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A historical and spiritual
document detailing the correspondence between Giorgio Montini and his
son Giovanni Battista
In 1986 Nello Vian's collection of Lettere ai familiari,
published by the Istituto Paolo VI of Brescia, consisted of 1,098
documents (letters, postcards, telegrams) which Giovanni Battista
Montini wrote between 1919 and 1943.
With familiari he referred to all the members of his family
with whom he corresponded, individually or collectively: his parents,
Giorgio Montini and Giuditta Alghisi Montini, his paternal grandmother,
Francesca Buffali Montini, his aunts and uncle on his father's side,
Maria, Elisabetta and Giuseppe Montini, and his brothers, Lodovico and
Francesco, during the period when they were living at home with their
parents. The following year, in Lettere a casa, Vian brought to
light another 18 messages that the very young Montini sent to his
relatives between 1915 and 1919.
The praiseworthy Brescian institute is now publishing the
correspondence between Giovanni Battista Montini and his father Giorgio
(G. Montini, G.B. Montini, Affetti familiari spiritualità
e politica. Carteggio 1900-1942, edited by Luciano Pazzaglia,
Brescia-Roma Istituto Paolo VI-Edizioni Studium, 2009 [Quaderni
dell'Istituto, 30]; €50).
There is a total of 427 documents, 106 of which were written by
Giovanni Battista
—
all formerly published in 1986 except for the first 10, which date from
the years of his childhood to 30 April 1918, of which only one letter
was published (in 1987)
—
and 321 of which were written by Giorgio. These latter have never been
published before.
In comparison with the 1986 and 1987 editions, now, for the first
time, it is possible to listen to the entire epistolary conversation
between father and son. In addition, Giovanni Battista wrote other,
hitherto unpublished, individual letters to his mother and to each of
his two brothers.
One could and should write at length about this book in which the
Istituto Paolo VI's long experience in editing correspondence and texts
by Montini is fully demonstrated.
All of the Institute's expert members played a part
—
from Renato Papetti to Caterina Vianelli (who edited the philological
edition of the letters, making an invaluable contribution to compiling
the notes) and to Lino Albertelli (who facilitated consultation of Pope
Montini's personal library and the library of the Istituto Paolo VI in
Brescia).
Thus this book is the result of team work and, in a certain sense, of
unanimity (indeed, the contributions of Anna Brichetti, Elisabetta
Luzzago Montini, Maria Ludovica Snider, Carissimo Ruggeri, Renata
Bressanelli and Sara Lombardi should not be overlooked). Thanks to them
the accuracy of the presentation of the texts is accompanied by very
detailed descriptions of events, circumstances, situations and reports,
spanning "important" history as well as local and family history. This
is therefore an exemplary collection of letters that is also
extraordinarily rich in content.
In the comprehensive introduction of almost 200 pages which almost
seems to take the form of a monograph, Luciano Pazzaglia carefully
reviews the productive intersection of the paths of the two protagonists
in the period covered by the correspondence.
It was a natural step for Giorgio, from being editor of Il
cittadino di Brescia (from 1881) and leader of the Catholic movement
of Brescia (in which he gathered the testimony of Giuseppe Tovini, who
died in 1897), to move onto assume national responsibilities. In 1917 he
became President of the Electoral Union (for the organization of
Catholic participation in administrative and political battles) and then
in 1919 was elected deputy in the ranks of Luigi Sturzo's "Partito
Popolare" [Peoples' Party].
In the meantime young Battista was growing up, at home, at the "Collegio
Arici", at the "Oratorio della Pace" and at the seminary (until his
ordination on 29 May 1920). He was sent to Rome to continue his studies.
So it was that at the beginning of the 1920s father and son would
meet to spend brief periods together in Rome. Between them a mature
dialogue developed. It continued through the important experiences and
trials of Fascism that had come to power in Italy, of the
Conciliation and of the consolidation of totalitarianism in the 1930s,
when clear signs of the catastrophic Second World War were looming up.
Giorgio Montini died in the middle of the war, on 12 January 1943, at
the age of 84. His wife Giuditta died soon after him on 17 May.
The correspondence offers us a testimony and an interpretation of all
these experiences. In them, as the book's title effectively indicates,
family affection
—what
tender, human love breathes through these letters!
—
is combined with a spirituality that truly orients all things to the
service of God, to understanding and fulfilling his will, and thereby
also illuminates the historical and political evaluations, decisions,
opinions and states of mind.
The father
—
as the number of letters sent by each of them demonstrates
—
wrote to the son more often than the son to the father. While with the
passing years the father was reducing his commitments, the son was ever
more absorbed by his increasing responsibilities (from 1937 he was
Substitute of the Secretariat of State), caught up in paperwork and
business matters "which, although they are not always linked to the
loftier thinking from which they stem and to which they aspire
—
fill rather than satisfy the heart" (Giovanni Battista, 1 December
1942).
