In 2002 the Socio-educational Proposal "Educating in Difficult Times" began in America with the commitment to promote quality education, humanizing and transforming, for everyone, inspired by Poveda’s pedagogical thought.
Starting at that time many initiatives and activities developed in each country where the Teresian Association is present. The aim is to review and update pedagogical frameworks and to create new programs and actions taking into account the current context and strategic lines of the proposal. Because of this, a movement of educators has been generated.
When Pedro Poveda, a young priest, full of dreams and enthusiasm, began his evangelizing action in the caves of Guadix in the early twentieth century, he could not imagine the future development of his intuitions and projects.
Throughout his life, these early ideas, these first projects to articulate evangelization, education and social advancement, were maturing, acquiring different rootedness and developments. His dreams, projects, and actions, seed sown on good ground has borne much fruit. Because when the seed falls on every piece of land that welcomes it, the seed becomes one with the land and, without losing its deepest identity; as it germinates it acquires the wealth of the land where it has been planted.
The prophetic intuition of Pedro Poveda, born out of the reality of Guadix, and of the wide and deep look at the society of his time from the mountains of Covadonga, is a seed and a fundamental point of reference for the development of what we now call the socio-educational proposal of the Teresian Association.
"I I have my mind and heart in the present moment.” "I want human lives." "True Humanism”. "Value justice as much as life" "Give me a vocation and I will give you back a school, a method and a pedagogy." “With the spirit I place knowledge and I consider that both spirit and knowledge constitute the essence of the Asociation." "Until Christ be formed in you" ...
I invite each and everyone, every teacher, every educator who lives his/her educational task like salt in the style of the early Christians, teams in different contexts that put their energies into creating educational environments where people grow, to continue their task. Let us continue at this time of crossroads, in the school Poveda, allowing him to speak to our hearts, and that we may hear the words that will bring out each day in the joyful and difficult situations, the light and strength that sustains us in the daily task of daring to educate.
It has been one hundred years ... We enter into a new millennium. The seed sown in Guadix is now present in different parts of the world. In Europe, America, Africa, and Asia. In different countries, peoples and cultures. In each of these realities it is generating life, much life, much dynamism and generosity in the continuing search for projects and actions that articulate evangelization, education, and social advancement.
Almost 75 years ago, in 1928, this seed was planted in America. First in Chile, and slowly it germinated and grew in different countries. Today it is also present in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, the United States, Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, Dominican Republic, Uruguay, and Venezuela. In each country there have been new socio-educational projects that have developed inspired by that seed. In Latin America, a real network of experiences and projects, encouraged for years by the Council for Culture of the Teresian Association, has been established, as well as opportunities for exchange, deepening and mutual support. The awareness that unity and diversity need eachother is becoming increasingly stronger and more rooted.
It is harvest time. Let the seed penetrate again into our best life energies with its transforming and mobilizing force. Different teams are being challenged. In Cochabamba (Bolivia), in a conference organized by the Council for Culture in 1998, the idea emerges: we have walked a lot, projects have worked through their identity and specificity. It is time to build together the Socio-educational Proposal of the Association in Latin America. The teams are launched. It has been four years of intense collective work, locally and across the continent, advised by specialists in education, with educational seminars and conferences in different countries. With the efficient and generous contribution of Poveda Cultural Center of the Dominican Republic.
Today Latin America wants to give Pedro Poveda, in the year we celebrate the centenary of the beginning of his evangelization in the caves of Guadix the fruit of your dreams, we dare to say.
This proposal, Educating in Difficult Times, an expression inspired by Poveda, wants to be a reference point for all social and educational projects, for each educator, for each educator in Latin America that is committed to the educational and evangelizing action promoted by the Teresian Association. It also wants to be a contribution to the dialogue and exchanges with centers and projects in other countries and continents.
