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Getting
Ready for World Youth Day 2002
Father Thomas Rosica, National Director of Toronto Event
TORONTO, AUG. 7, 2001
(Zenit.org).- Days after the yearlong countdown to the next World
Youth Day began, ZENIT interviewed Basilian Father Thomas Rosica,
42, national director and chief executive officer of the 2002 event.
ZENIT: What have you
experienced in Canada as you go about preparing for the big event?
Father Rosica: From the
very beginning when I was appointed by our bishops in June 1999
to lead the preparations for World Youth Day 2002, I desired that
this project would be by young people and for young people.
We had numerous challenges
to overcome: the immense distances in our country that lead to isolationism
and loneliness, the languages of English and French, several distinctly
different societies and cultures -- French, Quebec, Native, English,
etc. There has not been a national pastoral ministry for young people
in our country. The challenges were very evident from the beginning
of the project.
One of the first blessings
was to see the complete unity and unanimity of the Canadian Conference
of Catholic Bishops for the World Youth Day. It has been a great
experience to be associated with some excellent pastors from one
end of the country to the other.
I have been particularly
impressed by the creativity and dynamism of the bishops of Quebec,
who see in the World Youth Day an extraordinary moment of blessing
and promise.
Our first major challenge
was to establish the National Office for World Youth Day in Toronto,
an anglophone city. I had the wild dream in the first weeks after
Tor Vergata to call for a National Forum of Youth leaders and young
adults in Toronto this past February.
The initial proposal
was met with some skepticism. They told me that people wouldn't
come to English-speaking Toronto. We had representatives from 71
out of 72 dioceses attend the forum which many now consider to be
an historic moment in the life of the Canadian Church.
Over 140 of us gathered
together for three cold, winter days in a downtown hotel to dream
and strategize, to celebrate and pray for the new Pentecost and
the new springtime that has come to the Church in Canada. Many new
friendships were born, and many leaders surfaced who have now joined
the National Team. ...
Then, quickly moving
from the dream, World Youth Day 2002 became a living reality for
us on Palm Sunday 2001 in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican. There
... before a crowd of over 150,000 people, 70 Canadians representing
32 dioceses received the World Youth Day Cross handed to us from
the young people of Italy. ... We accepted that cross and carried
it with us to Canada.
The cross is causing
quite a stir in our land. In fact, the best part of my day is that
first half-hour in the office each morning when I read the reports
sent in to us from the various dioceses and communities that are
hosting the World Youth Day Cross. They are deeply moving testimonies.
A journalist asked me last year at a press conference if the World
Youth Day Cross could be compared to the Olympic torch that precedes
the Olympic games in a particular country. I assured him that the
analogy was not off the mark.
A bishop called me the
morning after the cross had left his diocese and said to me: "Father
Tom, you told us at the plenary assembly of bishops this past fall
that the cross would work its magic wherever it went ... and I couldn't
imagine how such a basic simple cross would draw so many people.
Now I know what you meant. Thank you for sending that cross to us.
I am amazed at what it produced."
In early June we released
our first major publication, "Prayers for World Youth Day"
jointly published by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops
and the World Youth Day Office."
One edition is in English
and the French edition will be released in the next few weeks. It
is a handsome volume that will help the entire Church in Canada
and far beyond prepare for World Youth Day. This book of prayers
for the World Youth Day serves as an invitation to the Church in
Canada and far beyond to pray for the success of World Youth Day
2002.
What lies at the heart
of this great event -- that is already sweeping across our country
-- is the person of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, crucified
and risen for us, who welcomes young people to fall in love with
him and discover a Church that is forever young at the beginning
of the third millennium. I hope that many young people and adults
in Canada and throughout the whole world will use this book to bring
them close to Christ as we continue the great journey toward World
Youth Day 2002.
We were able to keep
the price very modest. I encourage everyone to visit the CCCB Web
site for more information and the order form. [See http://www.cccb.ca/english/fullpresse.asp?ID=303)
]
Q: What were the fruits
of the international meeting in Rome in June?
