Salesians 2012 %28en%29


Salesians 2012 %28en%29

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SALESIANS 2012
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SALESIANS 2012
Cover:
Don Bosco of Tonj
† Fr John Lee Taeseok
(1962 - 2010)
Table of contents
SALESIANS 2012 02
» Editorial: Presentation
» Rector Major: Being Salesians Today!
» Salesians in the world by nation
2
SALESIANS 2012
RETURN TO DON BOSCO 10
» Don Bosco Birth Bicentenary
» Valdocco’s Basilica – 100 Years
» Don Bosco’s University
» Totus Tuus: Salesian Family a Marian Family
» Mary Help of Christians Association (ADMA)
» Salesian Bulletin at the Service of Life
» Called to Holiness
CREATING A CULTURE OF VOCATION 26
» Words and Ways
» Come and See!
» Following in His Footsteps
» Volunteer, Vocation and Missionary Movement
» Annual Altar Server’s Pilgrimage
» The Proof is in the Pudding
» Never Forget to Play!
» World Youth Day, a Celebration of Faith
» Salesian Youth Movement at the Feast of Faith
» “You are God’s hope and ours too”
» Voluntary Service Brings Hope Again
» Youth Forum: Come and See
English edition, December 8, 2011. Rome

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SALESIAN VOCATIONAL STYLE 52
» I Will Be With You
» A School with a Mission Vocation
» A week in the Salesian Mission
» Journey to the Soul’s Centre
» Catechists in Mission
» Helping us Pray Today
» Parish Missionaries Respond to God’s Call
» Come and See the SYM
» Rock Out Youth Poverty
» Salesian Network Keeps Schools Closely Linked
» Children Looking for God
SALESIAN VOCATION TODAY 76
» Don Bosco Žepče
» Prague: Encountering Today’s Youth
» Connecting the World: Medellin to Sihanoukville
» Priests’ Films Promote Rights and Evangelization
» Sixty Years Sowing Life
» Leading to the Future
» Alborada is a Lively Place!
» Proclaiming the Word in Kiriwina
» Good Morning Tale with a Twist
» Evangelisation by Example
» Project Life – Home for Young Refugees
INSPIRING TESTIMONIES 100
» “If your leg doesn’t heal, no Profession!”
» Youth Leader Becomes a Salesian
» “I will give you shepherds after your own heart”
» “What God has planned for you no one can take away”
» Volunteer Forever!
» From Vietnam to Japan – with Love
» Peace is Possible When Church Takes the Lead
» Don Bosco’s Dream in a Chinese Woman’s Son
» Don Bosco of Tonj: “The vocation of every Salesian is
tied to Mary Help of Christians”
Fr Filiberto González Plasencia, sdb
General Councillor for SC
Dear friends,
“Nobody trod yesterday, nor treads today, nor will tread to-
morrow the same path that I am treading now. God ensures that a
new ray of sunshine and a virgin path lies ahead for each of us”
(León Felipe).
We each have our story to tell if we wish to: the story of our
life, our particular calling, a story of the lights we have received and
the road we have taken.
Our story is our own unique one because it is a response to a
personal call. Contrary to the pragmatic view of things, it is not
woven of simple facts, free or paid for. It is woven of: important si-
lences where we listened in all humility; our openness to dialogue
and understanding; the risky decisions we have taken in order to
move on. ese are what set us on the road and measure the extent
of our sharing. We will usually understand only at the end what our
calling and response was, what the road and its point of arrival really
are - and not always everything even then. Such was the case for
Don Bosco when at the end of his life, old and ill, he said: “Now I
understand; it is She who has achieved everything”.
e theme running through the Magazine this year is life as a
vocation. It is a pleasure to be able to present you with these testi-
monies of religious, priests, and lay people. ey are simple testi-
monies of people who may be on in years, or may yet be young,
men and women, responding to the call they have received in one
or other part of the world where they were sought out.
e common factor in them all is a generous and uncondi-
tional commitment, cheerfulness, a desire to share their passion for
God and for the very poor. God and the poor have become their
call, their response and the meaning of their lives. You will also dis-
cover the testimony of those who give their life fully to the end: until
their health is spent and the seed buried in the ground. ey are
alive in those who receive them and they live on beyond those who
immediately know them.