May Pedro Poveda make fruitful the educational work of each of the centers and social projects in the continent and help us make his words alive:
“Our works give testimony and speak with unmatched eloquence about what we are" (1919)
Loreto Ballester Reventós
President of the Teresian Association
Los Negrales, July 28, 2002
Web of the Socio-educational project http://pseitperu.blogspot.com.es/
By ARÁNZAZU AGUADO ARRESE.- On behalf of the Teresian Association, I most sincerely thank those who have come to this Congress. Especially the sponsors and associates who have made this event possible, and those that have given their support in various ways.
Many voices have been raised to diagnose the present moment and express their claims to education. Reports from prestigious institutions have pointed the direction and horizons at the local level and internationally. Some, very recently and with undoubted success. Thus, making a space for reflection on the education issue is not an isolated event. This Congress adds something and enters, so to speak, into the forum of educational concerns, human concerns shared by so many people, groups, almost at the beginning of a new millennium.
The hundred years of socio-educational action of Pedro Poveda that this Congress celebrates with satisfaction and responsibility certainly speak of fruitful sowing of ideas and actions, and the way this union was realized: a most admirable coherence. This sowing can be considered a valuable initiative, because it speaks, in origin and development, of the capacity of proposal and fertility visible beyond the difficulties that always accompany the birth of an initiative. From today’s viewpoint, we can recognize in it an educational initiative with proven potential for impact in our multicultural societies.
Looking at Pedro Poveda as educator is to welcome the current validity of his thought and action. We are interested to recognize how he has been seen at different times in the elapsed century. But we no less want to see how his thought and action are reflected and realized in different cultures and contexts today.
His is a force that transcends the Spanish and European level where he started, precisely at the beginning of the century. The validity is explained because of the universal character of his ideas and his ability to open roads surpassing borders of different types.
Certainly in the case of Pedro Poveda it is needed, and it is beautiful, to insert at the outset his pedagogical contribution to the cultural field and understand his contribution to the history of humanity and the Church in the years that marked the turn of the century and the first third of the one that is about to end.
Pedro Poveda, Blessed Pedro Poveda, occupies a clear place in the history of educational processes. With them he committed himself to his own activity, writing tirelessly, creating institutions, and offering his cooperation to all initiatives that would lead to remedy situations and propose projects. Education of the popular classes, the professional association of teachers and social advancement, faculty training - fundamental concerns of Poveda-, as well as his achievements in the social and educational fields testify to his open and proactive spirit and the rightful place he occupies in the educational achievements of the twentieth century.
His thinking has been developed in a sequence of articulated statements about education, which together enclose an authentic humanism, which we always find attached to the concrete experience, to the test of truth which are the facts themselves, and to the survival of his ideas in countless educators of yesterday and today. We will always find in the expressions of Poveda’s style to educate the reference to the principles of personalizing education, inclusive, open, multicultural, communicative, rooted in Christian values, committed to the process of human growth for all involved in it, and social transformation. In short, guidelines that he considers indispensable for human fulfillment.
When we look today at the path followed by Poveda’s initiative in education, we find, therefore, specific embodiments which have given and give shape now to that proposal that was developed over the years and that has gained its physiognomy at various times and places.
Along with the initial achievements in the service of teacher training and collaboration in Spain, desire that has not stopped until today, we have to mention the deployment of his work and thought in America, Asia, Africa and a significant number of European countries. Today we can see various educational networks of international scope at the level of the university, the development of programs for human advancement, schooling at various levels, training of women, teacher training centers, promotion of publications, all fruit of a patient task in research, etc. Overall, a broad overview of efforts and collaborations.
Some innovation initiative has had particular impact on the educational environment, such as that developed in recent decades around personalized education.
Today we also have a multiplicity of extracurricular initiatives, involving valuable efforts to accommodate new educational situations in certain social spaces. And perhaps the biggest impact is offered by the large number of educators trained in the school of Poveda over many generations and who, in the gentle action of their daily work, serve society with true vocation.
