- Alex Zanotelli
Father Alex Zanotelli born
August 26 ,1938 , Livo,Trento, Italy ) is a member of the Combonian missionaries inVerona, Italy . He is the founder of Italian movements whose goals include social harmony and equality.= Biography =
Early life
In the early 1960s, Zanotelli moved to
Cincinnati, Ohio to attend a course on theology while he was in high school. In 1964, after completing his theological studies in Cincinnati, he was ordained a priest.udan and the Nuba
As a combonian missionary, he left for
Southern Sudan , which was plagued by civil war and where he stayed for eight years. The local government eventually pressured him to leave because of his openChristian witness and the activesolidarity he showed theNuba people. The reasons cited by the government included Zanotelli's inclusion of African traditional ceremonials in mass celebrations. Vatican authorities also objected to this practice, although Zanotelli received permission from localCatholic bishop s. This annoyed both the localSudan ese authorities (which feared a dangerous mixture between a foreignreligion and the local rites and ceremonies of a downcast people), and seniorprelate s in Rome who were finding it hard to accept thereforms brought on by theSecond Vatican Council . His sermons denounced injustices while exposing the responsibilities of corrupt government and administration officials who filled their pockets with both international and local aid funds.Director of "Nigrizia" magazine in Verona
The house of the
combonians inVerona was a quiet place of gathering for most of the seniorpriests coming home from the mission fields, but it also hosted a printing company, publishing two different magazines: "The little missionary" and "Nigrizia", a magazine providing news about the various missions around the world and was first published back in 1883. In 1978 Zanotelli became director of "Nigrizia" and worked to make it more of an information monthly, with the goal to be summed up in his statement: "To be atAfrica 's service, specifically 'the voice of those who have no voice" to radically criticize the political-economical system of the north of the world and the way it produces more and more misery in the south, destroying the most beautiful, significant, authentical African values."Over the next decade, in his magazine Zanotelli took more specific stands on
weapons dealing, on thecooperation for development having turned into an entangled business, on South Africanapartheid . All these matters had been taken on steadfastly and systematically, with the collaboration of the missionaries present on the different fields.In 1987, some political and Vatican leaders urged him to leave the direction of "Nigrizia". He was practically fired. At that time Zanotelli faced continuous attacks, but the goal was to undermine the growth and diffusion of the recently born movement he had inspired.
He denounced publicly the senior Italian political
leadership of the time, includingGiulio Andreotti ,Giovanni Spadolini ,Bettino Craxi andFlaminio Piccoli . He actually anticipated theTangentopoli season. In January 1985 he published in the magazine aneditorial titled “"The Italian" "face of African famine"”, an open and cutting exposure of the system aroundThird World aid. He commented that Tangentopoli could be exposed then, they had all the clues. From Africanfamine he passed on to the arms trade and environmental problems, and exposed what he regarded as the entanglement between the political class and business. "Spadolini" on the ’"Espresso"' magazine, attacked heavily the so-called "red priests", to the point of accusing him of incitement to political delinquency and internationalterrorism .”The period 1985-87 resulted in a hard time, with part of the Vatican
hierarchy and of the "old missionaries" trying to bend him or expel him. Zanotelli described it as "a time of great personal suffering" which led him to a spiritual crisis and to doubting: "Am I really sure I told the truth? Can it be possible 50 millionItalians are unable to see these scandals?” Hiscultural heritage has passed on to the following directors and editors of the magazine, and still keeps "Nigrizia" alive.Korogocho, or Hell on earth
In the local language the name
Korogocho means confusion, chaos. Zanotelli stayed in Korogocho, one of the many shantytowns surroundingNairobi , (Kenya ), until 2001. He founded many small Christian communities and a workers' cooperative for recycling, which employed many of the inhabitants of the shanties; he urged and helped in the Udada project, a community of former prostitutes involved in helping the women who wanted to change their life and at the same time he was working and struggling for the reforms about land distribution, one of the turning points in Kenyan politics.In Korogocho human degradation was frightful and Zanotelli's assumption "Maybe
God is sick" became the title of a book onAfrica , written byWalter Veltroni , former secretary of the Italian DS party (Democratici di Sinistra, left wing democratics), presently major ofRome and the only political leader (besides the American pastor and activistJesse Jackson ) who ever visited the place. In Korogocho God's sicknesses are namedAIDS ,hunger ,prostitution , drugs,alcoholism ,violence .The Lilliput Net
During a
sabbatical year Zanotelli spent in Italy in 1995-96, Zanotelli laid the foundation of theLilliput Net project, inspired by the structure of theinternet . The project is the result of meetings with Catholic associations, as well as inspiration fromJeremy Brecher andTim Costello , as outlined in their book "Global village or global pillage -" Economic reconstruction from the bottom up".In Italy, Zanotelli became a point of reference for the new global movement and the Lilliput Net. He took part in the organization and management of the European
Social Forum inFlorence , 6-10 November 2002. This forum confirmed the supremacy of the non-violent policy of the movement on a relatively small minority which (after the violence exploded during theGenoa G8 meeting in July 2001) was tempted to stand for a more violent manifestation of dissent.=Philosophy =
God
In a short excerpt from his
biography written by "Mario Lancisi", Zanotelli answers a question about his ever doubting God's existence:
*“Yes, I did. Times and again. When you find yourself in such unbelievable situations, facing thesuffering of innocents, just like it happened to me in Korogocho, the very first doubt is precisely about God' existence. Because you can't help but ask yourself: 'if You are there, how can You ever not intervene to put a stop to such atrocious suffering?' But, today, God ishelpless , He issick . He'll be able to recover when we will. We are the only ones who can and must do something about it, today. God can't. Not anymore. Each and everyone of us is important to help life come through...".
*Don't you think God is all mighty, then?
*“The more I think about it the more I realize that maybe God is not all powerful the way we believe Him to be. He is the God of thecross . Why didn't He answer theprayer ofJesus on the cross? It is a mystery. Maybe He is a weak God, Who sets limits to what He can do and will only be able to save us only through and by our will”.Civilization of care
In Florence, Zanotelli spoke clearly to the extremist wings of the movement and expressed the concept of "" civilization of" "tenderness"": " Active
non-violence is not merelypacifism , it is something different. I started readingGandhi ,Martin Luther King , Don Milani,Mazzolari and they helped me to realize it had beenJesus ofNazareth who first practised non violence, the same non violence that was crushed by the Romanimperialism , inGalilee . I'd like to beg of you, with all my heart, to find the courage for such a radical choice: non-violence. The present system is naturally violent. We have to build a non violent system, a 'civilization of tenderness'."=External links=
*Nigrizia (http://www.nigrizia.it/)
*Beati i costruttori di pace (http://www.beati.org/)
*rete Lilliput (http://www.retelilliput.net/)
* [http://www.liberliber.it/biblioteca/z/zanotelli/index.htm A biography on Liber Liber and his free e-book "Sulle strade di Pasqua"]
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