Episcopal Conference of Italy: Difference between revisions

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Marco Tarquinio ( Foligno , 16 March 1958 ) is an Italian journalist . Biography edit A resident of Assisi since birth , Tarquinio was a scout in the local Agesci . Married since 1986 , he has two daughters. [1] Tarquinio worked as a reporter for the Umbrian Catholic weekly La Voce between 1981 and 1984. From 1983 he was a correspondent from Assisi and then in the Perugia editorial office of the Corriere dell'Umbria , where he obtained the qualification of professional journalist . [1] In 198
m Reverted edit by TV2000 Marco Tarquinio, ex direttore di Avvenire candidato con il Pd (talk) to last version by Gogo Dodo
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*[[Stefano Russo (bishop)|Stefano Russo]] (28 September 2018 – 5 July 2022)<ref>{{cite press release |url= https://press.vatican.va/content/salastampa/it/bollettino/pubblico/2018/10/01/0716/01520.html | title = Rinunce e Nomine, 01.10.2018 | date = 1 October 2018 | language = it |publisher=Holy See Press Office |access-date= 28 February 2021 }}</ref><ref name=baturi>{{cite press release | publisher = Holy See Press Office | language = it |access-date = 6 July 2022 | url = https://press.vatican.va/content/salastampa/it/bollettino/pubblico/2022/07/05/0518/01055.html | title = Rinunce e nomine (continuazione), 05.07.2022 | date = 5 July 2022 }}</ref>
*[[Stefano Russo (bishop)|Stefano Russo]] (28 September 2018 – 5 July 2022)<ref>{{cite press release |url= https://press.vatican.va/content/salastampa/it/bollettino/pubblico/2018/10/01/0716/01520.html | title = Rinunce e Nomine, 01.10.2018 | date = 1 October 2018 | language = it |publisher=Holy See Press Office |access-date= 28 February 2021 }}</ref><ref name=baturi>{{cite press release | publisher = Holy See Press Office | language = it |access-date = 6 July 2022 | url = https://press.vatican.va/content/salastampa/it/bollettino/pubblico/2022/07/05/0518/01055.html | title = Rinunce e nomine (continuazione), 05.07.2022 | date = 5 July 2022 }}</ref>
*[[Giuseppe Baturi]] (5 July 2022 – present)<ref name=baturi/>
*[[Giuseppe Baturi]] (5 July 2022 – present)<ref name=baturi/>
Marco Tarquinio ( Foligno , 16 March 1958 ) is an Italian journalist .


Biography
edit
A resident of Assisi since birth , Tarquinio was a scout in the local Agesci . Married since 1986 , he has two daughters. [1]

Tarquinio worked as a reporter for the Umbrian Catholic weekly La Voce between 1981 and 1984. From 1983 he was a correspondent from Assisi and then in the Perugia editorial office of the Corriere dell'Umbria , where he obtained the qualification of professional journalist . [1]

In 1988 he moved to Rome to the editorial office of the local newspaper group La Gazzetta , directed by Giuseppe Crescimbeni , where he was a political-parliamentary reporter. [1] Two years later, in 1990 , Tarquinio moved to Il Tempo , then led by Franco Cangini , where he first dealt with foreign policy, then again with political-parliamentary news, and finally became head of the political editorial team and columnist. [1] Tarquinio resigned from the role of political editor in November 1993, in dissent with the newspaper's new line in support of Gianfranco Fini, candidate for mayor of Rome. [2]

In February 1994 Tarquinio moved to the Catholic newspaper Avvenire , directed by Dino Boffo , as editor-in-chief of the Milanese editorial team, and then of the Roman one. In July 2007 he was appointed deputy director. In 2009 he took over as director of Avvenire , following Boffo's resignation due to the defamation campaign against him by Vittorio Feltri 's Il Giornale [3] [4] . Tarquinio manages to broaden the circle of readers despite a phase of crisis in publishing: between the end of 2017 and mid- 2023 Avvenire ranks among the top four Italian generalist newspapers [5] . He leaves the editorship of Avvenire in May 2023.

From 2011 to 2016 , until the cessation of the activity of that dicastery of the Holy See , he was a consultant to the Pontifical Council for Social Communications [6] .

Vice president of the Dante Alighieri Society [7] , since 25 March 2017 he has been an Honorary Academician of the “Pietro Vannucci” Academy of Fine Arts of Perugia .

Tarquinio is also Magistrate-President in office of the Ente Calendimaggio of Assisi [8] .

