Andrea Gallo
Don Andrea Gallo (18 July 1928 – 22 May 2013) was an Italian presbyter. He was the founder and leader of the Community of San Benedetto al Porto.[1][2] He often called himself a "priest of the sidewalk", referring to his activity of helping poor and needy people.[3][4] BiographyAndrea Gallo was drawn to as a child by spirituality of Salesians of John Bosco, and entered the 1948 in their novitiate of Varazze. In 1953, after studying philosophy in Rome, Gallo was asked to leave Italy for missions, and he was sent to São Paulo, Brazil, where he attended theology courses. Since the Brazilian dictatorship forced him to return to Italy, he went to Ivrea in 1954 to continue the studies and was ordained as a priest on 1 July 1959.[5][6][7] In 1960, Gallo was sent as a chaplain to the training ship Garaventa, trying to introduce a different setting in teaching and to replace the repressive methods with an education based upon trust and freedom. After three years, Gallo was moved to another position, and in 1964 he decided to leave the Salesians and asked his superiors to incardinate in the Archdiocese of Genoa. After that, Giuseppe Siri, a cardinal and archbishop of Genoa at that time, sent him to Capraia as the chaplain of the prison. Two months later, he was assigned as assistant pastor to the parish of Mount Carmel, where he remained until 1970, when Cardinal Siri moved back to Capraia. In the parish of Mount Carmel, Gallo started to gather young people and adults from all over the city, especially the poor and the marginalized. In the summer of 1970, after a den of hashish was discovered in the same district, Gallo, taking a cue from the fact, he recalled in his homily that there are many other drugs, for example those of language, thanks to which a boy may become "unsuitable for studies" if he is "the son of poor people, or a bombing of helpless people can become action in defense of freedom."[8] Gallo was accused of being a communist, and this led the curia to decide his removal. The measure of the archbishop caused the parish and the town to protest, although the curia did not turn back and ordered Gallo to obey. He refused the assignment to Capraia, believing that there he would be totally and permanently isolated. Some time later, he was welcomed by the parish priest of St. Benedict at Port of Genoa, Don Federico Rebora, and together with a small group he established the Community of San Benedetto al Porto. In an interview in August 2007 at La storia siamo noi ("Preti di strada") on Rai Tre, Gallo said: "My gospels are not four... We have been following for years and years the gospel according to De André, a path that is in obstinate and contrary direction. And we can confirm it, note it: from diamonds nothing was born, from dung flowers bloom."[9] Since the foundation of the Community of San Benedetto al Porto, Gallo was committed to pacifism and to the recovery of marginalized people, even advocating for the legalization of soft drugs. In 2006, Gallo was fined for smoking marijuana in the town hall of Genoa to protest against the law on drugs in Italy. He actively supported the No Dal Molin movement of Vicenza against the construction of a new U.S. military base in Padua. In April 2008, Gallo joined the V2-Day organized by Beppe Grillo.[10] On 27 June 2009, he participated to the 2009 Genoa gay pride parade, complaining about the uncertainties of the Catholic Church in respect of homosexuality. An LGBT rights advocate, Gallo was honored on 15 August 2011 as "Gay Character of the Year" by Gay.it in Torre del Lago.[11][12] In 2013, he said that the Catholic Church needed an openly gay pope.[13] Gallo died in Genoa on 22 May 2013 at the age of 84. His death was announced by Domenico Chionetti, spokesman for the Community of San Benedetto al Porto.[14] Works
References
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