VELLETRI: Boffins eat your hearts out: the world record
holder for the number of university degrees is a cheery but truculent 70-year
old Italian.
Luciano Baietti lives
in the town of Velletri in the Alban Hills near Rome and spends his days
pottering around his small house and garden.
But at every morning
at 3am he pulls out his textbooks and starts studying.
He now holds 15
bachelors or masters degrees from universities across Italy, and is already
embarking on his 16th.
“Thanks to books, I
feel free, dammit,” he tells AFP.
“After all, the words
share the same root,” he says, referring to the Italian words libro (book) and
libero (free).
The certificates
proving his prowess hang on the walls of his study, framing a portrait of the
19th century French essayist, Louis-Francois Bertin, whom he cites as an
influence.
– Passion for a
challenge –
“He was a man of
culture and knowledge,” said Baietti, a former headmaster of a secondary
school, who made it into the Guinness Book of Records in 2002 with his eighth degree,
that time in motor skills.
At that point he
already had degrees in sociology, literature, law, political science and
philosophy, most from Rome’s prestigious La Sapienza University, one of the
oldest in the world.
Since then he’s added
seven others to his list, including one in criminology, a distance-learning one
in military strategies from Turin, and the latest in tourism from an online
university in Naples, which he was awarded at the start of this month.
“Each time I set
myself a new challenge, to see how far my body and my brain can go,” says
Baietti, who started life as a sports teacher.
His long-suffering
wife, some 30 years his junior, describes Baietti affectionately as “a real
character” who is known throughout their town.
He got most of the
qualifications under his belt while also doing his day job and volunteering
with Italy’s Red Cross.
This ageing eternal
student’s first degree was in physical education in 1972 — and he fell
instantly in love with the academic world.
“As well as the sporting
events, there were modules in theory which I liked, and which gave me a taste
for studying,” he says.
– ‘I surprised
myself’ –
The most challenging
and unusual degree so far has been the military strategies one: “It was
co-organised by the defence ministry and Turin University and dealt with
sensitive subjects related to national security”.
“We had to attend the
exams in uniform,” he recalls, showing off the regimental garb hanging in his
wardrobe.
His masters in
criminology, which saw him interview prisoners, also had a lasting impact.
“Listening to them, I
sometimes surprised myself; I’d be convinced by their arguments, and would
wonder about what was right or wrong — before realising that I had gone off
course.”
Baietti is back on
course, and already preparing to start the next degree, this time in food
science.
Once again, he’ll be
pouring over his books by the light of his desk lamp as outside the world
sleeps on.
“At that time the
brain is more open to assimilating knowledge, and it also allows me to keep a
normal family life,” he says with a grin. – AFP
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