La sua memoria è spesso sotto il peso di due giganti. Tra Montini e Wojtyla. Eppure il suo breve pontificato è fatto di intuizione e profezia.
| #Dio #Gesú #Religione #Santi #Santo #SpiritoSanto #Santa #Maria #Madonna #Preghiera #Preghiere #Chiesa #Chiese #Papa #Papi #Amen
| #Dio #Gesú #Religione #Santi #Santo #SpiritoSanto #Santa #Maria #Madonna #Preghiera #Preghiere #Chiesa #Chiese #Papa #Papi #Amen
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00:03It's morning, 7:30 am, September 29, 1978.
00:10Rome wakes up as always to the sound of traffic and the quick footsteps of workers.
00:16A normality that never seems to break.
00:23For this city, the great story is everyday life.
00:27Rome is the present time lived eternally.
00:31There is the Tiber, there are the hills and the treetops,
00:34the domes and bell towers that stand out from the Janiculum,
00:37the Colosseum and St. Peter's.
00:41A morning like any other, at least apparently.
00:46After 33 days of pontificate, Pope John Paul I died.
00:52This morning, September 29th, around 5.30am,
00:55the Pope's personal secretary, Father John McGee,
00:59entered the bedroom of His Holiness John Paul I,
01:03not having found it in the chapel as usual
01:05and found him dead in bed, with the light on,
01:07as a person intent on reading.
01:10The doctor who immediately arrived confirmed the death.
01:12presumably happened around 11pm yesterday
01:15for sudden death from acute myocardial infarction.
01:48The doctor who immediately arrived confirmed the death.
01:48and I found him in the chapel as usual.
01:52The doctor who immediately arrived confirmed the death.
01:53and I found him in the chapel as usual.
02:06The doctor who immediately arrived confirmed the death.
02:15and the church of Capito.
02:18The bells of Rome begin to ring in mourning. Albino Luciani, John Paul I, the sixth Italian Pope.
02:25coming from northern Italy in the twentieth century, the third as patriarch of Venice, has died.
02:38In 34 days the Pope managed to win over the affection.
02:42The official announcement was given at 7.30 by Vatican Radio, but after the broadcasts of the Italian RAI
02:51They released it and this shocked public opinion and took people by surprise, arousing disbelief.
03:03As you have seen, a night of mourning begins, the first night of mourning in the Vatican for just a month,
03:09from the last night of mourning after the death of Paul VI.
03:13It was something so strong, so unexpected and obviously unwanted.
03:19that we had some time to process it.
03:25So I was left with only this very strong and unfortunately negative impression.
03:48After just over a month, the pontificate of the Pope of smiles and amazement suddenly ends.
03:57It's a heartbreaking thing, a supernatural presence, just like that, because no one could think that the humanity of Pope John Paul II
04:09had this outpouring, had this impact, this incisiveness on the world.
04:15On the contrary, it turned out that way.
04:18The final emotion was the taking possession of San Giovanni del Terano.
04:23I have never seen such tension among the people listening to him.
04:28It is a serenity of dialogue, a spontaneous communication, just like conversation.
04:36She's really sorry to everyone. This morning when I found out, well, she did something really bad to me, because she was
04:42so good.
04:43I hurried, quickly prepared the girls to eat and came here right away to see it,
04:49because I'm really happy to go and see at least the body.
04:52What did you like most about this Pope?
04:55Sincerity, kindness and everything else.
05:00And you?
05:01Well, because he was very nice, he was always laughing.
05:05And then he was good.
05:10Listen, how did you feel when you heard the news this morning?
05:13Well, well, bad. He looked, he was like a Pope John, in short.
05:18He looked like a loyal Pope.
05:19He gave confidence, he inspired a lot of confidence in the citizens, in everything.
05:25TV, radio news, and newspapers are starting to churn out special editions.
05:3133 days, such a short pontificate.
05:34The kind, sincere, good profile of the pontiff,
05:38flows through the images that tell the places of origin in Veneto.
05:42His ecclesiastical career, his period in Venice,
05:46the warm ascension to the throne of Peter.
05:49One wonders, how did John Paul die?
05:54Mrs. Luciani, was it known that you were ill?
05:57Not from the heart.
