Youtube Interviews
In this episode of Roadmap to Heaven, host Adam Wright welcomes Father Craig Vasek, a priest of the Diocese of Crookston, to discuss the Eucharistic Revival and its significance. Father Vasek shares that the revival is not just about studying, but rather about bringing something dying or dead back to life.
Father Vasek emphasizes the need for repentance and imploring heaven for the Holy Spirit in order to be renewed and filled with the Spirit. He challenges listeners to go out and proclaim repentance and forgiveness to others, stepping out of their comfort zones and embracing uncomfortable situations.
During the interview, Father Vasek highlights the importance of being present in the moment during Holy Mass, considering it as being at the foot of Calvary, where Jesus was crucified and his blood was shed. He explains that when he thinks about it that way, there’s no desire to rush away from Holy Mass, as it is seen as an opening to heaven.
Father Vasek discusses the upcoming National Eucharistic Revival, which will hit parishes in June and start with Corpus Christi. He reveals that there will be programming on worship, encounters with God, and formation, and a small group study available for parishes. He invites listeners to visit eucharisticrevival.org for more information.
This episode of Roadmap to Heaven explores the significance of the Eucharistic revival, and how all Catholics and parishes have their own opportunities for revival.
Adam Wright:
We are happy to be joined today by Father Craig Vasek, a priest of the Diocese of Crookston, which is in Northwest Minnesota. I’m getting my geography lessons as we do more of these interviews by Zoom for both our radio show and our YouTube channel. Which by the way, if you haven’t checked us out on YouTube yet, be sure to look up Our Catholic Radio or Covenant Network Catholic Radio on YouTube, and you can find a lot of your favorite Roadmap to Heaven interviews there. Father, it is good to have you with us. Although today, you’re not in Minnesota. You’re actually out in Washington DC at the offices of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops because you are one of the preachers for this Eucharistic Revival. So, whether it’s Minnesota or Washington, we’re glad to be joined by you today.
Fr. Craig Vasek:
I’m very glad to be with you, Adam. Thanks for having me.
Adam Wright:
Now it’s that preaching that brought you to our attention. Someone from the station here was recently at an event where you were speaking, and this is what you do right now. You’re going all over the country preaching about the Eucharistic Revival. When we were getting ready for the interview, you used one of those Catholic words that I’m still not able to give a good definition of, but when I hear it, I know we’ve got to stop. We’ve got to talk about that. And that’s “kerygma”. So let’s go in this direction first. What is this Eucharistic kerygma that you’re going around talking about?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. So, the Kerygma is from a Greek word, and it simply means the center or the proclamation or the kernel or the nugget, however you wanna put it – I don’t know Greek very well, but it’s that kind of idea. So the kerygma with regard to Christianity, another way of saying it is the gospel message. But sometimes when you hear the gospel message, you think of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, it’s like the whole life of Jesus and everything that He’s done. Well, it is that. But what’s at the center of that? And that is what Paul says. Saint Paul says, “It’s that Christ has come, He’s died, and He has been raised for our justification, and he’s buried our sins in the grave, and he’s raised us to new life.” Christ came. He died. He rose. He ascended. He’s given us new life. That’s the central message. And we want to proclaim it. That’s what we are tasked to do as the Eucharistic preachers for the revival, is to go around the country and to proclaim. Even though we all know this message, Catholics if they’re going to Mass, like, “Yeah. duh. I know that.” But it’s not a “Yeah, duh” sort of thing. It should be the kind of thing that sets us on fire, because I’ve personally appropriated that, like, no, I was lost in sin. And because Christ died and rose, I have been raised to new life, and it’s only because of the work that He has done that I have that. And so I want to love Him and praise Him.
So it’s the invitation to personalize that message and to make a response of fidelity and of joy and of excitement and of wanting to tell others, “Hey, you need to be in a relationship with the Lord Jesus, because He saves us from Hell and He saves us for Heaven.” You know? So it’s that kind of thing that we’re supposed to be going around. And so that’s the kerygma, but we’re supposed to be giving that proclamation with regard to the Eucharist. So what we’re supposed to do is locate. Okay, so Jesus has come. He has died. He has risen. So how does He communicate that to us? Well, He communicates it to us through the sacraments: of baptism, first and foremost, and then He feeds us with His body and blood to strengthen us in Holy Communion, and that is all contained in Holy Mass. So to kind of renew people’s understanding that the entirety of the saving message of Jesus is not just a sermon, even though it includes servants, it is a lived experience in Holy Mass. And to catch that again for the faithful, that they might get excited for it.
