“Gifts of Light”—Chiara Lubich’s Mystical Narrative with Hindus: An Analysis of a Hindu–Christian Dialogue Experience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
In many Hindus, these words reinforced the conviction that a hidden, concerted agenda for conversion was at work within Christianity. The recent years in which the Bharatya Janata Party (BJP) came to power have further demonstrated the problematic relationship between the Hindutva agenda and the life of the Catholic Church. Yet, at the turn of the millenium, though the progress of Hindu fundamentalism was constant and already worrysome, there were many possibilities for opening avenues of constructive dialogue.5The Synod, which we are closing today, rejoiced at the thought of Jesus’s birth on Asian soil. The Eternal Word took flesh as an Asian! And it was on this continent, through the preaching of the Gospel in the power of the Holy Spirit, that the Church went forth to spread the Good News. With Christians throughout the world, the Church in Asia will cross the threshold of the new millennium, giving thanks for all that God has worked from those beginnings until now. Just as the first millennium saw the Cross firmly planted in the soil of Europe, and the second in that of America and Africa, so may the Third Christian Millennium witness a great harvest of faith on this vast and vital continent.
2. Chiara Lubich and Her Friendship with Hindus
The more we enter into contact with India—and we have only been here for just a few days!—the more it reveals itself to us as a world which is immense, with a concentration of realities and its own unique hallmark, not easy for westerners to decipher; a world which presents a picture of unity in all the richness of its diversity. We feel that before us lies a jewel box full of spiritual treasures, of attraction towards mysticism encompassing the whole of human nature—a mysticism which is certainly not extraneous to the work of God. And this treasure chest can be opened by those who approach it with respect, with love and above all with the conviction that God has so much to tell us through this ancient culture.
These impressions, along with new developments in Hindu–Christian dialogue, were also topics of discussion during a stimulating dialogue in which Lubich engaged with the CCBI bishops. Many of them expressed their appreciation for the new friendship established between the Catholic ecclesial movement and Hindus of different streams and organizations (Zanzucchi 2001; Catalano 2010; Menezes 2020).This afternoon, we spent two hours with some monks, priests of ancient temples, in the new centre of Dr Mahalingam, an industrialist and philosopher, who was present. It was an encounter with the Indian world as it is, with its traditions, in many aspects primitive, syncretistic, and to all appearances impenetrable! … I had thought I would be addressing people with a theological background, and so the talk I had prepared was a bit … elevated. I do not know how much of it they were able to absorb. We will need centuries, perhaps, to see any change.
The Idea of a Symposium and Its Characteristics
Zanghì reminded the people attending the conference that the Christian apostle Paul expressed the same concept in Christian terms when he recommended to the Philippians: “Be of the same mind, with the same love, united in heart, thinking one thing” (Phil 2:2). The desire of those present for the days of the symposium was summarized in words taken from Rabindranath Tagore: “May God in our midst accompany us, enlighten us, and guide us with His blessing. May He unite us in a relationship of good will” (see Dhavamony 1987, p. 199).Meet together and speak with one another: may your minds be in total agreement. They have the place in common; the assembly in common; the mind in common; likewise, may their thought be united. May your purpose be one and the same and may your minds be in agreement; may the thoughts of all be united so that all may happily agree.(see Dhavamony 1987, p. 52)
[For Hinduism] the three traditional ways of union are yoga, that is, path of union, ways of union: the first is the way of knowledge, the second is the way of devotion, and the third one is the way of action. … Chiara proposed a different path, and that is the path of love. We can call it; premyoga’. She does not want us to love only God and to be united only with God. She wants us to share this love with our neighbours through service. That is premyoga: union in love.
3. Chiara Lubich’s Mystical Experience: Paradise ’49 or Gifts of Light
3.1. General Characteristics and Connotations of Paradise ‘49
It was truly the religious vision of the universe, the religious vision of the world. That is the way God sees the world, how God sees things, how God sees creatures, how God sees Paradise.