05:58From the heart, no?
05:58Absolutely not, not from the heart.
06:04The official statement from the Holy See speaks of sudden death
06:08which occurred around 11pm the night before.
06:11Sister Vincenza Taffarello had prepared the usual coffee
06:15that Luciani, leaving his rooms,
06:20he would then drink before entering the chapel to say mass.
06:26That morning, however, Sister Vincenza realizes
06:29that the coffee placed at the entrance of the sacristy
06:33it had not yet been drunk by the Pope.
06:36So he knocks, there is no answer,
06:40he calls Sister Margherita Marin, who was already there in the meantime,
06:44he enters and finds the Pope lying in his bed
06:49with the light still on
06:51and together they verify that the Pope is dead.
07:00The Pope's sudden death sows grief and confusion.
07:04Why not declare right away?
07:06who was found dead by Sister Taffarello?
07:10That morning the most serious omission
07:12was not to say it openly
07:15who was a nun, and in this case two nuns,
07:18to find the lifeless body of John Paul I.
07:23It would have been much easier to tell the truth.
07:27Unfortunately they were nuns, they were women.
07:30and at that time these qualms were still persistent, so to speak.
07:41The reconstruction of his death based on unconfirmed rumours
07:45harms the memory of Albino Luciani.
07:53He had been chosen by the cardinals for his being a pastor,
07:57bishop of the council and gentle man of the church,
07:59but firm in governing.
08:15Vatican Radio is currently announcing
08:18that the Pontiff has been elected.
08:23The Pontiff, the Pope, has been elected.
08:31Here, there was an announcement, here, it should open soon
08:37and behold, it opens, the curtain of the shed opens
08:40of St. Peter's Basilica.
08:48We have a Pope!
08:50Applause!
08:53Applause!
08:57Applause!
08:59Thank you all.
09:39Yesterday morning I went to the Sistine Chapel to vote peacefully, never would I have imagined what was about to happen.
10:03I have neither the wisdom of Pope John nor the preparation and culture of Pope Paul,
10:14but they are in their place.
10:16I must try to serve the Church, I hope you will help me with your prayers.
10:57Canale d'Agordo, a small town 976 meters above sea level, 45 kilometers from Belluno.
11:05Our family, like almost all families in the village at that time, was a very poor family.
11:13Those were times when the wealth of families was judged by the number of animals they had in the stable,
11:20at most three, in the case of people with multiple environments.
11:24The village, nestled between Alpine valleys and Dolomite panoramas, was a place of emigration at the beginning of the twentieth century.
11:33The little money came from the work of the grandfather who, like almost all the men in the village,
11:39he periodically traveled abroad for work.
11:58Albino Luciani was born on October 17, 1912.
12:03His father, Giovanni Battista, has been working abroad for years, like many of his fellow villagers.
12:09His mother, Bortola Tancona, is a woman of sincere religious practice.
12:17They tell me that there are altar boys from Malta here.
12:21Come one, please.
12:23No, one.
12:31The altar boys of Malta.
12:38Who served in St. Peter's for a month.
12:42So what's your name?
12:44James.
12:45James.
12:47And listen, have you ever been sick?
12:50No.
12:51Never?
12:52Have you ever been sick?
12:55Not even a fever?
12:57Oh, how lucky.
13:06But when a child is sick, who brings him a little broth, a little medicine?
13:17Isn't that Mom?
13:19Here, after you grow up.
13:22And mom gets old.
13:25And you become a great gentleman and the poor mother will be sick in bed.
13:30So, who is it that will bring mommy some milk, some medicine, who will take a look?
13:36Who is?
13:38Me and my brother.
13:39Bravo.
13:40He and his brothers.
13:41And I like that.
13:42Did you understand?
13:49Luciani was born in 1912, but from 1915 to 1918 that land became the border area.
13:56And so there were the rear, there were soldiers in the house.
14:00It is said that 1917 was the year of hunger.
14:10Luciani himself, on September 3, 1978, speaking to those of Belluno, said
14:16You described me as someone who comes from a poor family.
14:20And he says, you've described it too much, but I really did suffer from hunger that year.
14:40After the war he began his scholastic and Christian education.
14:47School in the village, first communion and then confirmation in the village church.