We can say that Poveda’s initiative today takes place under the sign of globality. And perhaps this is one of the aspects that make it attractive and effective in the current interlace of proposals and perplexities that we detect in the educational field. The deepest requirement of globality is that in this historical juncture initiatives and human institutions are called to serve all human beings. Globality is both a way of being in the world, a way of seeing the world, and a way of living in this world.
Feeling part of a whole. One can understand oneself as a self-sufficient subject, like an island, or, conversely, feel and know oneself joyously a part of a whole, a whole human (the universal human family) and a cosmic whole (planet earth, the entire universe). At the same time, universality is a world view: as a community of peoples in the global human family.
Universality is also living according to the principle of responsibility: living the present with the awareness of being responsible for the future of the world. It involves a commitment of building a habitable and livable world for future generations, protecting the right to the future, while defending the rights of the future in the present.
Therefore, and with new elements that will be incorporated throughout this and other talks, we may well say that the validity of Poveda’s proposal in education participates, in its initial stages and in its present development, in the characteristics of globality because it includes an anthropology of communication among human beings, an overcoming of self-reliance, a practical sense of responsibility at this time.
But beyond the content of his proposal, we can extract from it something that makes great sense, in my view, in a Congress of these characteristics: a way to deal with large issues of educational endeavor today. Those he called "palpitating questions," or more precisely "engaging in the study of matters of throbbing interest " (P. Poveda, Alrededor de un proyecto, 1913).
It is fair that we are interested in clarifying what this means. Also those questions that today concern every educator and teacher, every responsible society not only deserve attention but willingness to enter into dialogue with them.
Poveda’s doing is made of an active capacity to intuit accurately, to question without acrimony, to propose decisively. Thus, doing in accordance with Poveda’s style is a mindset (to raise issues, to identify problems and to come into contact); a way of dealing that we can call technological (operational implementation of ways and means); a human spirit marked by responsibility and foresight, and political advocacy, that is, aware of their impact on citizenship. Surely all this involves a willingness to act. "Poveda is a famous educator, not one who studies and defines, but one of those who believe, who found, who build," someone wrote about him ("Claridades" February 8, 1917).
Thus, how should we deal, in accordance with Poveda’s style, with some fundamental issues of today’s educational reality? The series of articles collected in his publication Alrededor de un proyecto (1913) gives a good account of how to face the issue of the moment.
"The educational problem has not been granted, in general, the importance it deserves." "... Since the issue was not taken seriously, it was not studied. Had we taken it seriously, we would have done all we knew as we did for Spanish Literature, Theology, Philosophy and Natural Sciences ... It may be a wrong assessment; but I see that all our backwardness stems from not having given real importance to these issues, and we find ourselves in the predicament of treating them without knowing them, having dismissed them not to show our lack of preparation and educational background. Had we taken education seriously ... today we would have, why not! people, books, teachers, schools, methods, scientific material ..."
Pedro Poveda gives us a sign of the ability of facing the real situation and "look at it seriously,” as he would say on another occasion, that is, by doing a thorough analysis and present an active proposal. Inseparably connected to Poveda’s conception are the educational process and the transformation of society. This is highlighted in, among other studies, the last doctoral thesis centered on Poveda’s thinking on education and published under the title Pedagogy in times of crisis (Ramal, 1996). I quote:
"What he lived in Guadix would be repeated at various times in his life: a watchful eye discovering the possibilities offered by reality; a risky launch of a project; employ all forces to secure funding and collaborators for the realization of the plan; joy and vigor in daily work without discouragement; face obstacles and attacks, the negative ones received that threatened to limit the scope of his projects."
His subsequent contacts with the university sector in Oviedo during his stay in Asturias (1906-1913) allowed him to touch closely the political, educational, and religious problems that were circulating in the environment. Soon the academic world would receive the influence of his action, while he continued his incessant creation of Academies and Educational Centers. From 1914 until today Poveda’s initiative in the university arena promoted the creation of residences and student associations of all kinds, genuine opportunities for training.
