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The roaring twenties Paris, capital of the arts During the 1920's Paris became both the stage and the symbol of the desire for renewal, exemplifying the feeling of liberation that was widespread at the end of World War I. Already an international capital of art and culture, the City of Light was a fashionable and cosmopolitan city. A mythical place for artists who flocked there from all over the world, attracted by its liberal customs, the intellectual ferment, theatres, cafes and art galleries, to give free expression to their creativity,
The MEIS National Museum of Italian Jewry and the Holocaust Since 2009, the Ministry for Heritage and Cultural Activities, the Superintendence for Architectural Heritage, the City of Ferrara and MEIS Foundation have been working towards the realization of the meis, Museo Nazionale dell'Ebraismo Italiano e della Shoah (the National Museum of Italian Jewry and the Holocaust). Established by Act of Parliament No. 296 in 2006, in order to bear witness to the constant and widespread presence of the Jewish community on Italian territory,
Adventure in the “marshes” Yesterday and today in the Po Delta Park At the beginning we were clearly thrilled and amused, but this gradually changed to silence and then, towards the end of the adventure, we began to be afraid. We were classmates, just turned eight years old, and on that day we were on a trip to Mesola with my mother. A few days after the end of the school year in early June, she said: «I have a car to take me to paint in the Delta. Come along and bring a friend, if you want.
A reading and comment Truth and Memory in the last work of Aron Leoni Aron Leoni (1932-2010), son of Leone Leoni, chief rabbi of Ferrara and Venice, and Gemma Ravenna Leoni, inherited his passion for Jewish culture from his parents. He had a degree in agronomy and became director of the "Vita Mayer Corporation", also representing the Italian paper industry at the European Parliament in Brussels. On his retirement he totally dedicated himself to the study of the history and culture of the Sephardic diaspora,
Franco patruno: writing art, living art The Foundation publishes an anthology of his writings for «L'Osservatore Romano» Four years after the death of the author, Equivalenze, o dello scrivere l'arte. Scritti per «L'Osservatore Romano» (Equivalences, or writing on art. Articles for «L'Osservatore Romano») a collection of work by Father Franco Patruno has been published. Edited by Massimo Marchetti, the anthology – which covers ten years of his contributions to «L'Osservatore»

Franco patruno: writing art, living art

Written by  Andrea Nascimbeni

The Foundation publishes an anthology of his writings for «L'Osservatore Romano»

Four years after the death of the author, Equivalenze, o dello scrivere l'arte. Scritti per «L'Osservatore Romano» (Equivalences, or writing on art. Articles for «L'Osservatore Romano») a collection of work by Father Franco Patruno has been published.

Edited by Massimo Marchetti, the anthology – which covers ten years of his contributions to «L'Osservatore»

Don Franco Patruno (1938-2007)– contains interviews, commentaries, reviews of exhibitions and films, and is presented by Andrea Emiliani with an afterword by Carlo Bassi. The Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Ferrara supported the idea of commemorating both the figure and work of this priest, an expert in fine art, philosophy, theology, unconfined literature and cinema. Writing for the «Osservatore», was an object of satisfaction for Father Franco, an important culmination of thirty years of activity in journalism. We find the validation and fulfilment of his priesthood, in a field – that of culture – which provided a testing ground that looked more like a battlefield than a quiet vineyard. Through the homily pronounced by Pope Paul VI, in 1964, we can retrieve the atmos- phere that reigned in the Church in those years. «We need you – said the Pope – Our Ministry needs your cooperation. Because, as you are aware, our Ministry is to preach and to make accessible and comprehensible, even moving, the world of the spirit, the invisible, the ineffable, the world of God (...) and your art is precisely that of seizing the treasures of the spirit of heaven, Don Patruno interviews Robert Rauschenbergclothing them in words, colours, forms and acces- sibility». Father Franco had this sensitivity, this ability to feel what is almost impossible to grasp through thought, abundant with intelligence 'contaminated' by the tenderness of perception and vision, enriched with readings that substantiated an inner life. Fur- thermore, Pope Montini continued, «there is a profound understanding between priest and artist and an amazing ability to share insight» but «to scale the heights of the lyrical expression of intuitive beauty we must make priesthood and art coincide».  This is the secret of Father Franco's special vocation.

«I believe, – remarked Father Franco thirty years later – that today we can talk of a discussion (between artists and the Church) – that failed to work as a result of a sort of mutual estrangement. If artists once felt "at home" in the Church, they now look at it from a distance, as though it were a world apart», but Father Franco, strong with a faith that is capable of looking beyond appearances, observed: «From a religious point of view, we are now aware that God doesn't always write on straight and narrow lines and that travelling on routes that differ from those of the Church does not necessarily represent a radical distance from religion». Patruno both anticipated and suffered this toil, stating that «even expressions that are apparently "less ecclesiastical" do not face the Church as an abstract synopsis without correlation». When, in 1999, John Paul II wrote his Letter to artists, Father Franco, commenting in the «Osservatore», could not conceal his excitement in finding such venerable confirmation of his own insights: the «joyful effort of dialogue» through which many roads have been opened. «The artist, above all, – John Paul II reminds us – senses the precarious nature of things, often with the an- guished tones of the gap between nature and grace, becoming a sign of reality that infinitely transcends».

Today the treasure of his thoughts is entrusted to the pages of this anthology, ideally conveyed to a culture without bounda- ries. Just like the unconfined horizon of Father Franco.