Adam Wright:
Yeah. You know, sometimes I have to be honest here and say, “Oh, the Eucharistic revival’s not for me. I believe in the Eucharist” and yet, there are times that even to this day, sadly, I catch myself at the memorial acclamation when we proclaim His death and His resurrection until He comes again, that my response is not, “Oh my goodness. Can you believe what our God has done for us?” It’s like, “Alright. We’re about maybe 15, 20 minutes away, not even, from the end of Mass here. Things are moving. Father’s at a good pace.” And it’s like, “Adam, stop. You’ve missed the whole point of what we’re talking about right now. So it turns out Eucharistic Revival is for me, as well.
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, when we’re at Holy Mass, because it’s a routine, because it’s a habit, because of all these different things, there’s all the human contingencies and things that can get in the way that come into play. Right? But if I can refresh myself, and try to be cognizant. No, actually, when I’m at Holy Mass, I’m at the foot of Calvary. I’m really standing where He is being pierced for me, where He’s being lifted up on a cross, and all of His blood is coming out from every pore on Him. If I recognize that when I’m at Holy Mass, and I could just remember, “Oh, yeah. That thing which happened historically is happening mystically, truly, right now. That He is being crucified, that He’s going down into the grave, that He is coming up in His resurrected life, and He’s giving me the fruits of the redemption and the Holy Eucharist.” If we could just make that connection, it’d be like, “Yeah, I’m not in a hurry to rush away from here, because this is my entire salvation. This is Heaven opening up for me. This is my Savior, and I want to be with Him.”
Adam Wright:
Yeah. So lest I get too fixated on the splinter in my neighbor’s eye, at the peril of ignoring the plank in my own, what would you say to me and to our listeners this morning, that we have that starting point? We have that Eucharistic faith. We believe the church teaching. We go to adoration. We frequent the sacrament. We love our frequent reception of Holy Communion, but yet deep down inside of us, we need that revival too. Where do we start?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. So, some people mistakenly think that the Eucharistic Revival is like, “Hey, let’s just study and have a better catechesis.” Then that’s what the revival is. And that might be a little bit of a reform or a renewal, but that’s not a revival. A revival is when you bring something that is either sick, dying, or dead, and you resuscitate it to life. That’s revival. So the Eucharist Revival is not like, “Hey, let’s read a book on the Eucharist.” It might include that, but it’s not contained to that. It is a imploring of Heaven, for all of us individually and corporately, to turn to the Lord and say “Lord, our land, our church, our lives are in dramatic need of your Holy Spirit, of your heavenly power, and we beg you to send the spirit of God to us, that we might repent of our sins, that we might repent of our complacency, that we might repent of whatever we need to repent of, and encourage others to repent, so that we might be renewed and revived, filled with your spirit so that we might truly go out like those apostles did: filled with the spirit of God and proclaiming repentance and forgiveness of sense for the empowering of the Holy Spirit for the life of the world. Give us that, Lord.” And until we’re doing it, until I find myself out there in uncomfortable situations, going out of my comfort zone, thinking, “I have a burden for that person’s soul, so I’m going to go tell them about Jesus or about baptism or about confession or about Mass.” Until we see ourselves doing that, we are not revived yet. We need to pray for revival.