All these people know that they are not alone and cannot
remain alone. ey are joined by people who love Don Bosco and
his plans for the young, people who in various ways and means re-
spond to their own calling to help poor young people.
We are offering you the Magazine this year not just with the
intention of showing you ways to contribute or respond but also as
a way of saying thank you for the vocation that you have so gener-
ously joined with ours.
December 8, 2011
redazionerivistesdb@sdb.org, www.sdb.org, ©Direzione Generale Opere Don Bosco SALESIANS 2012
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RECTOR MAJOR
Today Being Salesians
!
Being Mydearfriends,Igreetyouwiththe
sentiments of Don Bosco himself;
may the New Year be filled with all the
good things you expect from life.
Salesians It gives me pleasure to offer you,
once again, this overview of the
Salesian Congregation by way of our
‘Salesians 2012’ magazine. This year it
Today! Fr Pascual Chávez V., sdb
Rector Major
is particularly focused on the idea of
vocation. This is one way of respond-
ing to the appeal which the Lord con-
tinually makes to every young person
in the world: “Come and See”.
But what does it mean to be
a Salesian today?
Let me answer this by telling you some-
thing of the story of my own vocation
and of my personal experience of invit-
ing others to follow Jesus.
I belong to a large family of 12 children:
6 boys and 6 girls. I am the eighth. I
have to confess that even though my
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Having a vocation means that life has meaning, and this means
it has direction, goals to achieve and enormous energy, the result
of motivation.
family is a very Catholic family, and the bishop,
priests, sisters visited home, it never occurred
to me that I might be a priest. And in fact,
other than myself, no-one else in the family
became a priest or sister.
So what happened for me to
make this decision?
Something very simple! When I was just
eleven, a pupil at the Salesian school in Saltillo
in the north of Mexico, my mum suddenly fell
ill and died two weeks later. Three days before
she died, however, I was able to talk with her.
I wanted some money to buy a pair of runners.
I loved playing games, especially basketball.
She said to me: “But do you know how I’ve
always asked God if one of my sons could be
a priest? I have had six boys and not one has
gone to the seminary”. And just wanting my
runners, I said: “And I’m the one!” She smiled
and gave me the money for the shoes. As I
have said, she died three days later. The most
interesting thing about this is that I asked for
a pair of runners and I got a vocation!
In fact a few days later I went to talk to my
teacher and told him simply that I wanted to
be a Salesian priest. I certainly did not mention
the talk with my mum. I did this only 14 years
later, the day of my ordination. That is when I
told my father, brothers and sisters: “Maybe
you want to know how I ended up a priest”.
And I told them.
ing, and this means it has direction, goals to
achieve and enormous energy, the result of
motivation. This is because we have a reason
for being who we are and doing what we do
happily, optimistically, convinced that we are
useful.
I really think the general problem for young
people is not brought about by seeking drugs,
or the result of alcohol, or confusion about
their sexuality, but rather the lack of meaning
and motivation in life. This is why they fall for
the temptation to exploit the present, experi-
ment with strong emotions, or just live indif-
ferently.
By becoming a Salesian I wanted to give my
whole life to God on behalf of the young, like
Don Bosco.
Once I had completed my formation in
Guadalajara, and immediately after ordination,
I was sent to do my Licenciate in Sacred Scrip-
ture in Rome, at the Pontifical Biblical Institute,
then Jersualem at the Hebrew University. I
became a Professor in Biblical Studies and
Rector of the Theologate in Tlaquepaque-
Mexico for nine years, then Provincial of
Now I can see how God has guided me
through life! He really has been wonderful
with me! I am not referring to the fact that I
happen to be Rector Major of the Salesians. I
am speaking of the gift of a vocation, because
it is the most wonderful gift the Lord gave me
other than the gift of life and faith.
