On the evening of January 17, 2020, the walls of the Church of San Nicolò al Porto in Rimini became silent witnesses to a singular act of faith. Dance became prayer, memory, and a gesture of welcome — a way for the Gospel to speak through bodies marked by exile and grace.
The occasion was the Week of Prayer for Christian Unity, an international ecumenical event held every January, where different Christian denominations come together to reflect, pray, and seek common ground. That year’s theme, drawn from the Acts of the Apostles (28:2), was striking in its simplicity: “They showed us unusual kindness.”
Acts, Reimagined Through the Body
Movimento Centrale – Danza & Teatro responded not with a sermon, but with movement. Their performance traced the journey of Paul’s shipwreck at Malta — a biblical narrative of fear, salvation, and hospitality — and reframed it through the lens of contemporary displacement. The storm at sea became the Mediterranean. The castaways became today’s migrants. And kindness, the central word of the scripture, took on the full weight of both hope and responsibility.
As bodies crossed the space in silence, searching, pausing, collapsing and rising again, the audience was invited to experience—not interpret—the deep physical and emotional charge of exile and welcome. The performance was not illustrative, but evocative. Each movement was a fragment of prayer, each gesture a reflection of unseen pain or unspoken grace.
An Ecumenical Breath
The evening unfolded within an ecumenical celebration that brought together the Catholic, Orthodox, and Waldensian communities of Rimini. Voices from different traditions shared reflections, scripture, and silence. Pastor Giuseppina Bagnato of the Waldensian Church took part in the liturgy, alongside Catholic and Orthodox clergy. Their shared presence was not merely symbolic — it was lived testimony to the search for unity across difference.
At the heart of this shared ritual, the action of Movimento Centrale served as a wordless homily. One that spoke through rhythm, vulnerability, and attention to the other.
Migration as Sacred Narrative
By choosing to root their performance in the language of migration, Movimento Centrale invited those present to reconsider the Gospel not as a distant story, but as a living map of our time. The apostle Paul’s arrival in Malta is not unlike the arrival of so many who now land—exhausted, unnamed—on Europe’s shores.
And it is the same call that echoes across centuries: Will we meet them with fear or with kindness?
A Light in the Rain
As Amazing Grace echoed through the church — soft, imperfect, human — it no longer mattered who had come as believer, as artist, as migrant, or as guest. For a moment, there was only one body: gathered, listening, trembling before the mystery of compassion.
In that fleeting unity, something sacred happened. Not a miracle. Not a spectacle. Just the quiet truth that we are, each of us, someone else’s refuge — or someone else’s sea.