|
|
What else can be said about Antonin Gadal?
What first struck those who knew him was his extreme modesty, his kindness, his patience, but also the faith he always had in the almighty power of the Holy Spirit, the faith in the Religion of Love breathed in Catharism.
For some he was the ‘grandfather’, the ‘Patriarch’, the ‘new Bonhomme’.
For others he was, ‘the good Master of Ussat’, that delightful man who honoured us with his friendship” (Pierre Durban).
‘Let us say that the beautiful figure of Gadal – the new Bonhomme – will mark the current blazing of Albigensianism.’
|
|
|
|
|