June 30th -
July 11th (11 nights)
New Beginnings and False
Starts
Catholics, Change,
Tradition, and Custom
Monumental changes obvious in every
sphere of contemporary life are making of our age
perhaps the most dramatic era in history. However
disconcerting this may be, change in the natural order
can never be surprising to the Catholic Church. She
recognizes the reality of individual human freedom and
the new situations that its proper and improper use must
continually create. She has been warning for centuries
of the deadly change threatening modern
civilization due to the problems of the parochial,
hubristic naturalist ideologies that have served as its
dogmatic foundation. She does not fear change as such
since her solid rooting in supernatural and rational
truth give her the means to judge whether and how to
accept, guide, or fight tenaciously against it.
Fallible Catholics, however, are not
themselves the Catholic Church. They have been tempted
either enthusiastically to accept fraudulent and
manipulative changes as unquestionable goods or to deny
the reality of the twists and turns of history, confuse
the Tradition with merely familiar custom, and thereby
hinder the advance of the Faith.
What are the real as opposed to the
contrived changes of our age? How are Catholics loyal to
Tradition to respond to them? What are the merely
customary, conservative chains hindering proper response
to the strange new world around us? These are the themes
to be addressed by the 2011 Summer Symposium
Faculty, Clergy,
Musicians
Dr. Miguel Ayuso-Torres (University of Madrid)
Rev. Mgr. Dr. Ignacio Barreiro-Carámbula (Human Life
International)
James Bogle, Esq. (Author, A Heart for Europe)
Dr. Patrick McKinley Brennan (Villanova University)
Dr. Danilo Castellano (University of Udine)
Joshua Copeland (Chorister)
Rev. Bernard Danber, O.S.A.
Bernard Dumont (editor, Catholica, France)
Christopher A. Ferrara, J.D. (President, ACLA)
David J. Hughes (Musical Director)
Luis Infante (University of Salamanca)
James Kalb, Esq. (Author, The Tyranny of Liberalism)
Michael J. Matt (Editor, The Remnant)
Dr. Brian M. McCall (University of Oklahoma)
Professor John Médaille (University of Dallas)
Rev. Dr. Richard Munkelt (University of Fairfield)
Rev. Gregory Pendergraft, F.S.S.P.
Dr. John C. Rao (St. John’s University)
Hervé Rolland, President of Notre Dame de Chrétienté
Dr. Thomas Stark (Philosophisch-Theologische Hochschule,
Austria)
Rev. Richard Trezza, O.F.M.
Daily Program
Each
day involves three lectures (morning and pre-dinner),
and Sung Mass in the Extraordinary Rite (Tridentine
Mass) at noon. There are no lectures on Sundays. Musical
and theatrical entertainments take place in the garden
of the Angeli and in the Piazza dei Caduti in the
evenings after dinner.
Cost
The
full cost of the Gardone program in a double occupancy
room is 2,000 Euros. This includes: tuition, room and
board (very ample breakfast and dinner with wine, beer,
and other beverages at will; all gratuities also);
transportation to and from Malpensa Airport in Milan; a
boat trip on Lake Garda; and excursions to Venice and in
the Lake region. Single rooms are extra, their price
depending upon the room concerned. A number of full
and partial scholarships are available. Preference
will be given to professors, students, clergy, and
seminarians. Nevertheless, anyone who genuinely cannot
afford the full tuition and believes himself to be a
worthy candidate for assistance may apply.
Accommodations and the
Setting
Accommodation and lectures for the Gardone program are
at the Locanda agli Angeli and the Hotel Villa
Sofia on Lake Garda, in the foothills of the Alps in
northern Italy. Rooms are mostly doubles, with bath.
A limited number of singles is also available. Both
hotels are located in Gardone Sopra, a ten-minute walk
from the lakefront, where free, clean beaches with a
number of amenities can be found. They offer beautiful
swimming pools and gardens on their premises. Meals are
taken at the Angeli and at other trattorie
several minutes walk away. Mass is in the parish church,
also within walking distance. Arrangements to arrive
earlier or stay later, at additional cost, may be made
through the director.