3.2. Lubich’s Sharing of Her “Gifts of Light” with Hindus
3.3. The Methodology of Communicating a Narrative
3.3.1. God-Centeredness and Holy Ground
3.3.2. Paradise ’49 as an Experience in the Tradition of the Church
This perspective can be confirmed in some comments that were shared by Dr. Lingam Raja from Gandhigram University. The mystical experience of the Focolare foundress helped him to understand Christianity:What was seen in 1949 has been confirmed by qualified experts in this field who agreed that everything is in conformity with the thought of the Church. Because Revelation was completed with the death and resurrection of Jesus, and the Church keeps all this patrimony of faith, she safeguards it. If other illuminations are given to certain people during the course of history, they are particular illuminations, but they must be in conformity with the Church’s patrimony of faith. They were studied by these experts of ours and they agree that they are in conformity with the thought of the Church. I would never have brought them out if I didn’t know that they were in fact in conformity with the Church.
I never understood Christianity in that wholesome way, but through Chiara I could understand Christianity is nothing but love, that love generates and transforms and extends”.
3.3.3. Absolute Clarity Regarding Christian Truths
3.3.4. Faithful to the Official Narrative of the Text (of Paradise ’49)
3.3.5. Attitude of Deep Humility
3.3.6. A Sense of Equality and Respect
3.3.7. Empathy—Being One with the ‘Other’
3.4. “We Really Have Something to Learn”—A Lived Mysticism
3.5. The Reactions of the Hindus: Lubich as a Jivan Mukti
The last words (highlighted in italics), which have been deleted from transcriptions and recordings, explain how Hindus perceived Lubich from their own perspective and sensitivity. To them, she was a jivan mukti, a creature that, according to Hindu tradition, has realized her divine nature and merged with the Absolute to reach moksha18, which ends the cycle of reincarnations. At the same time, she was still alive19 and open to share her ‘full realization’ with other men and women. This explains why Hindus—and, later, also other partners in the interfaith commitment—never perceived any hint of proselytization in this Catholic woman, who, in reality, lived a process of the proclamation of the Good News in the first person. In fact, in the days of the symposium, all the major Christian truths were announced and explained. These were at the center of the Hindus’ desire to grasp the real meaning of Lubich’s mystical experience. Therefore, Lubich succeeded in appearing to be a living example of one of the highest stages in life, according to Hindu sensitivity, while proclaiming her deepest beliefs without any pressure or imposition. This is one of the aspects of Lubich’s thought and experience that is deserving of further study in order to better understand how proclamation and dialogue are truly expressions of the same reality, and mysticism can be a way to harmonize them. We can find a clear explanation of this difficult balance between dialogue and mission in the following consideration of the Italian theologian Piero Coda, who was one of Lubich’s closest collaborators in studying Paradise ’49 at the Abba School:Your word is transparent, penetrating. In addition, I am still a man and I still have to pass through the gate of Jesus, to reach to my guru and to reach God. Moreover, I am glad that you have understood more of my silence than my words and I am very much grateful to you for this explanation. (Because you are in God. You are God).
Chiara recognizes that her mission is to communicate the Light she has received, not just to those living the experience of Paradise with her …, but to everyone. It is a matter of … inserting God’s life into relationships among human beings in our common home wherever and however these relationships are manifested. It is prolonging the Incarnation of Jesus, the Word of the Father who is love … extending into the world through the Church and the Holy Spirit’s universal action. From this comes the joys pressing urgency to communicate the Light—forming and shaping new life on an anthropological, social, and cultural [and religious] level.
