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In 1986, we celebrate the sixteenth centennial of the conversion of St. Augustine to Christianity. The Schiller Institute honored this occasion by organizing a conference in Rome, on November 1, 2, and 3, 1985, to discuss the solutions to the pressing problems of humanity.
In the spirit of St Augustine, who fought against the collapse of civilization under the Roman Empire, a broad alliance of powers from five continents came together and set itself the goal of ending the barbaric financial system of the International Monetary Fund, and creating a just new world economic order.
The conference unanimously resolved to support the fight of Peruvian President Alan Garcia against narco-terrorism and the international usurers. Days afterward, President Garcia was greeted on his arrival in Rome by a Schiller Institute delegation, with gifts and music.
The conference also sent greetings to Pope John Paul II, -- requesting him to continue to exercise his religious leadership and moral authority in the present crisis of humanity to cast out the forces of usury and to favor the creation of a just New World Economic Order for all nations.
This book brings you the extraordinary speeches of that conference, in the original languages and English translation. Twenty-four full color plates reproduce some the greatest art of Western, Augustinian tradition, and a large section of black and white illustrations, maps and photographs has been included.
CONDITION: soft cover, 424 pages, wear to cover, pages within in clean, vg condition.
*The Schiller Institute is an international political and economic thinktank, one of the primary organizations in the LaRouche movement, with headquarters in Germany and the United States. It was founded at a conference in Wiesbaden, Germany, in 1984 by Helga Zepp LaRouche, the German-born wife of American political activist Lyndon LaRouche. Following the second conference, in Washington, D.C. in 1985, it has held conferences in a variety of international locations. Since 1992, it has published a quarterly magazine Fidelio, which it describes as a "Journal of Poetry, Science, and Statecraft."
The Institute's stated aim is to seek to apply the ideas of poet, dramatist and philosopher Friedrich Schiller to what it calls the "contemporary world crisis."
The Schiller Institute has been described by the London Metropolitan Police as a "political cult with sinister and dangerous connections. (ie. anti-Semitic)
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