DONNA MARIA MARULLO DI CONDOJANNI FOUNDATION
Rome, 14 June 2000
"FOR OVER EIGHT CENTURIES TOGETHER ALONG THE PATH OF
CIVILISATION, HISTORY, AND PROGRESS, BESIDE THE
SICILIAN POPULATION".
International Conference in Palermo and Messina on
the presence of the Knights of Malta in Sicily.
Saturday 17 – Sunday 18 June 2000.
The Sicilian Regional Assembly will host for two
days in the Palazzo dei Normanni in Palermo and
Palazzo Zanca in Messina a prestigious
multidisciplinary meeting of experts from various
European universities. The conference is organised
by the Order of Malta to inaugurate the cultural,
scientific and humanitarian activities of its "Donna
Maria Marullo di Condojanni" Foundation, established
in memory of this Dame who died a year ago after a
life devoted actively and lovingly to the sick,
needy and refugees.
The Conference will be preceded by official visits
of the Grand Chancellor, Amb. Carlo Marullo di
Condojanni, and consort Donna Elisabetta, with the
Order’s Ambassador to the Italian Republic, Giulio
di Lorenzo Badia, to the President of the Sicilian
Region, Rt. Hon. Angelo Capodicasa, in Palazzo
Orleans and to the President of the Sicilian
Regional Assembly, Rt. Hon Nicola Cristaldi, in
Palazzo dei Normanni. In attendance, the Councillors
for Health and a delegation of the heads of the
Order’s structures in Italy and Sicily, President
Don Carlo dei Principi Massimo, the Commander of the
Order’s Military Corps, General Mario Prato, and the
Grand Priory delegates in Sicily. The constructive
and cordial meetings of the Order’s Head of
Government with the Presidents stress the ties that
bind the Order to Sicily, not only with regards to
tradition but also for the health, welfare and civil
defence services that the Knights perform daily all
over the region.
The Order’s Association of Italian Knights, and in
particular the Grand Priory delegations in Sicily,
will be co-operating with the "Donna Maria Marullo"
Foundation, as well as public and private
organisations with similar institutional aims. An
executive committee led by Donna Elisabetta Marullo
di Condojanni will be responsible for its
organisation. With this initiative, Donna Elisabetta
will be keeping alive the memory of her relation
Donna Maria, born into one of Sicily’s most
illustrious families and for over forty years
present in this land with her spirituality and her
indefatigable humanitarian commitment through
various international institutions. She was well
known for her devoted help to earthquake victims and
her services for the poor and the homeless, as well
as for gypsies for whom she organised camps.
The main aims of the Foundation, with offices in
Rome and Messina, are to promote and foster the
study and prevention of earthquakes in Sicily, and
especially in the province of Messina. Also included
are civil defence initiatives such as joint
emergency drills and specific information for the
population and the preservation and development of
family values.
By organising this international conference just a
month after its establishment, the Foundation has
attracted to it and to Sicily the cultural and
scientific interest of eminent experts, as well as
governmental, religious and humanitarian
institutions, thanks also to the co-operation of the
Order’s International Academy. The Sicilian Regional
Assembly and the Sicilian Region, through their
respective Presidents, Rt. Hon. Nicola Cristaldi and
Rt. Hon. Angelo Capodicasa, and the Order’s Grand
Magistry, through the Grand Chancellor, Amb. Carlo
Marullo di Condojanni, have given their High
Patronage. The Minister of Defence, Rt. Hon. Sergio
Mattarella, the Archbishop of Palermo, Cardinal
Salvatore De Giorgi, the Mayor of Messina, Dott.
Salvatore Leonardi, and the Grand Prior of Naples
and Sicily, Fra’ Antonio Nesci, will be
participating in the sessions and meetings with
their presence and their addresses.
The conference, divided into two sessions, will
start on the morning of Saturday 17 June in Palermo
and continue in Messina in the afternoon of Sunday
18, co-ordinated respectively by Prof. Orazio
Cancila, Professor of Modern History at the
University Palermo, and by Prof. Aldo Nigro,
Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Messina.
In the splendid setting of Palazzo dei Normanni, the
Grand Priory delegate for Palermo, Paolo de
Gregorio, will open the conference. Prof. Paolo
Caucci von Saucken, Professor of Spanish Culture at
the University of Perugia and President of the
Order’s International Academy, will give the first
paper on "The Order of Malta and Pilgrimages:
militia sacra e cura peregrinorum", devoted to the
Order’s core mission, the care and assistance of
pilgrims, of great topicality both for the Grand
Jubilee of 2000, and for the development of the
Great Marian Pilgrimages worldwide. Prof. Joseph
Brincat, Head of Department of the Italian Faculty
of Arts of the University of Malta, will be entering
right into the heart of the conference with his
study on "Linguistic Usage in Sicily and Malta
during the Period of the Knights", stressing the
great cultural and spiritual contribution of the
presence of the Knights in the two islands, already
beacons of civilisation and progress in the
Mediterranean basin. Prof. Kristjan Taomasporg will
treat the origins of the "Settlements of the Great
Orders of Chivalry in Sicily" drawing conference
participants’ attention to a century, 1130-1220, of
great splendour for Sicily, freed from the dominion
of the Arabs and becoming independent with the
conquest of the Kingdom of Sicily by the Normans
begun in 1060. The Director of the Istituto
Melitense of the University of Madrid, Prof. Hugo O’
Donnel, will take the occasion of the Emperor
Charles V’s fifth centenary - commemorated on Malta
last week with an international conference organised
by the Order’s International Academy, in which
numerous scholars participated in the presence of 18
ambassadors from all over Europe - to stress the
great political intuition of Charles V in assigning
Malta to the Knights, and in particular the role of
"Malta and Sicily in Charles V’s Naval Strategy".
