Podcast
He grew up in Porto in a Catholic family and with a rigid education, but in a house where there was no lack of love. Being a priest in a plans, but at the age of 21 he dropped the university and moved to Rome to study theology. The Jesuit priest, composer and musician, Duarte Rosado, is the guest of the new episode of Generation 80.
Born in September 1985 in Porto. He grew up in a Catholic family and went to Mass every Sunday. There was a “rijo” and “rigid” education, but “always with love at home”.
He studied in Catholic schools, but the school never interested him very much. I liked art and music classes, but from an early age I realized that “decorating things” was not for him. “At 14 he went to the school mass every day, I don’t know if it was to escape school and classes,” he recalls.
Being a priest has never been in the plans, but at 21 everything has changed. There were two months of reflection to pack and change Portugal, the band he had with friends and the university life for Rome and a course of theology. “I felt A huge desire to do something stupid and drop everything to go, it was a huge joy and a giant desire to be able to give life to Jesus. I thought if I slept passed, but it didn’t pass! It continued! ”He recalls.
The Jesuit priest, composer and musician, Duarte Rosado, is the guest of the new episode of Generation 80. Listen here.
Free and dreamers, the 80s in Portugal were marked by the consolidation of democracy and an openness to the world driven by the membership of the EEC. These were years of great creativity, whose impact still lasts today. Despite the mustaches, the wads and the permanent, the 80s gave the world the best harvest ever? In this podcast we give voice to a series of Portuguese born in this brilliant decade, in a return to the future guided by Francisco Pedro Balsemão, born in 1980.