Rimini Meeting
The Meeting for Friendship Amongst Peoples, more commonly known as the Rimini Meeting, is an annual lay Catholic festival held every year in Rimini, Italy, in the last week of August.
Inaugurated in 1980, the Meeting is the flagship event of Communion and Liberation, an international association of the faithful. It is a significant event in domestic politics, attracting high-profile guest speakers, and receives notable coverage in the Italian press.
Overview
The Rimini Meeting is held annually in the last week of August at Rimini Fiera. The weeklong festival includes talks, debates, workshops, exhibitions, sporting, musical and literary events, and other sessions. Each edition revolves around a theme that is chosen to inspire open reflection and dialogue.In 2022, the Rimini Meeting attracted 80,000 visitors, with a further 720,000 online attendees.
Venue and organisation
The first edition of the Rimini Meeting took place in 1980, at the site of the old Rimini Fiera. The Meeting moved to the new Rimini Fiera after its completion in 2001.In March 2008, the Meeting for Friendship Amongst Peoples Association, which was constituted in December 1980 to organise the Meeting, became a foundation. Over 3,000 volunteers work during the Meeting to stage, operate, and dismantle it.
Political and cultural significance
The Rimini Meeting is a significant event in Italian culture and politics, often attracting high-profile guest speakers and notable press coverage. Previous speakers include Pope [John Paul II], Mario Draghi, Staffan de Mistura, and Tony Blair.The 2022 Meeting included an early debate in the run-up to the 2022 general election and was attended by figures from major political parties: Giorgia Meloni, Matteo Salvini, Enrico Letta, Ettore Rosato, Antonio Tajani, and Carlo Calenda. Ten ministers of the Meloni government attended the 2023 edition, including Salvini, Tajani, and Giancarlo Giorgetti. The President of the Republic, Sergio Mattarella, spoke on the final day of the Meeting.
In previous years, national television channels, including the public broadcaster RAI, have broadcast some sessions of the Rimini Meeting, including the Sunday Mass on Rai 1, RAI's flagship television channel.