And later, in Jaen and Madrid, until well into the 30s, he would keep alive his reflection and action cultivated throughout his life. His extensive epistolary for communication gives a good account of it.
Perhaps a first consequence of Poveda’s point of view to address the education issue forces us to say something of fundamental transcendence. The time to return to education its proper place in the social dynamics has come. Surely we must place it in its entirety in the chapter on "the emerging". Whoever has a minimum sensitivity will not lack the capacity to see it. Sometimes emerging as a result of the efforts of some who are convinced more of the result than of their deserved recognition. Emerging because of the incisiveness of the issues that affect it.
Poveda gives us the opportunity to work in this Congress so that such special place is given to education or at least so that education may earn a space, a road on public opinion and, more importantly, in the good work of many educators here present that need reinforcement and strong support to continue to play the noble role that occupies them. Hopefully this our reflection may also contribute, if only in small measure, to grant educational pedagogical concerns careful attention in educational policies.
Poveda was someone who was convinced that he understood well the determining influence of education in shaping the human stature of people, families, social spaces, and the negative consequences of its absence or minimized consideration thereof.
"When in a population there is abundant water, the municipality is not concerned if more or less amount of it is lost; but when it is limited, studies and calculations are used so that not a single drop is wasted, if possible. So it happens now with regards to the issue of education. Perhaps without being hyperbolic, he continues, we could ensure that we now have enough water to produce energy; but this energy, which is what we need to produce, cannot be produced without channeling well that which comes from all sources: effort, talent and money." (Alrededor de un proyecto, 1913).
I dare say that the main reform we need is to return to education the central place it deserves. Could our real “problem” today also be an educational "problem"?
The Teresian Association, which I preside, along with the actions being developed along this line, has looked into recent reflections on education among the emerging issues that shape society today. We wanted to do it with the sensitivity of our founder. And we have stressed the direction we need to move towards with an increasingly committed vision to a genuine understanding of education and its impact.
"It is necessary to train people to be active and participatory subjects; committed to justice, solidarity, human rights and peace. Not forgetting that the educational process takes place in everyday life and in different areas of our life: home, work, leisure, street, classroom, media, etc. "(Fe-culturas-justicia: Cuestiones emergentes, 1994).
This Congress will not alleviate the large themes of current educational issues and major areas of concern. Just look at the ambitious program that brings us together: educational engagement in the family and at school, the social reality and marginalization, the set of opportunities and risks in the world of the young, the irrevocable contribution of educational research, the right and duty of training educators, challenges of the techno-scientific society, the issue of women, the anthropological and theological roots that sustain Poveda’s pedagogical approach, etc.
As a starting point, I want to identify some of these important issues with which to dialogue in accordance with Poveda’s style to address educational concerns.
This presentation allows me to just name them, aware that each one includes within itself multiple themes and possible reflections:
(To read the full article in Spanish, download the attachment to the bottom of this page).
ARÁNZAZU AGUADO ARRESE
President of the Teresian Association
President of the Congress on Education, Pedro Poveda educador. Vol. 2. Narcea Ed. Madrid, July 10-13, 1997
By ARMANDO PEGO PUIGBÓ.- This article seeks to provide an overview of the historiographical treatment of the life and work of the priest and educator Pedro Poveda (1874-1936). Here are presented features of a unique Catholic teaching proposal in a secularized age. Poveda wanted to present the Christian message in state educational structures by encouraging dialogue between faith and knowledge. This modernization program also includes the hermeneutical keys of an era marked by the activities of the ILE (Initials of Institución Libre de Enseñanza).
Pedro Poveda (Linares, 1876-Madrid, 1936), priest and Spanish educator of the first third of the twentieth century, and founder of the Teresian Association, ought to be given a noteworthy prominence in the political and social circumstances of Spain and even Europe at the beginning of the XXI century. Such a role has been obscured by a set of historical, educational, and religious factors that should be analyzed and thought over at a time when the limits of secularism in Western democratic societies are being discussed.