Having a vocation means that life has mean-
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SALESIANS 2012
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SALESIANS 2012
Guadalajara for another six years. Once
I had completed this service I finished
my Doctorate in Biblical Theology at
the Pontifical University of Salamanca.
Just at that point I was elected as a
member of the General Council, as Re-
gional for Interamerica which takes in
a good 18 countries from Canada to
Bolivia. Then in the General Chapter
(2002) I was elected Rector Major. How-
ever, my mission has always been the
young. They are my vocation, my raison
d’etre.
I am so happy with and proud of my
Salesian vocation that not only am I not
ashamed to be a Salesian, but I want to
invite young people whom I consider
suitable for this vocation to become
Salesians, because I want the best for
them, and I want them to be as happy
as I am.
I can tell you that amongst my students
and the boys at the oratory where I
worked, and amongst the volunteers
who were helping us, there are a
number to whom I made the proposal
and who responded positively.
And do you know where this decision
came from? From personal experience.
Amongst the boys in the basketball
team at school where I was teaching
during my time as a Practical Trainee
was one who went to the De La Salle
Brothers school, and while I was doing
my theological studies he wrote to tell
me he was joining them; I asked myself
at that point why I had not invited him
to be a Salesian! I said to myself: “From
now on I am going to be clear and
make the offer”. It was a lesson I
learned well and it had good results.
Someone might ask: “how difficult was
it for you to suggest a vocation to reli-
gious life in today’s context? How do
you invite young people to follow
Jesus if this also means going against
the dominant culture. Are there places
in the Salesian world where this kind of
vocation promotion actually works?”
In the West, especially in affluent coun-
tries, there are a number of factors
which work against consecrated life:
fewer people demographically speak-
ing (fewer children for society means
the same for the Church); secularism
which makes it more difficult for reli-
gious proposal and response; affluence
that makes life easier; so it is counter-
cultural to organise your life around
sacrifice and renunciation, or definitive
commitment, as well as the fact that
the State is now self-sufficient and can
carry out all the kinds of work that
seemed to be for religious to do
(schools, hospitals…).
Elsewhere in the world, though, there
are things that run in favour of conse-
crated life: the youth ratio is higher, the
cultural background has remained re-
ligious fundamentally, there is poverty
of a kind that makes us think about
how to help people, especially the
really poor and needy, and the State
does not have the resources to do it.
For example at the moment most
Salesian vocations are coming from
India, Vietnam, East Timor, and some
countries in Latin America. In Poland
too and in the Ukraine there are voca-
tions.
One case worth noting is Vietnam, the

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I am so happy with and proud of my Salesian vocation
that not only am I not ashamed to be a Salesian, but I want to invite
young people whom I consider suitable for this vocation to become Salesians,
because I want the best for them, and I want them to be as happy as I am.
province growing faster than any other in rel-
ative terms. A communist country, then, a to-
talitarian regime, also predominantly Buddhist,
and we have 400 aspirants to Salesian life, all
of them university students, showing a high
level of perseverance.
So it seems that consecrated life is much more
likely in poor countries, but this does not
mean to say that the Salesian vocation has no
place in affluent, developed nations; you find
Salesians in just about every such country. It
means that consecrated life has another func-
tion there, to be a visible, credible, legible sign
of God in a godless society where people live
Being as if God did not exist. It can be a sign to the
extent that it is truly countercultural, with a
gospel-based identity strongly focused on
God, witness to communion and total dedi-
cation to the other.
Salesians In our case, it is enough for there to be young
people for there to be a reason for us to be
there and to continue offering young people
the possibility of being a Salesian, as I am
doing right now, with you.
Today! Do something wonderful with your life!
Courage! Give God a chance and you will see
that he will not disappoint you.

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SALESIANS 2012
Netherlands 43
Belgium 215
Poland 975
Germany 303 Czech Rep. 149
France 178
Austria 83 Slovakia 208
Switzerland 20
Hungary 39
Slovenia 87
Andorra 5
ItalySa2n4M11arino
Croatia 82
4MoBnotse.nHeegrrzo.