Adam Wright:
You know, as you say that, I’m thinking of this analogy. It’s terrible allergy season right now, here in Saint Louis. I mean, the tree pollen is crazy. My kids are miserable. Everybody I know is miserable. Now, would we rather have the medicine that helps the allergy or the book about the medicine? I could read a whole book on antihistamines and how allergens work and this and that, or I could take the medicine that makes me better. And I love the way you put that. It’s not about just studying what does our faith teach about our Lord’s presence in the Eucharist. It’s not about an academic exercise. It’s about reviving and resuscitating our hearts. You know, if you’re having a heart attack, do you want someone to have a book about CPR, or do you want them to know CPR? So, Father, this is absolutely great. Now before we let you go, there’s a couple things we want to put on our listeners’ radar screens. One is going to be announced next month with the details, and that’s a pilgrimage that’s going to happen in the lead-up to the Eucharistic Congress next year in 2024. Can you tell us just a little sneak preview about that?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. We’re going to have a national launch of the idea in May, just to have a good campaign with regard to it. But next year, 2024, the Congress is in July of 2024. Two months prior to that Congress, we’re going to have four different routes, where the Blessed Sacrament is going to be pilgrimaged, processed, from Lake Itasca in Minnesota, down to Indianapolis. From San Francisco (and that’s for your listeners) from San Francisco and it’s going to go through St. Louis on the way to Indianapolis. From Corpus Christi, (Brownsville, really) Texas up to Indianapolis. And from New Haven, Connecticut to Indianapolis. Four routes, four pilgrimages of the Blessed Sacrament being carried at procession, with events every evening at parishes and every weekend in dioceses, with processions, with the bishop, on the way kind of like this movement, this national pilgrimming towards the Congress in July. So when I talk about it, people get fired up and they’re looking forward to walking or partnering with that, or to see come through their town or whatever. A lot of people are really excited about that. So we’re excited about it, too.
Adam Wright:
Yeah, forget Route 66. This is the route of the Eucharist, and it’s even better. We might have to write a song about that. I don’t know. Then the other thing coming up is there are going to be opportunities for parishes to take part in the Eucharistic Revival. Can you tell us a little bit about what will be happening with that?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. So right now, we’re in a Diocesan year: 2022 into 2023. So we’re working with bishops and their Diocesan staffs. This June though, the National Eucharistic Revival, which was launched last year, will hit the parish. It’s intended to hit the parish this June, starting with Corpus Christi. Hopefully, every parish in the country will do a Corpus Christi procession as a launch to the parish year, then there’s going to be programming that we’re announcing. We’re working with parishes already, that they can promote in their parishes on the topic of worship, on the topic of encounter with God, on the topics of formation (we were talking about that earlier). It’s part of it. It’s not the only thing. And then the sending of missionaries to proclaim the love of Jesus or the service of Jesus and the poor. Right? So there’s going to be all sorts of things. We have a parish playbook that’s coming out.
But one of our feature pieces this fall is a small group study that we’re putting together that a parish can do at the parish level. They can have a thousand people there. We’re calling it a small group study because everybody that comes will then sit at a table and form a small group for seven weeks. And we’ve been working with the best of production agencies in the United States Catholic church, and speakers, and bishops, and all these different people, to form a “plug and play”, what we’re calling it, where you go to the parish, press play. And for two hours, have a dynamic experience filled with table discussion locally, live, for seven weeks on the kerygma, the central message of the teaching of the Catholic church, the message of Jesus, and then how that’s situated in the sacraments. That’s going to be a great formation piece that hopefully then sends people out in excitement to share with their neighbors. So that’s this fall. It’s coming out this summer, but it’s going to be launched in September.
Adam Wright:
I love it, Father. Well, this has been great to have this time to sit down and speak with you today. Could I ask you to close us out with a prayer or a blessing for our listeners?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Absolutely. Heavenly Father, we ask that the Eucharistic presence of our Lord Jesus Christ and Holy Mass and the Blessed Sacrament be extended as King and Lord over the entire United States. We ask for conversion of life and for all to come under your banner of love. Pour out your blessing upon us all, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, Amen.
Adam Wright:
Amen. Father Craig Vasek from the National Eucharistic Revival, thank you so much for being with us today. For more information on the Eucharistic Revival, friends, you can just go to eucharisticrevival.org. It’s as easy as that: eucharisticrevival.org.
Adam Wright:
We are happy to be joined today by Father Craig Vasek, a priest of the Diocese of Crookston, which is in Northwest Minnesota. I’m getting my geography lessons as we do more of these interviews by Zoom for both our radio show and our YouTube channel. Which by the way, if you haven’t checked us out on YouTube yet, be sure to look up Our Catholic Radio or Covenant Network Catholic Radio on YouTube, and you can find a lot of your favorite Roadmap to Heaven interviews there. Father, it is good to have you with us. Although today, you’re not in Minnesota. You’re actually out in Washington DC at the offices of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops because you are one of the preachers for this Eucharistic Revival. So, whether it’s Minnesota or Washington, we’re glad to be joined by you today.