In the following pages I will focus my presentation on the historiographical reasons that seem to have postponed the originality of Poveda’s work and on the new paths that are opening in the study of a key individual in Spanish education -not only Catholic- from the final stage of the Restoration to the Second Republic. Thus this is a contribution to the reception and analysis of one of the most unique proposals of Spanish Catholicism in the twentieth century from the viewpoint of cultural understanding.
Therefore, I will first analyze the literature on the protagonist and his work, both from the civil and religious points of view. Then I will raise some of the paradoxes that have occurred when studying his educational contribution (biographies, historical and social analyses, history of the Teresian Association, etc.). I will end with an assessment of future prospects offered by current research on our author and the traces he may leave on the approach to the study of contemporary religious history.
1. PEDRO POVEDA, A FOOTNOTE ON A PAGE?
Seventy years after his death, when observing with perspective the image of Pedro Poveda projected by ecclesiastical and/or educational literature, one has the feeling of not being able to claim completely another one of the forgotten in contemporary Spanish culture. There are several reasons. Some are political. Among them, his tragic death on July 28, 1936, in the early days of the Spanish Civil War. Other reasons are religious, such as his efforts to embody the Christian faith through the practice of lay women, mainly in public education. To this, as a cultural explanation, ignorance of his writings may be added. Neither his recognition as "humanist and pedagogue" by UNESCO in 1974 on the centenary of his birth, nor his beatification in 1993 or canonization in 2003 have led to a greater dissemination of his life and work, hardly spread among the general public, misinterpreted or reduced in his originality to schemes that do not realize his complexity or his nuances.
Poveda did not found, in any way, a new religious congregation dedicated to teaching, but for the first time, even if relying on similar experiences in the field of private education, such as home teachers Associations promoted by Jesuit Fr. Tarin, he designed a program that would offer teachers and Christian teachers the opportunity to organize and participate in the process of building a national school of state character based on the principles of their faith. Inspired by the theological and spiritual model of "the early Christians,” citizens with equal rights and duties to others in a society immersed in a period of secularization, he wrote Ensayo de Proyectos pedagógicos. Following this publication, he founded what later became known as the Teresian Association. As an association of lay women dedicated to teaching, primarily in public schools, his ideal began to crystallize around his Academies as training centers, in close collaboration with official Teacher Training schools. The idea was to contribute to achieving the ultimate goal of making present the Christian message, through adequate preparation of teaching professionals, in state educational structures.
Both the emphasis on the associative character, in line with professional and pedagogical concerns of the time, and the thrust to the leading role that women could eventually develop in academia, beginning with primary education, make Poveda a thinker and organizer that can not be just confined to the scope of Catholic "intelligence." He should be studied in the historical context of one of the most fruitful stages of Spanish culture, which influenced him and in which he would leave a mark. Note also his constant social concern, since his years as a young priest in Guadix, where he founded a school for children of the caves in 1902, until the end of his life, having been a member of both the Central Board against Illiteracy and the Hermandad del Refugio. As Dolores Gómez Molleda said:
«his concern about the education of the popular classes, the professional association of teachers and social advancement, the pedagogical updating of teachers, and the renewal of teaching methods and their achievements in the social-educational field, place him in an important place in the modern and reformist educational movement.»