Father Rosica: Twelve
members of our national office attended the meeting in Rome along
with Cardinal Aloysius Ambrozic, Bishop Anthony Meagher, chair of
the episcopal committee for World Youth Day 2002, and Bishop François
Lapierre, member of the committee. We had very productive meetings
with the Pontifical Council for the Laity preceding the meeting.
I must say that we have had a continuos excellent dialogue with
Cardinal James Francis Stafford and Bishop Stanislas Rylko. We have
had the privilege of hosting them in Toronto and our collaboration
has been close. It was a privilege to be able to present the World
Youth Day 2002 to leaders from over 60 countries and many international
movements and communities.
We realized the tremendous
interest there is in the World Youth Day in Canada. One thing that
struck all of us from the National Team of Canada was how surprised
people where in discovering the great distances in Canada. Since
that meeting, we have launched the registration process and are
in communication with over 100 countries of the world at present.
Our staff had a surprise
during the June meeting and it was a tremendous blessing and moment
of encouragement to each of us. One morning we were invited as a
team to attend a private Mass with the Pope, during which he baptized
the granddaughter of a childhood friend of his. It was a deeply
touching moment.
After Mass the Pope spent
a good bit of time with us individually and as a group. It is very
obvious that the topic of World Youth Day is close to his heart.
He even asked our communications person about the visitors to our
Web site. Anyone who says that the Pope is not tuned in to things
is not accurate.
As I was leaving his
library, he thanked us again for a ski jacket with our World Youth
Day logo on it that we had presented to him earlier in the year
on Palm Sunday. I was surprised that he remembered that gift, but
little did I know what we would see in the newspapers several weeks
later.
Q: What did you see
in the papers?
Father Rosica: While
the Holy Father was vacationing in Val d'Aosta, we began receiving
calls and messages from as far away as Australia, telling us that
the Pope was wearing the ski jacket and vest with our logo in all
the pictures.
When a photo finally
appeared in our papers, I couldn't believe my eyes. There in a mountain
field was Pope John Paul II proudly wearing our logo. There seated
in the ski lift chair was the Pope wearing our jacket with the WYD
2002 logo!
I was told last week
by his secretary that this was no coincidence. The Pope wanted us
to know how much he is following this project. Bishop Dziwisz told
me that the World Youth Day in Canada is very close to his heart
and in his daily prayers. This has touched each of us personally
and encouraged us in our work.
Q: What do you think of the Pope's message to the youth of the
world for the 17th World Youth Day?
Father Rosica: I am delighted
with the message. As one who has taught Scripture at the university
and in seminaries, I am very happy to see how much the letter makes
references to the Bible, especially the texts of being 'salt of
the earth' and 'light of the world.' ... The letter is a wonderful
invitation to all of us to taste and see what the Lord has done
and is doing for us.
Salt is about giving
flavor to life. Light is about faith -- how to fan the flame into
a roaring blaze wherever we are. Our societies, our cultures, and
many parts of our lives lack the taste, the flavor, the presence
of salt and light. We often grow accustomed to tasteless living
and life in the shadows ... we are afraid of the light because it
reveals us.
Pope John Paul II invites
young people to give the world taste and zest, light and joy. He
invites us to move from the contemplation of the Word made flesh
to action in a secular world. He invites them to bring the taste,
the desire, the light of holiness out in public. ...
What struck me most about
the letter is the Pope's deep understanding of the reality of Toronto
as a multicultural and multiconfessional city. Having lived here
now for 10 years, I have experienced how so many languages, nations,
cultures, religions can live together in peace and harmony.
The Church is only enriched
by such an experience. In the midst of so much diversity, the radiant,
ever youthful figure of Christ shines brightly as the unique Savior
who brings us salvation, meaning and peace.
What the Pope's letter
does is extend to the young people of the world a strong call to
become missionaries in the complex yet beautiful cities in which
we live ... in the very places that are longing to know the unity
for which Jesus prayed, and the joyful news of his abiding presence
among us, often times in spite of our frailty, but more often than
not, because he has placed us here to be salt and light for the
world that God so loved.
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