4
3
Serbia 7
Kosovo
5
Vatican 12
Albania 12
Canada 26
Malta 31
U. K. 82
Ireland 56
USA 251
Spain 1160
Portugal 98
Tunisia 3
Morocco 3
Mexico 360
Cuba 16
HaiDti o69minican Rep. 130
Puerto Rico 28
Honduras 13
GuEaltSeamNlviaCcaladoarsoa9trga5u4Ra3Pica1an7a2m2 a
10
Colombia
Dutch Antilles
Venezuela 199
326
3
Ecuador 185
Peru 157
Brazil 761
Cape Verde Is. 5Senegal 11
Guinea Conakry 10
Mali 15
Burkina Faso 9
Sierra Leone 8
Liberia 6
Ivory CoasGt 3ha6nTaog7o260
Bolivia 166
LEGEND
1001 -
501 - 1000
251 - 500
101 - 250
51 - 100
11 - 50
1 - 10
No Salesian
(Data from Annuario 2011)
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SALESIANS 2012
Paraguay 94
Chile 180
Uruguay 102
Argentina 474

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SALESIANS IN THE WORLD BY NATION
Sweden 6
LitBheulaanruias917
Ukraine 38
Moldavia 4
Russia 53
Bulgaria 8 Georgia 3
Turkey 7
Azerbaijan 10
Lebanon 6Syria 8
Israel 58
Egypt 28
Kuwait 5
Iran 3
Pakistan 5
Nepal 13
India 2504
Chad 11 Sudan 14 EritreYae2m4en 4
C. African
Ethiopia 117
Republic 8 S. Sudan 13
Dem.
Rep. of
Congo 231
Kenya 78
Uganda 14
Rwanda 55
Burundi 14
Tanzania 65
Sri Lanka 65
Angola
78
Zambia
62
Malawi 8
Madagascar 96
Zimbabwe 7
Namibia 3
S. Africa 44
Mozambique
Swaziland 7
63
Mauritius 4
Mongolia 11
China 104
Indonesia 45
Korea 116
Japan 111
Taiwan 19
Philippines 282
Guam 3
E. Timor 146
Papua New Guinea 30
Solomon
Islands 6
Australia 79
Samoa 11
Fiji 13
New Zealand 2
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RETURN
TO
DON BOSCO
Don Bosco Birth Bicentenary 12
Valdocco’s Basilica – 100 Years 14
Don Bosco’s University 16
Totus Tuus: Salesian Family a Marian Family 18
Mary Help of Christians Association (ADMA) 20
Salesian Bulletin at the Service of Life 22
Called to Holiness 24
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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
2011 - 2015: Preparations for the Bicentenary
of Don Bosco’s Birth
1. Don Bosco’s story
16 August 2011 - 15 August 2012:
“A systematic plan for the study and assimila-
tion of Don Bosco…e study of Don Bosco is an
essential condition in order to be able to communi-
cate his charism and propose his current relevance”.
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2. Don Bosco’s Pedagogy
16 August 2012 - 15 August 2013:
“Nowadays a deeper understanding is needed
of Salesian pedagogy. In other words we need to
study and apply that updated preventive system de-
sired by Fr Egidio Viganò… developing its great im-
plicit principles, modernising concepts, guidelines
and interpretations so as to express the basic ideas
in a modern manner”.
3. Don Bosco’s Spirituality
16 August 2013 - 15 August 2014:
“Perhaps this is an aspect of our founder that
has not been studied at sufficient depth. He was a
man totally intent on work. We have no descriptions
of his interior development, nor has he left us any ex-
plicit reflections on his spiritual life”.
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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
Italy
100 Years
Valdocco’s Basilica
by Fr Natale Maffioli, sdb
One hundred years ago, July 13, 1911, the
Church of Mary Help of Christians in Valdocco
received the title Basilica. It finds a place in the heart
of every Salesian around the world.
One summer’s day, an elderly grocer trundling
along in his cart saw the massive scaffolding rising
in the midst of the Valdocco fields and became cu-
rious.
“What’s going on?” he asked one of the stone
masons.
“We are building a large church for Our Lady!”