On several occasions Battista, feeling
dismayed "in the midst of this incessant and implacable bureaucratic
work" (Giovanni Battista, 13 July 1940), apologized for not writing more
often since his work "invades every available moment, tranquillity and
thought and is so demanding
—
because of the excessive number of grave things one is obliged to think
about and do
—
that it leaves the heart ever unfulfilled and the task ever incomplete"
(Giovanni Battista, 22 April 1938).
Yet the unanimity of sentiments and the
spirit that he shared with the world from which he came and the presence
of his relatives in his love and thoughts are so vivid that he must
never have experienced any remorse for having forgotten them.
It is impossible to give a more detailed
analysis of the texts in the brief space of a presentation that is
intended to be simply an invitation to pick up the book. These texts may
be read in many ways, following the multiple paths of interpretation
that Pazzaglia perceptively suggests.
It is possible to follow in them the
slow development of positions on democracy and on the political
commitment of Catholics and the reactions and comments on daily events;
similarly one can note how the events of "important" history are mixed
with small family happenings in a dialogue that always has in the
background, whether or not it is expressed, the desire of both
correspondents to serve the Lord on the paths that his Providence will
reveal to them.
By comparison the father seems to be the
happier of the two, the most courageous, the most serene even in the
trials of old age, in the progressive loneliness caused by the death of
so many of his travelling companions on the journey of life (Defendente
Salvetti in 1933, Giovanni Grosoli in 1937, Filippo Meda in 1939,
Filippo Crispolti in 1942) in the darkest hours of the Italian homeland
that he served and loved as a Catholic.
This correspondence therefore
constitutes a historical, but also a spiritual document in which the
closeness of a discreet family circle, far removed from any ostentation,
is revealed naturally in the light of a faith that constantly enlivens
every step, from beginning to end, and for this very reason unites the
various careers of the members of the family.
On 30 November 1919, the day of his
tonsure, Battista expressed "the gratitude I must have to those who
brought me up to enjoy such good fortune [that is, the supernatural
destiny and vocation], to my family, to you, dear Papa and to our
forebears, who through faith have bound us for ever to the Lord and his
Gospel".
And then he straight away connects his
father's political militancy, amid the "clamour" of Roman life, with the
priestly journey on which he was setting out: "But I know that I have
learned from you to refer external, human events to the spiritual
principles of the Christian conscience and it is precisely from this
that our policy draws its purpose and strength; and I hope, indeed your
telegram assures me of it, that I have in you a continuous remembrance
that links the business and your work over there to the very humble work
of my spiritual life, like two forces which, in spite of being unequal
and different, work together for the same social purpose: the Kingdom of
God".
At the other end of this moving
conversation between "my beloved Father", and "your Father", having
turned his gaze to the tragic situation in the Europe of his time,
Giorgio likewise linked his distant son's work to his own, as if it were
a vicarious continuation of it: "My heart is wrung in the face of daily
events that show what agitation is rife in the society in which we live:
Russia, Mexico, Spain, even the poor, most Catholic Spain that should
have had its own stock of resistance.
"And will Italy be immune from
contagion? Will it keep its providential religious function at the heart
of Catholicism? How necessary it is to work in depth whereas we live so
superficially as Catholics!
"I would like to be able to do something
too, and I now feel the full truth of that apostrophe of St Philip to
the young: 'Blessed are you who have time to do good!'. You, my dear,
you are doing it and will do it. Have trust in Providence who will never
let you lack strength: Do something too on my behalf, for when I could
have done it I uselessly wasted so much time" (Giorgio, 28 April 1936,
p. 535).
Hence this volume of correspondence is
of great historical relevance but also of special and all-consuming
human beauty, characterized by delicate tenderness and affection that
are revealed above all in moments of trial.
When, in 1932 the first attack was
unleashed against Fr Battista, accused of "liturgism" in his work among
Catholic university students, Giorgio consoled him during the storm:
"Dear Fr Battista, you can well believe whether or not the hearts of
your mother and father, always beside your own heart, have shared your
suffering: but, knowing you to be sincere, we have also had the
consolation of seeing that you have faced the tribulations with manly
fortitude and Christian patience, defending yourself as a duty and
suffering humbly.
"We too sought to imitate you; to suffer
together, to offer the Lord the suffering and to cherish it for life and
beyond life is to lighten the burden. We do not doubt that everything
will turn out to be a blessing to you. In my long and busy life, the
Lord, knowing me to be weak, has more than once wished to make me see,
even here below, how from evil or from what has clashed with our limited
vision, the best would always come.
"From this you may derive great comfort
in which to trust: you will see that it will be the same for you, but
you know that the more devout and humbly patient you are, the more
abundant the Lord's graces will be. We are all praying for you and for
your work" (Giorgio, 18 May 1932).
However, at the end of the journey the
roles were reversed and it was he, "your old Father" as he called
himself, who entrusted to the filial devotion and priestly zeal of
Battista "my weakness, my inertia, the carelessness that is so easy and
so dangerous when relatively good health masks reality instead of
evoking the inevitable sunset", thus confiding to the charity of his
son's prayers "these last stages that can be neither long nor numerous
but are the crucial ones" (Giorgio, 3 July 1939).