Gardone is within easy traveling distance of Verona,
Venice, Trent, Brescia, Milan, Ravenna, Pavia and Padua.
In years past, participants have rented cars to tour the
area, taken private and more extensive boat trips on the
lake, attended the opera in Verona, and even ventured as
far away as Florence. The region offers opportunities
not only for swimming, but for hiking, biking, boating
and scenic walks as well. The lectures are scheduled in
such a way as to allow time for recreation and
sightseeing.
Transportation
Transportation to Italy must be arranged privately. Two
shuttles (morning and afternoon) to Gardone will be
provided from Malpensa airport only on June 30th, and
one back to Malpensa on the morning of July 11th.
Participants arriving and leaving at different times or
arriving at and leaving from different airports are
responsible for making their own arrangements for
getting to Gardone. Gardone can be reached by
shuttle from the Airport to Milano Centrale (50
minutes), train to Brescia (50 minutes), and bus to
Gardone Riviera (50 minutes), or by taxi from the
airport (which can be very expensive and is best
arranged through the Forum).
Application
Applications can be e-mailed ([email protected])
or sent by post. First time applicants only must
include name, address, telephone number, e-mail, date of
birth, occupation, academic degrees attained or pending,
and the names and phone numbers of two references.
Application should be made as soon as possible as there
are only limited places available.
Payment
A
non-refundable deposit of $500 will secure one’s
reservation. Once again, space is limited, so it is
advisable to send this in as soon as possible after
acceptance. Payment of the remaining fee, equivalent
to 2,000 Euros as of May 15th, 2011,
must be made no later than May 20th, 2011.
Deposits and all other payments must be made out to the
Roman Forum and mailed to Dr. John C. Rao, 11 Carmine
St. Apt. 2C, New York, NY 10014.
Final Notes
Seminar participants must eventually send us both
their arrival and departure information. It
is also important to let us know if you wish to arrive
earlier or stay later than the scheduled symposium dates
(at extra cost). We would appreciate this information by
June 15th, by e-mail. A representative of the
Roman Forum will meet participants at their arrival
gates. Should the contact person not be found, please
look for the bus driver holding a sign saying
Molinari Agency, Gardone Riviera. His cell phone
number will be sent to you by e-mail just before the
departure date. In case of trouble, telephone the
Locanda agli Angeli (from the USA,
011-39-0365-20991; from Italy, 0365-20991).
Barring
the unpredictable, the weather should be sunny and quite
warm/hot. We are in the foothills of the Alps, however,
so one may need a sweater or light jacket for dining and
sitting outside in the evening. Please also bring a
light poncho or some other form of protection from a
shower. If you do enjoy swimming and hiking, do not
forget a bathing suit and good walking shoes. Tennis
courts are available for use nearby. Access to the
Internet is available from the Angeli, the
Villa Sofia and the café-restaurant La Taverna
(the latter in the main square at Gardone Sopra, two
minutes away from the Angeli). There at ATM
machines just outside the Angeli, and at the
Banco di Brescia, a short distance away from the
Villa Sofia.
Gardone’s greatest difficulty is laundry. There is no
laundromat in the village. Someone does stop by every
day to pick up any laundry that needs to be done, to be
returned the next day. Under normal circumstances,
laundry costs are expensive in Italy. With the
dollar-euro exchange what it now is, it may be the
greatest expenditure of your trip. There will be a
general orientation at cocktail hour on Thursday, July 1st
at the Angeli. A schedule of masses, as well as
information about the Sunday boat trip and excursions
during the week will be handed out at that time.
Please consider giving a tax-deductible donation to
support clergy, seminarians, and students.
Mail all applications and send donations to:
Dr. John C. Rao,
Director
The Roman Forum
11 Carmine Street, # 2C
New York, NY 10014
Or e-mail to
[email protected]
“Even if the wounds of this shattered world enmesh you,
and the sea in turmoil bears you along in but one
surviving ship, it would still befit you to maintain
your enthusiasm for studies unimpaired. Why should
lasting values tremble if transient things fall?”
(Prosper of Aquitaine) |