Since 2010, Tarquinio has received multiple awards in the journalistic and humanitarian fields, including the Penna d'oro award , Sanremo, 2010 [9] ; Rotarian Ideal Award , Assisi, 2010 [10] ; Valerio Volpini prize , Pesaro, 2010 [11] ; Buone Notizie award , Caserta, 2011 [12] ; Fregene prize ("journalism" category), Fregene, 2011 [13] ; Give a meaning to life award , Italian Sociologists Association, Pistoia, 2011 [14] ; award from the Faculty of Medicine of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Rome, 2012 [15] ; Renzo Foa prize , Bettona, 2012 [16] ; International Peace, Culture and Solidarity Award , Centro Donati, Pistoia, 2012 [17] ; Piero Passetti-Province of Lucca award (as part of the Reporter of the Year Award ), Viareggio, 2012 [18] ; Golden Discobolus award from the Italian Sports Center , 2013 [19] ; special mention in the context of the Don Giuseppe Diana Award , Casal di Principe, 2014 [20] ; Artisan of Peace Award , Sermig, Turin, 2014 [21] ; special recognition Maria Rita Saulle Award for human rights , Rome, 2014 [22] ; Vito Finocchiaro prize , Acireale, 2016 [23] ; Emilio Rossi award , Ucsi, 2016 [24] ; Omodei Zorini “Città di Arona” award for journalistic career, 2016 [25] ; “Angelo Marinangeli” award for the press, Nocera Umbra, 2017 [26] ; “Rosa dell'Umbria” award for journalism, Foligno, 2017 [27] ; Unicef ​​“Our angels” award, Trieste, 2021 [28] ; “Gli Asini” award founded by Goffredo Fofi, Copertino-Rome, 2021 [29] ; “Montale-Fuori di casa” award for journalism, La Spezia-Milan, 2022 [30] ; “Ignazio Silone” International Award, Pescina, 2022 [31] ; “Golden Dove for Peace” award promoted by Archivio Disarmo, Rome, 2022 [32] ; recognition “A lily for Peace and Freedom of the Press”, Rome, 2022 [33] ; Giuseppe Zilli prize for the press, Fano Adriano, 2022 [34] ; Giffoni52 award, Giffoni Festival, 2022[35] ; Magna Grecia Awards, Bari, 2022 [36] ; “Gulf of Tigullio for Peace” award, Santa Margherita Ligure, 2022 [37] ; ANPI National Award “Renato B. Fabrizi”, Osimo, 2022 [38] ; “Il Volantino” award, Tricase, 2023 [39] ; “Salvator Mundi” award, Rome, 2023 [40] ; “Angelo Narducci” award, Lerici, 2023 [41] ; “Ambassador of Humanity” Award, Italian Council for Refugees (CIR), Rome 2023 [42]
==See also==
==See also==
*''[[Avvenire]]''
*''[[Avvenire]]''

Revision as of 05:53, 6 April 2024

Archdioceses of Italy

The Italian Episcopal Conference (Italian: Conferenza Episcopale Italiana) or CEI is the episcopal conference of the Italian bishops of the Catholic Church.

The conference was founded in 1971 and carries out various tasks, including setting the national liturgical norms for the Mass. Episcopal conferences receive their authority under universal law or particular mandates. Cardinal Matteo Zuppi was appointed its president by Pope Francis in 2022.

It is the only episcopal conference for which the pope appoints the president and secretary-general. In almost all other conferences the president is elected, while the secretary-general is elected in all others.[a]

At the beginning of his papacy in 2013, Pope Francis considered having the CEI membership elect its own president and secretary-general, a proposal that was once considered and abandoned by Pope John Paul II.[1] In 2017, adopting a new procedure, the CEI members elected three candidates for president and submitted them to the pope, who was free to choose one of them or someone else.[2]

Pope Francis repeatedly urged the CEI bishops to organize a national synod as discussed at their conference in Florence in 2015, first through surrogates and then himself inviting them to undertake a synod, eventually telling them in January 2021 that it was their duty and the time had come.[3] The conference leadership submitted their synod proposal to him a month later.[4]

A public domain version of the Bible in Italian is published by the CEI.[5]

The conference established Italy's first national day of prayer for survivors of clerical sexual abuse on 18 November 2021.[6]

Leadership

Presidents

Secretaries-General

The official that deals with the day-to-day affairs of the Conference is the secretary-general.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The exceptions are Belgium, where the archbishop of Mechelen-Brussels is president ex officio, England and Wales where the archbishop of Westminster is president "ex officio", and the Latin church in Arab lands where the Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem is always president.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Galeazzi, Giacomo (8 April 2013). "Pope: Italian bishops to elect their own president and secretary". Vatican Insider. Archived from the original on 31 January 2020. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Italian bishops get a leader cut from Pope Francis's cloth". Crux. 24 May 2017. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  3. ^ Agasso, Domenico (31 January 2021). "Il Papa bacchetta la Cei: "Bisogna fare un sinodo"". La Stampa (in Italian).
  4. ^ Gambassi, Giacomo (27 February 2021). "Sinodo per l'Italia, la proposta della Cei consegnata al Papa". Avvenire (in Italian). Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  5. ^ BibleGateway.com, Version Information, accessed 28 December 2018
  6. ^ Brockhaus, Hannah (18 November 2021). "Catholic Church in Italy holds 1st national day of prayer for abuse victims". Catholic News Agency.
  7. ^ "Rinunce e Nomine, 30.12.2013" (Press release) (in Italian). Holy See Press Office. 30 December 2013. Retrieved 3 January 2014.
  8. ^ "Rinunce e Nomine, 01.10.2018" (Press release) (in Italian). Holy See Press Office. 1 October 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2021.
  9. ^ a b "Rinunce e nomine (continuazione), 05.07.2022" (Press release) (in Italian). Holy See Press Office. 5 July 2022. Retrieved 6 July 2022.

External links