The son, after he became Pope, was to
recall with prudent discretion his father from whom, as he remembered on
29 June 1963, he had received "together with natural life so great a
share of our spiritual life".
And in Dialogues avec Paul VI he
was to tell Jean Guitton that it was to Giorgio that he owed "the
examples of courage, the urgent need never to give in supinely to evil,
the oath never to prefer life to the reasons for life. His teaching may
be summed up in a word: being a witness. My father was not afraid".
This extraordinary correspondence
—
in which a father and son, an old man and a
young one, a layman and a priest, encouraged each other, edified each
other and comforted each other on the journey toward the Kingdom of God
—
confirms it.
A son's solidarity in sickness
The following is the translation of
Giovanni Battista's letter to his father ...
11
October 1942
Dear Papa,
I knock at your door and come to keep you company for a moment. I
know that once again you have been obliged to keep to your bed and to
exercise some patience. I cannot say how worried I am about you. Amidst
the pressing anxieties of my work I am troubled by saddening thoughts of
you. But then I think of your courage, of the serenity you always taught
us, of the good that loving Providence certainly conceals even in this
suffering and of the many far greater sorrows in the world and I take
heart. Let us pray and console each other. I am sorry not to be there, I
do not say to nurse you for I am not even capable of being a nurse, but
to share with you and with the loved ones who are close to you the small
and great..."
The following is a translation of
excerpts from the correspondence.
The paths on which [Providence] leads
us, on which it leads you, certainly prepare serious sacrifices for us:
but what would be our sincerity when we offered you and consecrated you
to the Lord if subsequently, when put to the test, we felt
reluctance or dismay? I should have liked to see you caring for souls or
with a chair at a seminary; you would have stayed with us and you would
have cultivated our field which I too sought feebly to plough and to
sow. We were forbidden this consolation: so go peacefully on your way,
knowing that we are resigned. May you be serene and modest: holy, and
also resigned, resigned I say, not only to the sacrifices that may be
asked of you because of the detachment from all that is dear to you
—
both people and places
—
but resigned to the grave trials that may be imposed upon you because of
the responsibilities, dangers and temptations inseparable from all that
glitters. Humbly and generously accept your duty and the Lord will do
the rest.
[Giorgio Montini to his son Giovanni
Battista, 8 January 1923]
This morning, after Holy Communion, in
thinking of you and of your affairs for some time I had a feeling of
great peace. I write to you about it, hoping that it may give you some
relief in the demanding work to which you must submit without the
comfort of seeing its good results. I do not doubt that they will come
and that you will see and enjoy them; but for the time being you must
not immediately claim them to be the direct result of your efforts. How
often do we hear it said that where there is less of our will, there,
more certainly, is the Will of the Lord; and how sure we may feel that
in working with upright intentions for the good of others our work is
not lost but must bear fruit for us and for our brethren. The task that
awaits you now is not to your taste. Yet it has been entrusted to you by
your Superiors, the Holy Father has blessed you and the Lord, as a good
Master, will generously do his part. And you will see that later,
thinking back to these days that now seem lost because of your studies
and uselessly wasted because of your office, you will feel the greatest
satisfaction and see in them the kind hand of Providence that carries
out salutary designs. Therefore ensure
—
as, moreover, you already do
—
that you are patient, trusting and serene. Work day by day without
thinking too much of the future. And make sure you keep well, do not
overtire yourself.
[Giorgio Montini to his son Giovanni
Battista,
2 March 1924]
I am with you and with all those dear to
us to celebrate the Feast of your Saint who has bequeathed to us, at
least to us unversed people, his name as the only thing by which to
remember him. It is a rural name, a name of peace, and his profession a
dangerous profession, that of bearing arms, a profession of war. And
both the one and the other, peace and soldiering, are for the Kingdom of
God, just as the Saints address everything to this end. And as I see
you, dear Father, with your Saint in the background of the eternal
scene, I understand what the Lord wanted of you for us: domestic peace
and Catholic militancy on the stage of this fleeting life of ours. For
both the former and the latter I thank you, Father, as well as for the
most beautiful gifts you have offered us with your life; nor would this
life have been so dignified and beautiful without them.
[Giovanni Battista Montini to his father
Giorgio, 22 April 1931]
I have just been informed that Lodovico has been awarded the insignia
of the Order of St Sylvester. Being not so keen on confraternities for
mutual aid for or beside the Authority, I place little importance in
this sign of esteem and gratitude that is attributed to our beloved
worker for social Catholic action.... Dear father, in this circumstance
too you have prepared us for the best sentiments, sincerity and
gratitude. You taught us not to seek such kinds of recognition, which
can be nothing but genuine when one has chosen to keep one's efforts
hidden, and therefore does not expect them but sometimes, as on this
occasion, receives them.
[Giovanni Battista Montini to his father, Giorgio, 15 April 1932]
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