Comunità di S.Egidio


ARCHIVIO


 

January, 2000

Sant�Egidio�s diplomacy of friendship
A lay Catholic movement dedicated to helping the needy
and mediating in international conflicts

 

An old woman barricades herself in a dilapidated building in the slums of an Italian city. She refuses to open her door. Her neighbours are convinced she�s becoming a derelict. A member of the Sant�Egidio community knocks at her door and starts to speak to her. She replies in monosyllables. He leaves but comes back later to continue a dialogue that may go on for months, even a year, until she agrees to open the door and let him in and finally start getting some help.

Using these skills in patient communication based on friendship, the community later made contact with a guerrilla chieftain hidden away for years in the heart of Africa, brought him out of his isolation and persuaded him to negotiate instead of fight.

�The Church is a home for everyone, especially the poor,� said Pope John XXIII, who set the Church on the road to modernization and opened it up to the world, moves which were endorsed by the Vatican II Council. In line with this, a group of Catholic students decided in 1968 to set up a movement which would not be an ngo but a Christian community where religious devotion went hand in hand with putting the Gospel into practice by personal commitment to the poor. Their leader was Andrea Riccardi, who now teaches history at Rome University and has been awarded Unesco�s Gandhi Medal for his commitment to a culture of peace.


A language of reconciliation
The Sant�Egidio community, which takes its name from the disused Roman church it has adopted as its headquarters, today has 20,000 members in some 300 grassroots communities in 34 countries. The community began by helping abandoned children in the slums of Rome, then went on to work with immigrants, the elderly, the homeless, the handicapped, Aids victims and many other groups of disadvantaged people in Europe and in developing countries of Asia, Latin America and Africa.

One country where Sant�Egidio (St. Giles in English) has been particularly active is Mozambique, where famine and war raged in the early 1980s. The fighting began against Portuguese colonial rule in 1963, stopped with independence in 1975, and started again a few years later for external and internal reasons. The apartheid regime in South Africa wanted to destabilize all its neighbours who refused to recognize its regional dominance. Socialist-ruled Mozambique was a front-line target.

Humanitarian aid provided by the Sant�Egidio community disappeared into a bottomless pit because it was impossible to solve the hunger problem as long as a war was going on. The search for a traditional mediator�a state or an international organization�failed because diplomats couldn�t make contact with an invisible armed opposition and thought, wrongly as it turned out, that the war would not end until apartheid disappeared in South Africa.

The community reluctantly saw it had no choice but to act as a mediator. Lacking experience, it had to learn what to do as it went along. It invented a �language of reconciliation� whose syntax it picked up as a humanitarian organization working for the poor.

Sant�Egidio had discovered how to talk to all kinds of people from its compassionate work in a wide variety of constantly changing situations in which its members related to the poor, shared their lives, spoke their language, went to the same places they did and regarded them not as welfare cases but as full members of society.


Turning weakness into strength
Such a dialogue might be regarded as ineffective when the resources to overcome poverty are unavailable. But the community refuses to give in to these circumstances. Experience has shown that its mere presence can be vitally important, even if it doesn�t lead to any immediate results. In the age of the Internet, isolation, or solitude, is a serious ailment of our time. Personal isolation or loneliness can drive a person mad. The isolation of a movement, a party or a country can lead to war, especially if the international community stands idly by. The persistence of wars in Africa�in southern Sudan, for example�provides ample proof of this.
The community�s work has also taught it to be patient. When the foreign minister of an important country travels to mediate in a given situation, he or she has limited time yet their mission must lead to results. They cannot risk failing because failure would damage their credibility, because there is pressure from public opinion or because elections are imminent. But how can conflicts that have taken shape over several decades be solved in a matter of months? The community has no target date for results.
Peace negotiations started at the same time in Angola and Mozambique. In Angola, they were completed in three and a half months, and it was said that the talks in Mozambique were dragging on. Many people told the mediator he was wasting his time and theirs too. The negotiations were indeed long�11 sessions over 27 months, between June 1990 and October 1992. Every detail was carefully scrutinized because the mediator regarded himself as a beginner. Today the Mozambique peace agreement is still holding, whilst sadly war has broken out again in Angola.
The community�s weakness is also its strong point. It cannot mobilize an army or sign enormous cheques. This �weakness� is in fact a guarantee of its sincerity�that all it�s interested in is peace-making, that it has no weapons except its belief in friendship and peace. So different sides come to trust it and talk about their problems freely, without the restraints they would feel if dealing with official bodies as part of the power plays that are inevitable in such contacts. This familiarity with the warring parties goes hand in hand with the in-depth understanding of the societies in conflict, especially in Africa, that Sant�Egidio has gathered from its local grassroots communities.
A peace process is not just about negotiating and then signing a document. The follow-up is extremely complex. It involves development and democracy, reconciliation and remembering. The
community cannot do this by itself and has never sought to do so. It does not believe in parallel diplomacy but in promoting a synergy of resources and actions.


Gatherings to pray for peace
A peace accord�s chances of success depend mainly on those who sign it but also on civil society and the international climate. So Sant�Egidio encourages consistent and prolonged efforts by many other international parties�governmental and otherwise�to boost any peace process in which it is involved. Observers representing the United Nations and the governments of Italy, France, North America, Portugal, the United Kingdom and even South Africa took part in the final stage of the Mozambique negotiations.
These talks brought the community into the limelight and it acquired a reputation and credibility that have since been used by warring parties from Guatemala to Burundi, from Congo-Kinshasa to Kosovo and Algeria. In Algeria, Sant�Egidio managed to bring Muslim enemies to the negotiating table by using another of its methods, inter-religious dialogue.
For more than a decade, Sant�Egidio has organized international gatherings to pray for peace. These are a key factor in the language of reconciliation because they build a genuine culture of inter-religious peace. But Sant�Egidio�s commitment to peace continues to be an extension of its commitment to fight poverty, to which it still devotes 80 per cent of its efforts.

Mario Giro
head of West Africa Section, 
Sant�Egidio community