14:55Luciani was an extremely cultured person.
14:59Even as a child, as his only entertainment, he always tried to read something.
15:07We must also consider that those were times when it was not easy to have reading material available.
15:13However, every occasion was a good one to read something.
15:18And he always had this attitude of not reading for fun,
15:22but to read to learn and above all to remember.
15:27And he emphasized that he would have to use this type of information in the future.
15:52At the age of 11 he entered the seminary in Feltre.
16:05Don Filippo Carli, the enlightened parish priest of Canale, will be instrumental in his formation and vocation.
16:14But it is to his father, who in his wanderings around the world in search of a job,
16:18he had come closer to socialist ideas, which must ask for consent for priestly life.
16:25I hope that when you become a priest, his father answers him affirmatively in a letter,
16:31you will be on the side of the poor.
16:34Christ was on their side.
16:42After Feltre, Albino went on to study at the Gregorian seminary in Belluno.
16:54In the summer he returns to his family, among his mountains and valleys,
16:59and his commitment to the parish.
17:02Don Filippo Carli, towards Luciani,
17:04have this attention to have him put a library in order
17:08which was not his personal library, but was the parish library.
17:12And Luciani, along with some others, but he was the first actor,
17:16he reorganized 1200 or more volumes, cataloging them one by one.
17:22His theological education, complete and timely,
17:26leads him to be ordained a priest before the age of 23
17:30which canon law sets as a limit.
17:34He celebrates the first mass in the village church.
17:40He was called to the seminary in Belluno at the age of just twenty-five
17:44to act as vice-rector and to teach.
17:56In 1942 he enrolled for a doctorate at the Pontifical Gregorian University.
18:03In February 1947 he obtained his doctorate in theology
18:08with the thesis The origin of the human soul according to Antonio Rosmini.
18:14The future bishop, patriarch and then pope
18:17he was absolutely not a simple village priest.
18:23However, his forays into Rome put him to the test.
18:26The body suffers so much that pneumonia
18:29he keeps it at rest for a few months.
18:32In these years we know what is in between,
18:34the difficulties of moving, the war, the danger.
18:37Yet Albino Luciani committed himself to this
18:41always returning to Belluno after the exams
18:44to sharpen the seminarians.
18:46Let's say the physicist asked for an account of this effort
18:51because in 1947 he returned, as they said then, a graduate but ill.
19:06In 1949 he published a booklet entitled
19:10Catechesis in crumbs.
19:12The dedication is all for his mother.
19:16We are objects of God
19:19of an everlasting love.
19:25She's a father, and even more so, she's a mother.
19:34On December 27, 1958 he received episcopal consecration
19:39from the hands of Pope John XXIII in the Vatican Basilica
19:43and on January 11, 1959 he makes his entrance
19:47in the Diocese of Vittorio Veneto.
19:51He chooses as his episcopal motto
19:53umilitas, like San Carlo Borromeo
19:55together with three stars
19:57symbol of faith, hope and charity.
20:02He had been repeatedly cursed to become a bishop.
20:05From Rome, it is said,
20:07the request was rejected because of poor health.
20:28and there's Pope John's famous joke
20:32that in the end he decided
20:34no, this one should become a bishop.
20:37And when they repeated it to him
20:38look, he is a person who has poor health
20:41he told him, well, he'll die a bishop.
20:46In the ten years as bishop of Vittorio Veneto
20:49Luciani's pastoral action
20:50it is mainly oriented towards direct contact with the faithful
20:54showing sensitivity towards problems
20:56of a world that is changing rapidly.
20:58The ancient peasant world
21:00gives way to the industrial and modern one.
21:05My uncle was considered in the family
21:07absolutely one of the locals.
21:10Among other things, the house where we were born
21:13and we grew up
21:14it's the same one he was born in
21:16at a certain point
21:18he sold his share to his brother
21:20who was starting to have several children.
21:24The house has been renovated, etc.
21:26and on that occasion I remember that once
21:28he said jokingly
21:29well, I'll give you my share
21:32but, come on, maybe reserve me a little room
21:35for when I'm old
21:36that I might need a place to go.
21:53Between 1962
21:55and 1965
21:57Bishop Luciani
21:59participate in the four sessions
22:01of the Second Vatican Council.
