FRANKFURT - 8 October 2004 - 343 words
Pope to publish new book : 'Memory and Identity'
Next Spring, the Pope is publishing a new book: 'Memory and Identity. Conversation between Millenniums,' Joaquin Navarro-Valls, director of the Holy See Press Office, announced at the Frankfurt Book Fair yesterday.
The book will be published by the Italian
publishing house Rizzoli, which published the Pope's "Opera
omnia filosofica," a volume of over 1,000 pages, as well
as other texts on literary criticism written by Karol Wojtyla.
The book, according to Navarro-Valls, is a work on the philosophy
of history, in which the Pope considers topics such as modern
democracy, liberty and human rights, the diverse concepts of nation,
fatherland and the state, the more than functional relationship
between nation and culture, the rights of man, the relationship
between Church and state. The common theme is one that characterizes
all of John Paul's philosophical and literary works: the great
mystery of man.
Asked how the book came about, the director of the Holy See Press
Office said it was a result of conversations the Pope had with
two Polish friends, Professors Josef Tishner and Krystof Michalski,
in his summer residence at Castelgandolfo in 1993.
"The two intellectuals asked the
Holy Father questions and he responded," said Navarro-Valls.
The conversations were recorded and later transcribed. The manuscript
was saved for some years until the Pope read it and decided to
make it into a book after having made some corrections.
Although the book makes reference to situations and facts on other
continents, the Pope, said Navarro-Valls, is primarily thinking
of Europe, in the dynamism of ideas that sometimes remain latent
over the centuries and that explain realities that would otherwise
be inexplicable. Among the questions that the Pope addresses are
themes on life and modern thought. The Pope answers these questions
with intellectual rigour. "We must learn," he writes,
"to go to the roots."
In 'Memory and Identity,' said Navarro-Valls, the Pope looks for
these roots, and at his relationship to the terrible moments
in our recent history, as well as the "innumerable positive
fruits" which have been the result of Western history. The
book causes the reader to think about the great problem of finding
the meaning of history. From this point of view, the author makes
an inestimable contribution to understanding the great historic
questions of our age.
The director of the Holy See Press Office said that in the book
John Paul II writes about the ideologies of evil, national socialism
and communism, and he explores their roots and the regimes that
resulted. In addition, he makes a theological and philosophical
reflection about how the presence of evil often ends up being
an invitation to do good. "Sometimes evil, in certain moments
of human existence, reveals itself as useful. Useful in the measure
in which it creates an occasion to do good," says the Pope
in a excerpt from the book.
In presenting the volume, Navarro-Valls said that John Paul II
is the first Pope to have books published commercially. 'Memory
and Identity' is his fifth book after 'Crossing the Threshold
of Hope,' 'Gift and Mystery,' 'Roman Triptych' and 'Arise and
Let us be Going.'
Source: VIS
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