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19/05/2001 |
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Andrea Riccardi is a professor of contemporary history at the Third University of Studies in Rome. But the 50-year-old Italian is much more widely known as the founder of the international Sant�Egidio community, one of the most promising lay movements to emerge since Vatican II. Riccardi�s father was a bank president who was largely uninterested in religion. But animated by his own faith, 18-year-old Andrea and some of his friends moved from Rome�s wealthy neighborhoods to the city�s impoverished outskirts in 1968 and 1969. By 1973, the young people were meeting to read Scripture and pray each night in the St. Egidio Church in the Trastevere area of Rome. According to Sant�Egidio and the World, Riccardi�s 1996 book about the community, the young activists worked and went to school in the city by day. At night, they roomed in basements in Trastevere to establish solidarity with immigrants, the unemployed, the elderly and lonely. Early efforts to serve included an outreach to the elderly and homebound and the establishment of a day care in a neighborhood where a baby had been bitten by rats. Since then, the tiny group of idealistic teenagers gathered together by Riccardi has grown into an ecclesial community with 40,000 members in 60 nations including the U.S., where Sant�Egidio affiliates have been founded in New York and Boston. Along with serving the poor, Sant�Egidio has acted as a peacebroker in countries like Mozambique, where the community played a role in the 1992 negotiations that ended 16 years of civil war. Sant�Egidio also has been active in building opposition to capital punishment. gathering 2.7 million of the 3.2 million signatures of death penalty opponents that were submitted to the United Nations. The community was nominated for the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize and received the 2001 Felix Houphouet Boigny UNESCO peace prize in February. Riccardi recently received University of Notre Dame�s annual Award for International Humanitarianism, given previously to such individuals as Jimmy and Rosalyn Carter, Mother Teresa of Calcutta, Jean Vanier and Brother Roger of Taize. He spoke with Register correspondent Catherine M. Odell. Odell: Please tell how the Sant�Egidio Community was born, when you and your friends were just high school students at Virgilio High School in Rome. What kept you going in these early years of community life? Besides Jesus, who were the patron saints or models for you then? How did Pope John Paul II become a friend of Sant�Egidio Community? What are your hopes for the Sant�Egidio Community?
Catherine M. Odell
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