REINTERPRETATION
OF THE PRESENCES
IN THE FORMATION
AND EDUCATION OF TODAY
INTRODUCTION
"The
model we have inherited is not the whole model"
Not long ago, reading
a report from UNESCO called "Education: a hidden treasure" (Ed. Odile
Jacob, 1996) I was struck by the words of M. Jacques Delors, then President of
the European Commission, who defined our modern culture as "a culture
lacking in soul".
The man of today
goes through many experiences. In the First World, he is eaten up by
consumerism, by "progress", and so on. In the Third and Fourth
Worlds, it is by striving to better himself, by anxiety, by the need to
survive. And in the midst of all this, among the youth of today, the adults of
tomorrow, there is a growing indifference to fundamental verities.We find this
even in not a few of our Catholic educational establishments, in which the
mission of the school is not fully supported by the underlying culture.
The social
framework in which many of our educational projects are carried out is a new
one, which is taking over rapidly - an ambience which is multiethnic, multicultural,
secularized, and multi-religious. It is my opinion that we must rethink the
various "presences" in the light of the will to resolve the needs of
the young people of today, immersed as they are in social realities that are
for the most part highly conflicting both for their personal balance and their
social balance.
When we look at
the cultural situations and the challenges they bring, together with new
possibilities for evangelical and charismatic witness, we have to have the
AUDACITY not only to analyse the new realities and to take an "evangelical
consciousness" of them, but also and primarily to PROCLAIM with creative
fidelity new presences, new values and projects, new institutional language.
Fidelity to our charisma demands of us both at personal and institutional
levels, that we live "prepared for and attentive to" the social and
cultural tendencies that have so much influence on the formation, awareness,
values, and development of the personality of the young. We must be aware of
all this preparedness and attention in order to re-interpret and re-situate our
educational establishments. They exist for the young people, not for us.
Many times, torn
between the desire for the almost impossible and the confident yearning for the
possible, I have asked myself: "Is it possible nowadays in our educational
establishments, to give "new responses" to "new
challenges", without putting at risk the system in which we live, a system
which is largely the fruit of "old responses" to "old
challenges?"
The confidence our
Founders had in the evangelical vitality of the RELIGIOUS LIFE and in their
deeply evangelical "intuition", is something that pulls us strongly
to a "creative refounding" of our life, our works, our institutions.
Personally I have a strong belief in the impelling force of the charisma, in
its unrenounceable place in the deepest heart of the mission, but so often
swamped in a multitude of structures which accommodate themselves to the times.
A
"re-founding" will be "prophetic and creative" if it is
concerned to be RECOGNIZED in a NEW WAY OF LOOKING AT INSTITUTIONAL LIFE, and
in PRESENCES which, coming to life like a tree, including starting from lowly
beginnings, are capable of hearing the new cries of the people and of coming to
life in the new needs. This is what we mean when we talk so forcefully about
"displacement", "exodus", "frontier".
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