Indian
Priest Gets Multimedia Award
NIEPOKALANOW, Warsaw, Poland , May 28, 2010, 16:00 Hrs (SAR
News):
Indian
priest Fr.C.M. Paul was given the "Multimedia in the Service
of the Gospel Award 2010" at the solemn Eucharistic celebration
inaugurating the silver jubilee of the longest running International
Catholic Film Festival at Niepokalanow, May 27.
Salesian
Father Paul belonging to the Calcutta province was formerly
the Editor of The Herald, and is currently pursuing doctoral
studies in Social Communications at the Salesian University,
Rome.
The first
president of the festival, Zygmunt Gutowsky, and the current
president, Danuta Stachyra, presented St. Maximillian Kolbe
statuette with the inscription "Fr C.M. Paul, Multimedia
in the Service of the Gospel, honorary prize of Julian Kluenty,
Catholic Film association (CFA), Poland 2010." Two prizes
are offered in this category "for outstanding achievements
both in Poland and abroad in the area of evangelisation through
multimedia." This is the seventh year of the award dedicated
to Polish film director, cameraman, author of over 100 films,
as well as president for the Warsaw Branch of Polish Association
of Scientific Film, Julian Kulenty (1922 – 2000).
The first
year overseas award went to film director Mel Gibson of the
"Passion of Christ" fame. The second year award went
to Mother Angelica of the EWTN, the third to Sister Angela Ann
Zukowski president of Unda-World and founder director of the
Centre for Religious Telecommunications, university of Dayton,
Ohio.
"I
am totally floored by this award," said 56-year-old Father
Paul in his brief presentation on receiving the award.
Father
Paul is a former president of Signis-India and first Catholic
priest to be appointed to the Central Board of Film Certification,
by the Information & Broadcasting Ministry of the Government
of India.
The Niepokalanow
festival is holding its 25th uninterrupted screening, May 27-30,
some 45 km west of Warsaw, capital of Poland.
Last June,
Father Paul won Father Horace Rosario SJ Journalism Award given
by the Ambassadors for Jesus Calcutta and in 2008 Father John
Barrett Award for best SAR News reporter given by the Indian
Catholic Press Association, Bangalore.
The Niepokalanow
(City of the Immaculate) film festival had its genesis in the
heydays of "Solidarnosc" (Solidarity) the national
resistance movement against the Polish Communist Regime, in
1985. A group of activists formed the Catholic Film Association
of Poland as a cultural forum. The festival started under the
guise of a spiritual retreat in the Franciscan (OFM Conv.) monastery
at Niepokalanow, the national shrine of Mary Immaculate and
the headquarters of the "Militia Immaculate" (Army
of the Immaculate).
Father Maximillian
Kolbe founded the Franciscan monastery at Niepokalanow in 1927.
After the fall of Communism, Poland had its first democratically
elected government in 1989. The president of Poland, who recently
died in airplane crash, was patron of the festival along with
the Polish primate Cardinal Josef Glemp.