“And who’s finding the money?”
“Don Bosco. But he is scraping together donations
from everywhere”.
The man was silent a moment, then called the su-
pervisor and gave him all the fruit in his cart so he
could share it amongst the builders and then,
wanting to give a hand himself, with the help of
some others he heaved a large stone onto his
shoulders and started climbing the scaffolding. The
poor old guy was trembling all over under his
heavy load, but sweaty and breathless he got to
the top. He lowered the stone in place and said
cheerfully: “Now I can die happy because I hope
that now I can somehow be part of all the good
this church will achieve”.
Don Bosco never said: “I’ll do this or that…” He
always said: “Mary Help of Christians will do this and
that…”
Together, Mary and Don Bosco built a beautiful
church!
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Neither land nor money
Since the early 1860s, Don Bosco had
dreamt of building a church of consid-
erable size; the reason he gave initially
was that the church of St Francis of
Sales, built between 1851 and 1852,
was too small. This what he told Fr Paul
Albera one evening in December 1862:
“I’ve been thinking, our church is too
small, and may not hold all the young-
sters, or they’ll be too packed in. So
we’ll build another one, a bigger, more
beautiful one. We will call it Mary Help
of Christians”.
On February 1, 1863, Don Bosco res-
olutely began planning the new
church, although the land he was
dreaming of building it on was not his
and he lacked a plan, but he sent out a
large number of circulars to ask bene-
factors to help.
The excavations were partly begun in
autumn; winter passed then work was
taken up again in March 1864.
Towards the end of April, at the invi-
tation of the foreman, accompanied
by his priests and many of his boys,
Don Bosco went down the excava-
tions to place the foundation stone.
After this was done, to show how
pleased he was he turned to Buzzetti
the foreman and said: “I want to im-
mediately offer you a deposit for this
wonderful effort”. So saying, he pulled
out his wallet, opened it and poured
into Buzzetti’s hands everything it
contained, all of 40 cents. “Don’t
worry” said Don Bosco, “Our Lady will
take care of providing the money we
need for her church”. “And Mary", Don
Bosco wrote later, “wanted to give a
hand herself and make it known that
since it was in her honour, she
wanted to build it herself: aedificavit
sibi domum Maria. Oh, how many
have had recourse to Mary Help of
Christians, making the Novena and
promising a donation if they obtained
the grace they were asking for!”
Devotion pictured
Don Bosco was no connoisseur of art,
but had a strong sense of the potential
of a religious building for strengthen-
ing memory, and of sacred art for con-
veying a message. He entrusted the
task to architect Antonio Spezia, who
had been a long-time friend of his.
For the Church of Mary Help of Chris-
tians, Spezia drew inspiration from the
facade of the Basilica of St George the
Great in Venice, by Venetian architect
Andrea Palladio. In five years, the
church was complete and was conse-
crated on June 9, 1868.
After the consecration of the church
the time for thinking about some inner
adornments began. Don Bosco cer-
tainly had a precise iconographic plan
in mind: he wanted, through the paint-
ings over the altars and various devo-
tions, to communicate a message, offer
the faithful more than just saints to ad-
dress their prayers to, but examples to
follow.
In June 1868, at the time of the conse-
cration, the large painting by Thomas
Lorenzone was already in place, pictur-
ing Mary Help of Christians with the
baby Jesus in her arms, surrounded by
the Apostles and Evangelists; over the
altar dedicated to St. Joseph, in the left
transept, he placed a canvas featuring
St. Joseph and the Family of Nazareth,
also by Lorenzone. Then, proceeding
towards the back, where we find the
altar dedicated to St. Anne, he placed a
painting by Giovanni Battista Fino
which had the education of the Virgin
as its subject.
The final work, completed after Don
Bosco’s death, was the decoration
around the dome, the Help of Chris-
tians in her glory. This project, designed
by artist Giuseppe Rollini, goes back,
however, to Don Bosco himself.
Between the 1920s and 1930s the
Salesian superiors wanted to enlarge
and re-design the basilica for the beat-
ification and canonisation of Don
Bosco.