His innovative vision of lay apostolate, through the Christian presence in state structures, precisely reflects the profound impact of the modernization process experienced by Spanish society between the Revolution of '68 and the Second Republic. Trying to overcome a confessional stance marked by catechetical zeal, Poveda tried to harmonize the exemplary witness of a Christian life with a scientific training in accordance with the requirements of the moment, beyond controversies over teaching catechism, while remaining faithful time to Papal teaching. For him, faith and knowledge are not set against each other, in a time when certain sectors supported an antagonism between the two with conviction. What could be done, in his opinion, was, on the contrary, articulate a dialogue, taking into account the complex power relations of a society that demanded the autonomy of public life: "Thinking about the amendment of the legislation, when each new law is a step towards secularism, would be equivalent to thinking of an unattainable remedy.” Faced with this attitude and through the foundation of what he called Catholic Institution of Teaching, which failed to materialize, he proposed the following in his Ensayo de proyectos pedagógicos:
«Train, according to the Christian spirit and according to the best teaching methods, a body of teachers of primary education, who would take annually the required competitive exams in order to obtain the largest number of positions in public schools; and second, maintain by all means possible, and exerting the best efforts, the Christian spirit and professional union in all teachers belonging to the Association."»
Assuming the novelty of such an approach, as well as the difficult balance that caused this proposal to be placed on the borders of the usual Catholic practice in those years, the following pages are an endeavor to account for both the historiographical reception of this proposal and indicate the possible lines of action, making them historically intelligible. Otherwise, it should be recognized, with Cioran, that in the case of Poveda, it has an ironic validity to affirm that "man makes history; in turn, history destroys him. He is the author and subject, agent and victim."
(To read the full article, in Spanish, download the attachment to the bottom of this page)
ARMANDO PEGO PUIGBÓ. Universitat Ramon Llull,
in Hispania Sacra, LIX 120, July-December, 2007, 707-740, ISSN: 0018-215-X
By Card. PAUL POUPARD.- Always alert to the celebration of the anniversaries of eminent personalities in the field of education, science and culture, Monsieur René Maheu, active and tireless Director General of UNESCO, invites us this evening to celebrate, at the request of Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Spain, and Peru, the centenary of Fr. Pedro Poveda Castroverde, Spanish educator and humanist. Let us thank publicly such happy initiative.
Is this concentration of men and women, coming from far away, from nations and continents so diverse a test of the communion that, above all barriers, unites minds and hearts when given a place of communication? And, is it not the high calling of UNESCO, since its foundation, the offer to all people of good will a forum for meeting and dialogue, and present itself to our modern world, crossed by tragic bouts of division, as the privileged place where the pluralism of spiritual families that make up humanity can be manifested in an authentic atmosphere of brotherhood and peace?
With the competence and talent that is theirs, eminent Professor García Hoz, Madrid, and Ms. Aranibar, former President of the "Inter-American Union of Women" will speak on educational thought and the place of women in the world of Pedro Poveda, respectively. They will discuss the old and the new world in a cantata in two voices. And we will rejoice as we listen carefully.
My responsibility, more modest, in these preliminary words and by way of introduction, is to let them enter the porch of this vast cathedral: the humanism of Poveda in his historical context.
Is there anything more fascinating than this context from 1874-1936 that contains the hectic life and death of our educator? We would need the consummate art of an experienced filmmaker whose camera would explore the files of a substantiated history since the coup of General Pavia, the dictatorship of Serrano, the pronouncement of Martinez Campos and the third Carlist war until the October Revolution in Asturias and Catalonia. And while, the long march of the Chinese Communists of Mao Zedong begins, the Popular Front on both sides of the Pyrenees succeeds, and Hitler and Mussolini proclaim the axis Berlin-Rome, symptoms of the tragic symphony that will threaten to plunge Europe into a fratricidal war, increasingly large, into a world dripping blood and tears. Is this not, perhaps, the time when Charlie Chaplin produced his incomparable masterpiece "Modern times" where the brotherly humor of the camera fails to mask the tragic and inhuman of an industrial era that becomes technocrat?
The young Pedro is nine years old when Karl Marx dies in 1883 and José Ortega y Gasset is born. The telephone, the phonograph, cinema, the electric lamp, the bicycle and car rush to conquer the world. At the same time, emphasis is placed on the break between a group of privileged people who benefit and a mass of workers whose "unmerited misery" will be condemned by Pope Leo XIII in the first great social encyclical "Rerum Novarum" of 1891. Then Pedro is 17 years old and is studying theology at the seminary of Guadix.