22:04The event that changes the face
22:07of the Contemporary Church
22:08Luciani also changes.
22:10I'm learning theology again
22:12he tells his faithful
22:14to whom it transmits teachings and news
22:16which the Conciliar Assembly pronounces.
22:21Luciani got involved
22:24in this new experience of the Church
22:27he listened to the other Bishops
22:28study
22:29having books and books brought to him
22:31it was its specificity
22:33when there was a problem
22:34it is studied
22:35Luciani was like that.
22:41he was a shepherd close to men
22:45focused on the essentials of faith
22:48with an extraordinary ability
22:52of cultural and social sensitivity.
22:56this in summary
22:58it's a bit of a portrait
22:59what a stale cliché
23:03unfortunately though
23:04he relegated
23:05to a superficial simplicity
23:08without thickness.
23:22what class are you in?
23:24fifth grade
23:26Well
23:26then wait
23:28you always want to stay
23:30in fifth grade
23:31or next year
23:33do you want in another class?
23:35you always want to be in fifth gear
23:36oh but
23:39At that time
23:40this child
23:42he is different from the Pope
23:43because when I was in fourth grade
23:45I was saying
23:45oh if I'll be in fifth grade
23:47the Lord said
23:48to all Christians
23:50you are the light of the world
23:52you are the salt of the earth
23:54become perfect
23:55how perfect is my Father
23:57which is in the frosts
23:57so never stop
24:04from the medieval castle
24:06of San Martino
24:06from Vittorio Veneto
24:07Albino Luciani
24:09descends towards the lagoon
24:25It's the end of 1969
24:28when Paul VI
24:30he names it
24:31Patriarch of Venice
24:39in the entrance homily
24:41to the city
24:41he writes
24:42I am the dust
24:44the office of Patriarch
24:47and the Diocese of Venice
24:48they are the big things
24:49combined with the dust
24:54since however
24:55the secretary
24:56which is inherited
24:58from the previous cardinal
24:59he didn't have a driving license
25:00as often happens in Venice
25:02he asked me
25:04if I for a few months
25:05I could
25:05since I was in Padua
25:07I could drive his car
25:09the need
25:11also because
25:11it's not like he used it very often
25:13in Venice
25:14other means are used
25:15I made myself available
25:18that's how I learned
25:19even a little bit
25:20to be an employee
25:21I did
25:22I beat him
25:23the speeches
25:24he gave him a hand
25:26in research
25:27in the library
25:29and things like that
25:30it was very interesting
25:36in 1972
25:37Paul VI
25:38on the road
25:39towards the congress
25:40from Udine
25:41stops in Venice
25:43to Luciani
25:44many dioceses
25:45they opposed
25:47they consider it
25:49not up to par
25:50of the task
25:50not enough
25:52hieratic
25:53princely
25:56maybe that's why
25:57Paul VI
25:58publicly
25:59in front of the crowd
26:00of St. Mark's Square
26:01imposes on him
26:02his stole
26:06Pope Paul
26:07she rose
26:08the stole
26:09and he put it on me
26:11on the shoulders
26:11I am never
26:12became so red
26:16in that period
26:18we had
26:18a visit
26:19in patriarchy
26:21of a group
26:22of Polish priests
26:23guided
26:24from their bishop
26:25who were going to Rome
26:28and in the evening
26:29at dinner
26:30I remember
26:31what he told me
26:33you saw
26:34these people
26:34you saw
26:35how poor they are
26:36they have many problems
26:37this and that
26:38but
26:39there in Poland
26:41there is a bishop
26:42that many people talk about
26:44they speak well
26:45and what will he do
26:47a lot of road
26:48in the church
26:55the initial reluctance
26:57of some environments
26:58Venetians
26:59it comes completely
27:00abandoned
27:01when the patriarch
27:02Luciani visits
27:02the sick
27:03talk to people
27:05he hangs out with the workers
27:06that in those years
27:07they live in precariousness
27:09and labor unrest
27:11he made an intervention
27:13to a synod
27:13once
27:14he was patriarch of Venice
27:15at one of the first synods
27:17and made a proposal
27:18that was coming
27:19from the conference
