The poem La terra feconda by the Georgian writer Dato Magradze, several times nominated for the Nobel Prize, is one of the most convinced hymns raised over the centuries to the value of poetry, intended as a tool to "fertilize" the current "wasteland" produced by a society "Emporiumcentric" and corrupt.
The writer, author of the words of the national anthem, former Minister of Culture and several times deputy, testifies with art and life his belief in the high civil and moral values inherited from a tradition that binds East and West, Athens, Jerusalem and Byzantium.