Holy See to be guest of honor at Turin Int'l Book Fair
(VIS) A press conference was held in the Holy See Press Office this morning to present
the Holy See's participation as a guest of honour at the 27th Turin International
Book Fair, to take place from 8 to 12 May. The speakers were: Cardinal Gianfranco
Ravasi, president of the Pontifical Council for Culture; Rolando Picchioni, president
of the for Books, Music and Cultural Activities; Fr. Giuseppe Costa, S.D.B., director
of Libreria Editrice Vaticana, and Ernesto Ferrero, editorial director of the Turin
International Book Fair.
The Holy See will be represented by a stand in the
form of a dome made out of books, explained Cardinal Ravasi. The plan incorporates
the design for the new Vatican Basilica by Donato Bramante; the 500th anniversary
of whose death is commemorated on 11 April.
The stand will be located in the
third pavilion of the complex, and will host cultural and artistic events including:
on Wednesday 7, a pre-inauguration concert performed by the choir of the Sistine Chapel;
on Friday 9, a cultural debate between Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi and a distinguished
non-believer; and on Saturday 10, the presentation by Cardinal Secretary of State
Pietro Parolin of a new book dedicated to the Holy Father and a dialogue on the first
year of Pope Francis' pontificate.
The Turin International Book Fair opened
its doors for the first time in 2001, and each year it invites a different country
to attend as a guest of honour. The participation of the Holy See this year, said
Rolando Picchioni, “not only constitutes an out of the ordinary presence, but in a
certain way has also shaped the spirit according to which the most important debates
and events are structured. … Its most relevant contribution is the profoundly international
and universal character of its constitutive and spiritual nature, and the marvelous
variety of ways in which the message and teaching of the Church is translated into
works of thought, reflection and literary and artistic creation”.
According
to Ernesto Ferrero, the Vatican participation offers “a substantial contribution to
the reflection that the Book Fair has promoted for years, posing questions on the
current meaning of concepts such as Time, History, Beauty, Creativity, the 'I', the
'Other', by means of mutations, impetuous but disordered, not managed or directed.
But it is precisely this function of governance that we must ask of books”.