37th International Eucharistic Congress explained

The 37th International Eucharistic Congress that was held from 31 July to 7 August 1960 in Munich, West Germany, was the 37th edition of the International Eucharistic Congress of the Roman Catholic Church.

History

The site of the 37th International Eucharistic Congress was chosen by Pope Pius XII, who had previously served in Munich as a papal nuncio. Approximately 430 bishops and 28 cardinals attended at the congress, including Cardinal Richard Cushing of Boston, Cardinal Francis Spellman of New York, and Cardinal Albert Gregory Meyer of Chicago from the United States.

Events

Opening mass

The opening mass of the congress was celebrated on 31 July 1960 on the Odeonsplatz. About 80,000 people attended the mass. Cardinal Joseph Wendel adopted elements of the Liturgic Movement by celebrating the mass not with its back to the people (like in the Tridentinian Rite) but celebrating it looking toward the people and by reading the Gospel not in Latin but in German.[1]

Church of atonement near the Dachau

During the congress, the foundation stone for a "church of atonement" near the former Dachau concentration camp was laid.

Mass on the Theresienwiese

The congress was closed by celebrating a Statio Orbis Mass on the Theresienwiese, a large square in Munich on which also the Oktoberfest takes place every year.

Fimcap

In the course of the 1960 Eucharistic Congress, Catholic youth organizations from different countries met in Munich and held a first delegate conference that prepared the foundation of the Fimcap (International Federation of Catholic Parochial Youth Movements).[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Eucharistischer Weltkongress in München, 31. Juli bis 7. August 1960. Fellner. Michael. Historisches Lexikon Bayerns ("Historical Encyclopedia of Bavaria").
  2. Web site: International Federation of Catholic Parochial Youth Movements . . 2015 . July 1, 2016.