The conference on the presence of the Knights in
Sicily will continue in the afternoon of the next
day in Palazzo Zanca in Messina, a symbolic city for
all the Knights of the Sovereign Order. It was
inside the embrace of this port, with the generosity
of its population, and in particular in the spirit
of solidarity and co-operation of the confreres of
the Grand Priory of Messina, that the Order found,
both after the surrender of Rhodes and the loss of
Malta, the strength and the ability to take up its
journey begun nine centuries ago in Jerusalem. The
strength to rise again from its disastrous crises
and also to withstand, with the help of the Messina
Knights, the extenuating sieges and naval battles
against Muslim expansion. Messina like Jerusalem,
like Rhodes, like Malta? Perhaps. Certainly behind
Jerusalem, behind Rhodes, behind Malta, and now
behind Rome, there has also been, there still is,
the precious contribution of this city, with its
Knights, with its Dames and with its young
volunteers.
It is precisely the Grand Priory Delegate of Messina
and Grand Chancellor of the Order, Amb. Carlo
Marullo di Condojanni, whose name and whose
illustrious family have been constructively and
actively interwoven for centuries in these glorious
historic events, who has the task of introducing the
session of the international conference in the city
of the "Giant who came from the Sea".
It was in this city, on 9 February 1803, that the
Pontifical Bull arrived nominating Giovan Battista
Tommasi, closing the troubled period following the
loss of Malta and opening new horizons which were to
bring the Order to the coasts of Sicily and to those
of all continents. "Grand Master Tommasi and the
Order of Malta in Sicily" is the title of the
in-depth and rigorous study by Prof. Paolo Caucci
von Saucken, President of the Order’s International
Academy, who will be the first to take the floor.
Prof. Joseph Bricat, following on from the paper
given in the Palermo session on linguistic usage,
will enrich and complete the panorama under the
scientific profile by talking about "The Knights and
the Maltese: the scientific promotion and the
formation of standard varieties". Also of great
interest for Sicily’s history is the paper of Prof.
Kristjan Toomaspoeg, with its invaluable and
exhaustive research on "The Geography of the Order
of St. John in Jerusalem’s Patrimony in Sicily, 1145
- 1492", assets of the Sicilian Grand Priory
strictly linked to its welfare activity and to its
defence of Christendom and the western world. To
close the session, attentively and cordially
co-ordinated by Prof. Aldo Nigro, Lecturer in
Psychology at the University of Messina, Prof. Hugo
O’Donnel will dwell on the strategic and determinant
deeds of "Don Garcia de Toledo, Viceroy of Sicily
and Captain General of the Sea", artificer of the
"Little Relief" and "Great Relief" of the Sicilian
fleet, definitively repelling the Great Siege of
Malta by the overwhelming and powerful Ottoman fleet
and Muslim expansionism in the West.
During the conference organised for the
establishment of the "Donna Maria Marullo di
Condojanni" Foundation, the path of civilisation,
history, and progress trod for centuries by the
Knights and the Sicilian people has become more
vivid than ever. This is not only thanks to the
historical excursus of eminent scholars but also to
the exemplary life of this Dame of Malta who lived
according to the Order’s principles and
institutional aims. For the needy, the gypsies in
their camps and for the sick, Donna Maria Marullo
was "our Dame", just as she was for the generations
of young people to whom she had dedicated, with
passion and professionalism, the most advanced and
farsighted training schemes.
The Sicilians usually referred to the Knight’s ships
as "ours". "Tutela Italiae" were the words engraved
on a medal that Grand Master Pinto had struck in
honour of the Knights’ naval fleet and the Knights
of St. John and Sicily have created together, day
after day, their joint history; in its moments of
glory and in those of pain. And in the moments of
solidarity, of relief: from the destructive
earthquakes which have occurred over the centuries,
the epidemics, the famines and the abuses of the
conquests. The sea is a source of life for the men
and women of this land surrounded by it, even though
it can become a source of death, just as the waves
die as they follow each other in perpetual and
infinite motion. But it is also the discovery of new
horizons, the construction of a new history of
progress and civilisation, source of boundless
solidarity, as also happened for the children of
this island, as it happens and still happens for the
Knights and Dames of the Order of St. John.