4. The Holy Spirit and the Role of Women in Dialogue
… when women are introduced as subjects to interreligious dialogue, a more textured and challenging realization is in store. As women’s voices and experiences are incorporated in interreligious dialogue, we begin to see a more dynamic construction of the ‘religions’ …
5. Conclusions
Our work with many brothers and sisters of the major religions and fellowship we experience with them has convinced us that the idea of religious pluralism can shed its connotation of division and conflict. It can emerge to represent for millions of men and women, the challenge of recomposing the unity of the human family, so that the Holy Spirit may in some way be present and active in all religions, not only in the individual members but also in the inner workings of each religious tradition.
Mysticism … is the “place” where true dialogue and the meeting of different religious traditions, in an atmosphere of “reciprocal transparency” can occur. Such a creative rapprochement will facilitate and open dialogue in which the different mystical traditions can acknowledge their complementarity and articulate plurality. As such, dogmatic rigidity and colonial intellectualism will be replaced by a deep humility in the face of the infinite mystery and “unknowingness” of the Ultimate.
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Conflicts of Interest
1 | The present analysis also includes an experiential element. As one of the organizers, the author had the opportunity to witness the events that are dealt with in the following pages. |
2 | Chiara Lubich, (1920–2008), one the leading figures of Catholicism during the last century, a charismatic leader, foundress and, until her death, president of the Focolare Movement (Gallagher 1997; Zanzucchi 2001; Masters and Uelmen 2011). |
3 | This is the famous definition used by the American President Ronald Reagan to define Russia and Communist countries, which formed the Warsaw Pact. |
4 | It is enough to think of the Jesuits Roberto De Nobili (1577–1656) and Giuseppe Beschi (1680–1747), and, closer to our times, Jules Monchanin (1895–1957), Henry Le Saux (1910–1973), Bede Griffith (1906–1993) and Raimon Pannikar (1918–2010), to name only the most well known. |
5 | For more details on this topic, see Jafrelot, Christoph. 2021. Modi’s India: Hindu Nationalism and the Rise of Ethnic Democracy, Princeton: Princeton University Press.; Chowdhry, Debasishi R. 2021. To Kill a Democracy. India’s Passage to Despotism. New Delhi: MacMillan. |
6 | Beginning in June 2022, all Congregations and Pontifical Councils in the Vatican have been renamed as Dicasteries. |
7 | The Conference of Catholic Bishops of India (CCBI) is formed by all Bishops of Latin rite, whereas the Oriental rite constitutes two Bishops’ conferences: the Syro-Malabar and the Syro-Malankara. These three rite-based bishops’ conferences together form the Catholic Bishops Conference of India (CBCI). |
8 | Among many figures, we can mention: Dr. Krishnaraj Vanvarayar, industrialist and widely acknowledged religious and cultural figure in the state of Tamil Nadu; Prof. Markandan, noted Gandhian activist engaged in promoting new policies in favor of Dalits and former vice-Chancellor of Gandhigram University in Madurai (TN); Mr. Mariappan, a well-known advocate of the Supreme Court and others. |
9 | An extensive literature is available with detailed information about neo-Vedanta Hindu schools. |
10 | Somaiya Sanskriti Peetham, Bharatya Vidhya Bhavan and Mumbai Vidhya Peeth (Bombay University) are all prestigious educational institutions in Mumbai. |
11 | The proposal, much to Lubich’s surprise, came from Dr. (Mrs.) Kala Acharya, who visited Lubich in Rome in October 2001. At Lubich’s request of possible avenues to follow in order to continue the experience of dialogue, Dr. (Mrs.) Acharya immediately answered: “Let’s have a symposium”. Lubich was taken by surprise, as her style of dialogue was always oriented towards dialogues of life and dialogues of collaboration. Yet, she accepted Prof. Acharya’s proposal without hesitation. |
