(Vatican Radio ) Marking the feast of St. Ignatius Loyola founder of the Society of
Jesus in the Jesuits’ mother church, the Gesu, Rome, July 31st last, Father
General Adolfo Nicolás spoke of the need for Europe to see the current crisis also
as an opportunity.
The leader of the largest male religious order in the
Church also said the ‘old continent’ needs to look beyond its own small borders, to
Asia and Africa, which can give us a new energy and help us understand what being
part of the human family really means.
Listen to his interview with Vatican
Radio’s Stefano Leszczynski:
Talking
about the importance of family: can it be a platform on which to build a new idea
of humanity in the present crisis in Europe? In some ways we can say that,
yes, the best comparison we can make is exactly with humanity. We are becoming
more and more aware of what ecology means for the human family and much more of what
the human family itself means . So, at the time of Ignatius, there went through a
tremendous historical change, a cultural and society change, and they had put aside
the old presuppositions which were limited to a small Europe, where they thought the
differences were absolute or almost. But Europe is so small and now we know that Asia
has cultures that are much more different than any European difference can be. Then
we have Africa and we are only beginning to discover the wealth, the depth and the
values of humanity that we find in Africa. So these are all signs of hope that we
need to welcome, because they are going to enrich and give us anew the energy that
seems to be lost in great parts of Europe. So we have a new élan, a new perspective,
a new horizon for humanity and I think we have to welcome it.
So the crisis
is an opportunity to renew the human being…,
Yes, exactly. So the crisis
is never what you think? A crisis is a new opportunity. In Chinese, Japanese, Korean
the word for crisis is “Kiki”: the first “Ki” meaning “danger” and the second “ki”
meaning “opportunity”. So in all these traditions it is very clear that it is through
crisis that we grow, like any human being. I myself think that I have grown more in
the most difficult times [of my life]. When everything goes smoothly, as we thought
it would thirty years ago, there is little growth. But now, when things get difficult,
we have an opportunity to really deepen what is most human, what is most real to each
one of us.