While Becquerel discovers radioactivity (1896), the Curies discover radium (1898) and Branley discovers the principle of wireless telegraphy in a small laboratory on Assas Street at the Catholic Institute of Paris (1899), Fr. Pedro is ordained in Guadix, where he begins teaching (1897-1905) History of Philosophy, Logic and The Fahers of the Church.
"This century was two years ..." We are in 1902. King Alfonso XIII is reigning. The young priest, who has discovered the social problem, goes intrepidly to present his projects and a royal decree gives him, generously, 500 pesetas.
While Picasso and Braque exhibit their first Cubist works (1909) Spanish law abolishes compulsory religious education in schools and sets a maximum of 60 hours of work per week (1913). For Fr. Pedro this is the decisive moment: the fruitful collaborations, large foundations, and pedagogical studies are on par with his concrete achievements. At the time of the First World War and the Russian Revolution Pedro Poveda multiplies his efforts both toward teacher training and the advancement of women; these will always be two his major concerns.
The march in Rome, the pontificate of Pius XI (1922), the abdication of the Young League of Nations before the rise of fascism in Europe, the publication of "The Agony of Christianity" by Unamuno (1925) and the economic crash in the United States (1929) match the prelude to the civil war in Spain, of which Fr. Pedro will be a victim (1936).
Here, outlined broadly, are the threads of the substantiated historical plot, within which stands the humanism of Fr. Pedro Poveda, in a Spain where the return of tragedy is rampant, and in a prisoner Europe, according to the unforgettable words of Chesterton, of the "crazed Christian ideas."
Nothing would serve us better to define the humanism of Fr. Pedro than the famous words of Pope Paul VI at the last public session of Vatican II, Dec. 7, 1965, at St. Peter's Basilica in Rome: “We call upon those who term themselves modern humanists, to give the council credit at least for one quality and to recognize our own new type of humanism: we, too, in fact, we more than any others, honor mankind… Our humanism becomes Christianity, our Christianity becomes centered on God; in such sort that we may say, to put it differently: a knowledge of man is a prerequisite for a knowledge of God. (Paul VI).
Such is the humanism of Pedro Poveda in our century in which man, focused on the inordinate conquests that his intelligence has done to nature, hesitates about the meaning he is to give to his existence.
Like the educational achievements of Fr. Pedro, his whole reflection starts from the same intuition and is proof of the same conviction: man must be educated so that he may become what he is.
Since 1897, the young professor of philosophy at the seminar Guadix will be found, almost inadvertently, plunged into social action, in the heart of his province, called by Azorín in those difficult years "the tragic Andalucía," immersed into powerful forces of anarchist inspiration.
It is, as we know, in 1901 when Francisco Ferrer founds the "New School" in accordance with the principles of the libertarian educational movement.
Poveda, since 1902, performs, with his presence and action, considerable work between the agricultural proletariat and the gypsies in the caves of Guadix. This apostle has found the secret of all apostolate: share the life of those to whom he is dedicated in body and soul. He owns their precarious existence and their problems. And, because of this shared existence, he multiplies initiatives, arouses social awareness, creates schools, challenges public authorities, so that, as Paul VI said in his encyclical Populorum Progressio, he calls on all those who have become a "nearest neighbor" to take responsibility for their own destiny for a common development of the whole person and of all people at the economic, social and spiritual levels, since a human being is not and can not be reduced to just one dimension.
There is no doubt that the fact of sharing the human condition, no matter how evangelical it may be, it can not but arouse contradiction and attract persecution. The ruling class sees this as a dangerous threat to the established order and leftist movements see it as a bourgeois recovery covering up the fundamental injustice of alienating structures of capitalist society. All this forced him to leave Guadix, bearing in his flesh and in his wounded heart the suffering of his people whose pain will never leave him.