12 | It is important to note that the Abba School was established by Chiara Lubich herself in 1990 to study the so-called experience of Paradise ’49 from different perspectives (e.g., theological, philosophical, sociological and psychological ones, as well as from the perspectives of other disciplines later on). When the symposium took place in 2002, the Abba School was already well established, with twelve years of experience and a growing number of disciplines that were added to the initial ones (science, economics, mass media and communication, ecumenism, etc.). However, the symposium with the Hindus was the first official engagement of the Abba School with an outside cultural and academic reality. |
13 | Igino Giordani, a member of the Italian Parliament at the time, was a well-known politician, among the founders of the Italian Christian Democrat Party and one of the fathers of the Italian Constitution. He was also an outstanding Catholic writer familiar to the popes before and after World War II (Sorgi 1994, 2003; Lo Presti 2021). |
14 | They used to call these mutual spiritual agreements ‘pacts’, which often marked a new step in their spiritual communitarian life. For instance, they often remembered and renewed their ‘pact of mercy’ (i.e., trying to forgive and forget the wrong done by others) or the ‘pact of reciprocal love’ (trying to commit themselves to living the invitation of Jesus to the apostles: to have love one for the other in the same way He had loved them). |
15 | Hindus refer to this feeling with the term ‘holy vibrations’. |
16 | Dr. S. K. Somaiya (1927–2010), was a noted industrialist and educationist who followed the footsteps of his father, Padmabhushan Shri K. J. Somaiya, both in business and in educational commitment. He led the Somaiya Trust and Somaiya Vidyavihar (a large university campus long affiliated with Mumbai University and today an independent institution). In the last years of his life, he actively engaged in interreligious dialogue in India and at the international level. |
17 | Sureshchandra Uppadhyaya (1932–2021) was a leading exponent of the “Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan” of Mumbai, the Institute of Indian Culture, present throughout India. He joined the institute in 1960 at the age of 28 as a Sanskrit teacher. Later, in 1972, he was promoted to academic director and continued his career with great passion, guiding many students in their Ph.D. studies. He received numerous awards, including: the “Eminent Vedic Scholar” award of the University of Mumbai (India); the “Certificate of Honour” of the President of India; the “Eminent Sanskrit Scholar” award of the government of the country; and the “Best Teacher Award” of the government of the Indian state of Maharashtra. |
18 | Moksha and mukti come from the same root, much (liberated). |
19 | This particular aspect is effectively expressed by the term jivan (life). |
20 | The video recording of the two sessions we have examined in the present paper has been shown to groups of Jews, Muslims and Buddhists, and the effects were similar, according to the differences in culture and religion of those who saw the recording. |
21 | Apart from Chiara Lubich and Natalia Dalla Piccola, her first companion and, for many years, the co-head of the Centre for Interreligious Dialogue of the Focolare Movement, we should not forget the already mentioned Mrs. Minoti Aram and her daughter, Miss Vinu Aram, Prof. (Mrs.) Kala Acharya, and also Prof. (Mrs.) Shubada Joshi and Prof. (Mrs.) Lalita Namjoshi. |
22 | |
23 | See G. Scattolin (Scattolin 2007), “Spiritualità in dialogo. La spiritualità come terreno di dialogo interreligioso”, Comboniani, (https://www.comboniani.org/?page_id=711) (accessed on 15 January 2023). |
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Catalano, R. “Gifts of Light”—Chiara Lubich’s Mystical Narrative with Hindus: An Analysis of a Hindu–Christian Dialogue Experience. Religions 2023, 14, 521. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040521
Catalano R. “Gifts of Light”—Chiara Lubich’s Mystical Narrative with Hindus: An Analysis of a Hindu–Christian Dialogue Experience. Religions. 2023; 14(4):521. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040521
Chicago/Turabian StyleCatalano, Roberto. 2023. "“Gifts of Light”—Chiara Lubich’s Mystical Narrative with Hindus: An Analysis of a Hindu–Christian Dialogue Experience" Religions 14, no. 4: 521. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040521
APA StyleCatalano, R. (2023). “Gifts of Light”—Chiara Lubich’s Mystical Narrative with Hindus: An Analysis of a Hindu–Christian Dialogue Experience. Religions, 14(4), 521. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14040521