One of the perks of studying for the priesthood in Rome was the gita, an Italian word meaning ‘holiday’ or ‘trip’. We students rarely returned home in our seven-year stint out there, so we were given a list of places to visit during holidays, like Subiaco, the birthplace of Benedictine monasticism, Fiesole near Florence, where we would stay with the ‘Blue Nuns’, and many other places with religious resonance. But the most popular places for gitas were the Umbrian towns and villages like Perugia and, above all, Assisi — home of Sts Francis and Clare. The local stone and light, and the undulating country with delightful hill-top towns, make Umbria very attractive, but Assisi and the Franciscan shrines in Umbria will always have a special place in my heart.
Once I had rather an unexpected adventure in Assisi when on gita with some of my students during my time as rector of the venerable English college.
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