Pope’s message to the book SONO FRANCESCO

by time news

Edith Bruck, born in Hungary in 1931, is a prolific writer, translator, and immigrated to Urom in 1954.

Marina Raj – Vatican

Pope Francis said that meeting the writer Edith Bruck inspired him with a sense of awe, hope and gratitude that humanity, soft, light and always ready to break, is capable of being broken and regenerated.

In his foreword to the book SONO FRANCESCO, which has been on sale in the library since October 21, the Pope has mentioned that he was surprised to see the peace of a woman in a life full of suffering and the strength that shines in suffering.

On January 26, 2021, the Pope read an interview with Edith Bruck, a Hungarian writer, in L’Osservatore Romano, and went to her home in Urom to meet her, and then met Edith and her assistant, Olga from Ukraine, at Santa Marta. Mentioned in the text.

Edith Bruck, born in Hungary in 1931, is a prolific writer and translator. He migrated to Rome in 1954 and worked as a director at RAI, an Italian television company, from 1970 to 1990.

Edith, a 91-year-old woman, has published various novels and essays on her life experiences, family environment and personal life.

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