Logo Fondazione Internazionale Don Luigi Di Liegro Ets
Logo Fondazione Internazionale Don Luigi Di Liegro Ets
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Logo Fondazione Internazionale Don Luigi Di Liegro Ets
Logo Fondazione Internazionale Don Luigi Di Liegro Ets
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Father Luigi Di Liegro

A LIFE DEDICATED TO THE DEFENSE OF THE HUMAN BEING

"You cannot love without getting your hands dirty. But above all you cannot love without sharing". These words condense the extraordinary life of Fr. Luigi Di Liegro, born on 16 October 1928 and died on 12 October 1997. Head of the Pastoral Office of the Vicariate of Rome, first director of the Diocesan Caritas, he is still remembered today as "the priest of the last", for having dedicated his life entirely to the defense of the poor, of the excluded, the marginalized, of any origin. "The greatest sacrament is human relationship", he wrote. Denouncing the risks of a society devoted to exclusivity and therefore exclusion . “Solidarity arises from the analysis of social complexity, from the degradation caused by the law of the strongest, from the lack of collective ethics”. Guided by a very high sense of civic participation and the political dimension: “A city in which a single man suffers less is a better city”. Almost thirty years after his passing, Fr. Luigi's thoughts and work represent a light for all those who work for the defense and promotion of human dignity.

Father Luigi Di Liegro offered and asked everyone to share. His tireless work as a builder of solidarity remains an invaluable asset for Rome and for Italy" (Sergio Mattarella, President of the Italian Republic).

The Life of Fr. Luigi

Fr. Luigi's battle was, until the last day of his life, an incessant battle against every form of exclusion and fear of strangers, a radical defense of humanity.

Don Luigi Di Liegro

Faith and works

From Fr. Luigi's Speech at the Convention of Caritas Territorial Workers in Rome

"The fundamental truth of Christianity is that Jesus Christ was born among us, in human history, in human life, in order to be able to liberate it. The love of God came, so to speak, to "dirty its hands" in our life and in our history. This we firmly believe and this we express with the works which are a manifestation and consequence of faith. Works are needed because without them faith becomes only deepening and this is not enough to achieve that fullness that is expressed in service. Life is saved because we put ourselves at the service of others. This is the great testimony that we can and must give: we are the living witnesses that God has put himself at the service of men .
Works without faith and faith without works are both incomplete, because by separating them, works become mere activism and faith becomes sterile".

DEL DIVINO AMORE SANCTUARY, 20 SEPTEMBER 1997

The discernment

From Fr. Luigi's Speech at the Convention of Caritas Territorial Workers in Rome

Discernment is this question: Lord, where are you? It means starting from certain particular situations that people experience, that communities experience, situations that reveal the presence of evil and the presence of good. This would be enough to understand what discernment is: a commitment to go deep, to enter into the depths of people. It is this intimacy of the Spirit that we can and must try to reach, to grasp what He suggests to us when we find ourselves faced with certain truly pulsating, dramatic, desperate situations. In situations like these, it is not by bringing medicines, or food, or paying a bill to those who don't have the money to do so that we have solved people's problems, even if we cannot ignore these needs nor can we say: look, I I am only interested in spiritual things. We must continue to do everything that charity suggests we do, judging through discernment, without making too much separation between the spiritual and the material.

Don Luigi Di Liegro

Discernment should lead us to make contact with these realities of suffering to ask ourselves what they are, how they manifest, and where. It's not enough to know these realities numerically and generally: we're talking about living people, so we must personalize them, identify them, and empathize with every single experienced situation, without limiting ourselves to abstract words of comfort. Here, then, is our fundamental question: how, through my lifestyle, can I feel involved in the various dramatic sufferings of humanity, those we discover within us, in our city, outside our city? These are not theoretical issues but real facts and situations: migrations, the mentally ill, the handicapped, drug addicts, the terminally ill, in short, all those spaces where human suffering is most alive and which God, by becoming incarnate, takes upon himself to free us from despair and give meaning to pain.

Discernment does not enter into theories but into facts, into personal lives, and into events. It represents a new way of thinking, a new way of interpreting events. It requires the methodology of listening. Not just listening to others, but listening to God in others. So, the real issue is not about determining whether the poor person is telling the truth or not: the real issue is rather helping the poor to become aware of God. And I do not mean a purely spiritual truth: God became less spiritual when He became incarnate. God is the person who is in front of me. Thus, through discernment, we should come into contact with this truth to help people become aware not of us, not of the Church, but of the mystery that is already within each of them.

DEL DIVINO AMORE SANCTUARY, 20 SEPTEMBER 1997

Quotes

Listening, guidance and information for
Mental Health Problems.
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