No less restless is the society located in Asturias in 1906, prey to an economic and social imbalance, to which the confrontation of traditional values and the crisis of the school is added. The progress of secularization continues to provoke a violent doctrinal opposition causing the tragic week of July 1909 in Barcelona, where passions are unleashed by the Ferrer process and the destruction of religious buildings, where some liken secular education and revolutionary fires and others identify Catholic schools with the inquisitorial spirit.
And then, the way followed by Poveda is drawn: train people "of virtue and knowledge," raise across the country a true body of educators, apart from political quarrel and beyond ideological plots; in short, train "professionally competent and spiritually motivated educators.” This gives rise to his famous "Academies," cultural centers that allow closer ties among educators and give them appropriate training in a climate of human advancement and spiritual expansion. Amid the reactionary fundamentalism and militant anti-clericalism, he promotes a body of responsible educators, prepared to provide an education adapted to the masses. Judge for yourself the manifesto on Modern Education, in the biweekly illustrated journal on Social Education, July 15, 1912:
"In order for a newspaper company of lofty purposes to develop with strength, it needs to penetrate the core of the people, know their pitiable state and try to redeem them; but this can only be achieved with gigantic ongoing work, firm and thorough, condensed expressively in this word: Education! Who moves us then? The love of culture! Where are we going? To awake the people."
The reform movement spread across 12 major cities, but it will be based in Madrid, where Poveda becomes an "educator of educators" in a world that has seen the strongest values sway and in a Spain that is victim of a tragic pessimism. In the face of the decline of ideologies and destructive skepticism of minorities, Poveda strongly affirms his faith in the human person and works relentlessly to train people right at this moment, of which Ortega y Gasset says that "the Spanish problem has become an educational problem."
Building a new world on the ruins of an old society, such is the humanist program of Poveda: a fraternal and welcoming world for all people, before the sterile confrontation of the moment that will soon be bloody. According to him, we must help people develop their personal and communitarian potential and therefore insert their creative freedom into the social fabric, fighting the sclerosis of conservatism and the mutilations of rationalism, because it is the whole person and every person that we must help advance in a harmonious and fruitful symbiosis.
Humanism, based on courage and founded on hope: "to educate is to rebuild," in a single movement, man and society, combining for this great work multiple diversified resources of pedagogy in "plein air": physical and manual training, technical and aesthetic, singing, music, drawing, theater, poetry, in a stimulating emulation between teachers and pupils.
Humanist, whose intelligence, rather than being lost in a dissolving criticism, is enriched by a positive reflection and the original creation in the service of youth, which he proclaims with lyrical accents, "powerful weapon, omnipotent arm, force in the world." He is a humanist who knew how to share his faith in man: "Give me a vocation of an educator and I will return to you a school, a method and pedagogy." Hence, the extensive network of teachers he imspires, men and women proud to participate in an educational renewal at school, the Teachers College, the University, through clubs, college dormitories, student associations, with marked predilection for advancing women in the tasks of education, research and culture through Academies, study days, educational weeks, and training centers.
The thought and action of Pedro Poveda extend over all borders and his message is transmitted in 5 continents today.
Members of the Teresian Association, educators, scientists, Christians involved at all levels in a deep social and cultural action, continue the path taken by Pedro Poveda.
Please allow the Rector of the Catholic Institute of Paris say at the end of this short and at the same time long talk: I owe it to the Teresian Association to have discovered the life and influence of Fr. Pedro Poveda throughout the world. May his humanism continue beyond the celebration of his centennial, and thus continue allowing us to benefit greatly. Your Excellency, ambassadors, ladies and gentlemen, it is a pleasure to pay my tribute to him within UNESCO, which is dedicated to education, science and culture.
Paul Poupard
Rector of the Catholic Institute of Paris
Commemorative session at UNESCO. Paris 1974
CENTENARY of Pedro Poveda 1874-1974