Fr. Craig Vasek:
I’m very glad to be with you, Adam. Thanks for having me.
Adam Wright:
Now it’s that preaching that brought you to our attention. Someone from the station here was recently at an event where you were speaking, and this is what you do right now. You’re going all over the country preaching about the Eucharistic Revival. When we were getting ready for the interview, you used one of those Catholic words that I’m still not able to give a good definition of, but when I hear it, I know we’ve got to stop. We’ve got to talk about that. And that’s “kerygma”. So let’s go in this direction first. What is this Eucharistic kerygma that you’re going around talking about?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. So, the Kerygma is from a Greek word, and it simply means the center or the proclamation or the kernel or the nugget, however you wanna put it – I don’t know Greek very well, but it’s that kind of idea. So the kerygma with regard to Christianity, another way of saying it is the gospel message. But sometimes when you hear the gospel message, you think of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, it’s like the whole life of Jesus and everything that He’s done. Well, it is that. But what’s at the center of that? And that is what Paul says. Saint Paul says, “It’s that Christ has come, He’s died, and He has been raised for our justification, and he’s buried our sins in the grave, and he’s raised us to new life.” Christ came. He died. He rose. He ascended. He’s given us new life. That’s the central message. And we want to proclaim it. That’s what we are tasked to do as the Eucharistic preachers for the revival, is to go around the country and to proclaim. Even though we all know this message, Catholics if they’re going to Mass, like, “Yeah. duh. I know that.” But it’s not a “Yeah, duh” sort of thing. It should be the kind of thing that sets us on fire, because I’ve personally appropriated that, like, no, I was lost in sin. And because Christ died and rose, I have been raised to new life, and it’s only because of the work that He has done that I have that. And so I want to love Him and praise Him.
So it’s the invitation to personalize that message and to make a response of fidelity and of joy and of excitement and of wanting to tell others, “Hey, you need to be in a relationship with the Lord Jesus, because He saves us from Hell and He saves us for Heaven.” You know? So it’s that kind of thing that we’re supposed to be going around. And so that’s the kerygma, but we’re supposed to be giving that proclamation with regard to the Eucharist. So what we’re supposed to do is locate. Okay, so Jesus has come. He has died. He has risen. So how does He communicate that to us? Well, He communicates it to us through the sacraments: of baptism, first and foremost, and then He feeds us with His body and blood to strengthen us in Holy Communion, and that is all contained in Holy Mass. So to kind of renew people’s understanding that the entirety of the saving message of Jesus is not just a sermon, even though it includes servants, it is a lived experience in Holy Mass. And to catch that again for the faithful, that they might get excited for it.
Adam Wright:
Yeah. You know, sometimes I have to be honest here and say, “Oh, the Eucharistic revival’s not for me. I believe in the Eucharist” and yet, there are times that even to this day, sadly, I catch myself at the memorial acclamation when we proclaim His death and His resurrection until He comes again, that my response is not, “Oh my goodness. Can you believe what our God has done for us?” It’s like, “Alright. We’re about maybe 15, 20 minutes away, not even, from the end of Mass here. Things are moving. Father’s at a good pace.” And it’s like, “Adam, stop. You’ve missed the whole point of what we’re talking about right now. So it turns out Eucharistic Revival is for me, as well.
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, when we’re at Holy Mass, because it’s a routine, because it’s a habit, because of all these different things, there’s all the human contingencies and things that can get in the way that come into play. Right? But if I can refresh myself, and try to be cognizant. No, actually, when I’m at Holy Mass, I’m at the foot of Calvary. I’m really standing where He is being pierced for me, where He’s being lifted up on a cross, and all of His blood is coming out from every pore on Him. If I recognize that when I’m at Holy Mass, and I could just remember, “Oh, yeah. That thing which happened historically is happening mystically, truly, right now. That He is being crucified, that He’s going down into the grave, that He is coming up in His resurrected life, and He’s giving me the fruits of the redemption and the Holy Eucharist.” If we could just make that connection, it’d be like, “Yeah, I’m not in a hurry to rush away from here, because this is my entire salvation. This is Heaven opening up for me. This is my Savior, and I want to be with Him.”
