities of life can only be seen with eyes washed clean by tears.”The director is keen to stress that the film does not only show the path of the missionary’s students to the profession of doctor: “They have become people who give: it is about how they live their lives. And they live exactly the life of their ‘spiritual father’. They showed me what happiness is and what authority really means.” “I wanted to know if the tears had changed the students. Well, their lives have changed a lot,” adds the director, who also has more than 30 years of experience as an investigative journalist. (F.B.) (Agenzia Fides, 27/9/2024)

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