27:20Episcopal Church of the Tri-Veneto Region
27:21that one percent
27:23of all income
27:24of ecclesiastical entities
27:25it was the portion
27:27for the poor
27:29close to the people
27:30Luciani shows himself
27:31even when he speaks
27:32use anecdotes
27:33examples taken
27:34from reality
27:35and above all he speaks
27:36in a very simple way
27:37showing a lot of attention
27:39for those who need to listen
27:40and with the aim
27:42to make oneself understood
27:43always from everyone
27:44Bishop Luciani
27:47he prepared the text
27:48he took care of him
27:49but he didn't care about it
27:50if not
27:51making him listen
27:52to the nuns
27:53he asked the nuns
27:54before the bishopric
27:55from Vittorio Veneto
27:56and then of the patriarchy
27:57of Venice
27:58that they told him
27:59it's understandable
28:00it's understood
28:07even when he spoke
28:09his voice
28:12it was rather
28:13cult
28:20that evening
28:23that blind old lady
28:26that I met
28:28in the evening
28:29that I got lost
28:31in the middle of the woods
28:32he told me
28:33if the road
28:36you don't know it
28:38I'll show it to you
28:40that I know her
28:43if you have it
28:44the strength
28:46to come after me
28:47and so much
28:49meanwhile
28:50I will give you
28:51a voice
28:52all the way down there
28:54where is it
28:55the cypress
28:56up there at the top
28:58where is it
29:00a cross
29:01I
29:02I answered
29:03will be
29:06but I find it strange
29:08that can guide me
29:10who doesn't see us
29:12the blind woman
29:15At that time
29:16he took me
29:17the hand
29:18and sighed
29:20walk
29:21era
29:22faith
29:321978
29:35it's a special year
29:38three popes
29:39they take turns
29:41two conclaves
29:43they close
29:43and they hatch
29:44an era
29:46August 26th
29:47he is elected
29:48successor
29:49of Peter
29:49Albino Luciani
29:50John Paul I
29:52in the first
29:53true conclave
29:54media
29:55of history
29:59I felt
30:00some time
30:01on the street
30:01someone
30:02what he told us
30:03but
30:03I have never had
30:06this impression
30:07that he could be elected
30:10he was elected
30:11the bridge
30:12the Pope
30:19Luciani was elected
30:21with a consent
30:23which was defined
30:24Almost
30:26plebiscitary
30:27that had the flavor
30:30of the acclamation
30:36his sober style
30:38not artificial
30:39colloquial
30:40you can see it right away
30:41from the first moments
30:46I hope that
30:47mine
30:49brothers
30:50cardinals
30:51they will help
30:52this poor man
30:53Christ
30:53Vicar of Christ
30:55to carry the cross
30:56have mercy
30:58of the poor
30:59New Pope
31:00that really
31:01he didn't wait
31:02to go up
31:03to this place
31:04try to help
31:05and let's search together
31:06to give to the world
31:08show of unity
31:09even sacrificing
31:11something
31:11the times
31:12but we will have
31:13everything to lose
31:14if the world
31:15he can't see us
31:16firmly united
31:19he was carrying on
31:20the priorities
31:22which had been
31:23of the council
31:24Vatican II
31:25and what are they
31:26these priorities
31:27the climb
31:29to the emerging ones
31:30of the Gospel
31:30a renewed one
31:32missionary work
31:33collegiality
31:35episcopal
31:36the service
31:37in poverty
31:39to the Church
31:41and the dialogue
31:43with contemporaneity
31:44and then
31:46the research
31:47of the unit
31:47of Christians
31:49and with
31:50the dialogue
31:51interreligious
31:52and a thread
31:54also conductor
31:55of all his
31:56interventions
31:57during that month
31:58little more than a pontificate
32:00the research
32:01of peace
32:05but in little more
32:06of a month
32:07they will see each other
32:08only flashes
32:09of the magisterium
32:10that could have
32:11to be
32:23thanks to all his
33:06I can assure you that I love you,
33:07that I only wish to enter into your service.
33:22Applause
33:32Entering at your service
33:35and make my poor strength available to everyone
33:40the little I have and that I am.
33:56Thank you all.
34:19Thank you all.
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