Adam Wright:
Yeah. So lest I get too fixated on the splinter in my neighbor’s eye, at the peril of ignoring the plank in my own, what would you say to me and to our listeners this morning, that we have that starting point? We have that Eucharistic faith. We believe the church teaching. We go to adoration. We frequent the sacrament. We love our frequent reception of Holy Communion, but yet deep down inside of us, we need that revival too. Where do we start?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. So, some people mistakenly think that the Eucharistic Revival is like, “Hey, let’s just study and have a better catechesis.” Then that’s what the revival is. And that might be a little bit of a reform or a renewal, but that’s not a revival. A revival is when you bring something that is either sick, dying, or dead, and you resuscitate it to life. That’s revival. So the Eucharist Revival is not like, “Hey, let’s read a book on the Eucharist.” It might include that, but it’s not contained to that. It is a imploring of Heaven, for all of us individually and corporately, to turn to the Lord and say “Lord, our land, our church, our lives are in dramatic need of your Holy Spirit, of your heavenly power, and we beg you to send the spirit of God to us, that we might repent of our sins, that we might repent of our complacency, that we might repent of whatever we need to repent of, and encourage others to repent, so that we might be renewed and revived, filled with your spirit so that we might truly go out like those apostles did: filled with the spirit of God and proclaiming repentance and forgiveness of sense for the empowering of the Holy Spirit for the life of the world. Give us that, Lord.” And until we’re doing it, until I find myself out there in uncomfortable situations, going out of my comfort zone, thinking, “I have a burden for that person’s soul, so I’m going to go tell them about Jesus or about baptism or about confession or about Mass.” Until we see ourselves doing that, we are not revived yet. We need to pray for revival.
Adam Wright:
You know, as you say that, I’m thinking of this analogy. It’s terrible allergy season right now, here in Saint Louis. I mean, the tree pollen is crazy. My kids are miserable. Everybody I know is miserable. Now, would we rather have the medicine that helps the allergy or the book about the medicine? I could read a whole book on antihistamines and how allergens work and this and that, or I could take the medicine that makes me better. And I love the way you put that. It’s not about just studying what does our faith teach about our Lord’s presence in the Eucharist. It’s not about an academic exercise. It’s about reviving and resuscitating our hearts. You know, if you’re having a heart attack, do you want someone to have a book about CPR, or do you want them to know CPR? So, Father, this is absolutely great. Now before we let you go, there’s a couple things we want to put on our listeners’ radar screens. One is going to be announced next month with the details, and that’s a pilgrimage that’s going to happen in the lead-up to the Eucharistic Congress next year in 2024. Can you tell us just a little sneak preview about that?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. We’re going to have a national launch of the idea in May, just to have a good campaign with regard to it. But next year, 2024, the Congress is in July of 2024. Two months prior to that Congress, we’re going to have four different routes, where the Blessed Sacrament is going to be pilgrimaged, processed, from Lake Itasca in Minnesota, down to Indianapolis. From San Francisco (and that’s for your listeners) from San Francisco and it’s going to go through St. Louis on the way to Indianapolis. From Corpus Christi, (Brownsville, really) Texas up to Indianapolis. And from New Haven, Connecticut to Indianapolis. Four routes, four pilgrimages of the Blessed Sacrament being carried at procession, with events every evening at parishes and every weekend in dioceses, with processions, with the bishop, on the way kind of like this movement, this national pilgrimming towards the Congress in July. So when I talk about it, people get fired up and they’re looking forward to walking or partnering with that, or to see come through their town or whatever. A lot of people are really excited about that. So we’re excited about it, too.
