en:primo-mazzolari
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- | ====== Primo Mazzolari ====== | + | ====== |
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+ | Don Primo Mazzolari (Cremona, 13 January 1890 - Cremona, 12 April 1959) was a well-known Italian priest, author, partisan and advocate for peace who believed in the power of non violence to solve conflicts. | ||
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+ | ===== Life ===== | ||
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+ | Primo Mazzolari was born in the early 1890s in Cascina San Colombano di Santa Maria del Boschetto, a rural village near Cremona. In 1902, he entered the seminary in the city. By the time he was a teenager, he had already developed a few ideas on the Church and society that he would continue to hold onto in his later years; these included faith in modernity (contrary to the rigid Catholic interpretation of it), patriotism of the Risorgimento movement, and a democratic outlook ("the future belongs to democracy: [...] it must be us Christians, who have the true democracy of Christ", | ||
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+ | Over the years spent in seminary, his thoughts developed and connected him to his classmate Annibale Carletti, who shared a modernist and reform-minded perspective. This fostered a strong bond of understanding and deep affection between the two seminarians, | ||
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+ | On August 24th, 1912, he was ordained as a priest in Verolanuova by Bishop Giacinto Gaggia, and subsequently was appointed the curate of Spinadesco on September 1st. On May 22nd, 1913, he was appointed the curate of Santa Maria del Boschetto. | ||
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+ | Out of his commitment to democratic interventionism, | ||
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+ | On the final day of 1921, he was assigned to be the parish priest in Cicognara. Ten years later, he was relocated to Bozzolo, his home for the rest of his life. | ||
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+ | Following the date of September 8, 1943, he was a supporter of the resistance movement, inspiring the younger generations to join in. He was arrested and freed shortly after, but he was forced to stay in seclusion and hidden until April 25, 1945. After the war, the Anpi of Cremona honored him for his efforts as a partisan. | ||
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+ | ===== The newspaper Adesso ===== | ||
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+ | In 1949, Don Primo Mazzolari founded the fortnightly Adesso, of which he was director. His writings, however, incurred the disapproval of the ecclesiastical authority, which ordered the paper to close in 1951. In July of the same year, the priest was additionally prohibited from preaching outside the diocese without permission and publishing articles without prior review from the church. The publication was able to resume in November, but Don Primo had to step down from his role as director. He continued to write some pieces under pseudonyms, some of which on the subject of peace and attracted more sanctions in 1954. These sanctions included a ban of preaching outside his own parish and a ban on publishing articles about social matters. His right-hand man, the engineer Giulio Vaggi, husband of Giulia Clerici and relative of the socialist leader Antonio Greppi, took over as director. Before his death in 2005, Vaggi created the autobiographical film L'uomo dell' | ||
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+ | ===== Thoughts ===== | ||
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+ | «He had too long a wheelbase and we found it hard to keep up with him. So he suffered and we suffered too. This is the fate of the prophets" | ||
+ | (Pope Paul VI) | ||
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+ | Since the 1950s, Don Primo Mazzolari had a social ideology that was close to the lower classes and to pacifist values, which caused him to be reprimanded and separated from the church in his parish of Bozzolo. Despite the institution' | ||
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+ | In 1955, Don Primo Mazzolari published 'You Do Not Kill' anonymously, | ||
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en/primo-mazzolari.1673794033.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/01/15 14:47 by omnipedia