Adam Wright:
Yeah, forget Route 66. This is the route of the Eucharist, and it’s even better. We might have to write a song about that. I don’t know. Then the other thing coming up is there are going to be opportunities for parishes to take part in the Eucharistic Revival. Can you tell us a little bit about what will be happening with that?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Yeah. So right now, we’re in a Diocesan year: 2022 into 2023. So we’re working with bishops and their Diocesan staffs. This June though, the National Eucharistic Revival, which was launched last year, will hit the parish. It’s intended to hit the parish this June, starting with Corpus Christi. Hopefully, every parish in the country will do a Corpus Christi procession as a launch to the parish year, then there’s going to be programming that we’re announcing. We’re working with parishes already, that they can promote in their parishes on the topic of worship, on the topic of encounter with God, on the topics of formation (we were talking about that earlier). It’s part of it. It’s not the only thing. And then the sending of missionaries to proclaim the love of Jesus or the service of Jesus and the poor. Right? So there’s going to be all sorts of things. We have a parish playbook that’s coming out.
But one of our feature pieces this fall is a small group study that we’re putting together that a parish can do at the parish level. They can have a thousand people there. We’re calling it a small group study because everybody that comes will then sit at a table and form a small group for seven weeks. And we’ve been working with the best of production agencies in the United States Catholic church, and speakers, and bishops, and all these different people, to form a “plug and play”, what we’re calling it, where you go to the parish, press play. And for two hours, have a dynamic experience filled with table discussion locally, live, for seven weeks on the kerygma, the central message of the teaching of the Catholic church, the message of Jesus, and then how that’s situated in the sacraments. That’s going to be a great formation piece that hopefully then sends people out in excitement to share with their neighbors. So that’s this fall. It’s coming out this summer, but it’s going to be launched in September.
Adam Wright:
I love it, Father. Well, this has been great to have this time to sit down and speak with you today. Could I ask you to close us out with a prayer or a blessing for our listeners?
Fr. Craig Vasek:
Absolutely. Heavenly Father, we ask that the Eucharistic presence of our Lord Jesus Christ and Holy Mass and the Blessed Sacrament be extended as King and Lord over the entire United States. We ask for conversion of life and for all to come under your banner of love. Pour out your blessing upon us all, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, Amen.
Adam Wright:
Amen. Father Craig Vasek from the National Eucharistic Revival, thank you so much for being with us today. For more information on the Eucharistic Revival, friends, you can just go to eucharisticrevival.org. It’s as easy as that: eucharisticrevival.org.
In this episode of Roadmap to Heaven, host Adam Wright welcomes Father Craig Vasek, a priest of the Diocese of Crookston, to discuss the Eucharistic Revival and its significance. Father Vasek shares that the revival is not just about studying, but rather about bringing something dying or dead back to life.
Father Vasek emphasizes the need for repentance and imploring heaven for the Holy Spirit in order to be renewed and filled with the Spirit. He challenges listeners to go out and proclaim repentance and forgiveness to others, stepping out of their comfort zones and embracing uncomfortable situations.
During the interview, Father Vasek highlights the importance of being present in the moment during Holy Mass, considering it as being at the foot of Calvary, where Jesus was crucified and his blood was shed. He explains that when he thinks about it that way, there’s no desire to rush away from Holy Mass, as it is seen as an opening to heaven.
Father Vasek discusses the upcoming National Eucharistic Revival, which will hit parishes in June and start with Corpus Christi. He reveals that there will be programming on worship, encounters with God, and formation, and a small group study available for parishes. He invites listeners to visit eucharisticrevival.org for more information.
This episode of Roadmap to Heaven explores the significance of the Eucharistic revival, and how all Catholics and parishes have their own opportunities for revival.
We often send out our newsletter with news and great offers. We will never disclose your data to third parties and you can unsubscribe from the newsletter at any time.
Unfortunately, we’re unable to offer free samples. As a retailer, we buy all magazines from their publishers at the regular trade price. However, you could contact the magazine’s publisher directly to ask if they can send you a free copy.
You can create a new account at the end of the order process or on the following page. You can view all of your orders and subscriptions in your customer account. You can also change your addresses and your password.
No, you don’t have to create an account. But there are a few advantages if you create an account.
You never have to enter your billing and shipping address again
Find all of your orders, subscriptions and addresses in your account
Download invoices of your orders
No, we don’t have a physical store location at the moment. We accept only orders through our online shop and we’re shipping all orders with the Swiss Post Service. Please visit our shipping section for more details.
From time to time you will find us at design fairs and popup markets in Switzerland. Subscribe to our newsletter and you’ll receive the latest news.
An initiative of Covenant Network