The blessing of the enlargement, and
of the monumental altar to St. John
Bosco and the marble additions to the
sanctuary took place June 9, 1938, re-
calling the the fiftieth anniversary of
Don Bosco’s death. With the start of
World War II work slowed down, creat-
ing all kinds of difficulties, especially fi-
nancial ones, but on December 19,
1942 the chief foreman, Carlo Cussetti,
declared the work completed with final
touches to the main altar.
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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
Italy
Don Bosco’s University
by Fr Renato Butera, sdb
There is one place in the Salesian
Congregation with a very special
meaning, characterised by its interna-
tional nature and what has always
been called ‘family spirit’in the Salesian
tradition. Those who live and study
there know this. They do not need to
belong to the Salesian Family. The stu-
dents, as they themselves tell us, expe-
rience and share it with others who
have made the same choice, a choice
which means being formed as individ-
uals and as professionals for the future
in one of six faculties at the Salesian
Pontifical University (UPS), Rome: (The-
ology, Educational pedagogy and psy-
chology, Philosophy, Canon Law,
Christian and Classical Literature, Com-
munication Studies, to which we can
add the Youth Ministry and Catechetics
Schools). The UPS was founded as an
institute in 1940. On May 24, 1973,
Pope Paul VI elevated it to the status of
University with his Motu Proprio, ‘Vitae
Magisterium’.
Now over these 70 or so years of its ex-
istence, the UPS has delivered to soci-
ety, the Church, the Congregation, the
Salesian Family, not only well-devel-
oped human beings, but also a host of
pastors and leaders, professionals and
experts, in short, the ‘good Christians
and upright citizens’ whom Don Bosco
dreamt of, who contribute to building
up a ‘civilization of love’ (Paul VI). The
popes, Benedict XVI in particular, have
highlighted the mission and the spe-
cific role that the UPS plays in the
Church and society: the special atten-
tion given to the study and resolution
of issues concerning educational and
pastoral activity, especially among the
young and ordinary people, according
to the spirit of Don Bosco.
Many vocations, priestly, religious and
lay, have been formed in it. They come
from all corners of the earth and from
every continent. Students at the UPS
come from at least 90 different coun-
tries: a range of cultural expressions
united by a single creed which makes
the educational mission of the Univer-
sity even more universal in nature. This
feature makes it special when it is com-
pared with many like institutions.
The UPS is therefore Don Bosco’s Uni-
versity in the fullest sense, not only be-
cause it deals with approximately 2000
students each year (not counting the
thousands enrolled in the 28 centres
connected with it), but because it
forms teachers, youth leaders, experts
who in turn devote the wisdom and
competence they have gained to the
service of the multitudes of young
people they discover when they return
to the place from which they came and
for which they have now been pre-
pared.
Academic life at the UPS applies Article
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40 of the Salesian Constitutions as its
basic criterion: “a home that welcomes,
parish that evangelises, school that pre-
pares for life, and a playground where
friends can meet and enjoy them-
selves”.
The UPS is a ‘home that welcomes’,
where people study in a spirit of
friendship and solidarity, and are cer-
tain to find someone they can count
on. The University has a Pastoral Team,
a volunteer group which is especially
helpful for students with difficulties
typical for someone arriving in a
country for the first time, barely
knowing the language or finding
themselves in an academic structure
with quite different requirements
from high school. This kind of wel-
come is experienced, for example, on
the day that graduating students wel-
come the ‘newbies’ and show them
around the university.
The UPS is also a ‘parish’ which evan-
gelises through its care and develop-
ment of personal spirituality and
offers communal services such as
daily Mass, confessions, monthly re-
treats, opportunities for deepening
faith or accepting a lay calling such as
that of the Salesian Cooperator. Then
there are particular experiences such
as the traditional Lenten Wednesday
services.
The UPS is also a ‘playground’ for cul-
tivating friendship in a happy spirit
through moments of celebration like
the ‘Meeting of Peoples’, or fellowship
festivities for the the feasts of Don
Bosco and Mary Help of Christians, or
Christmas preparation, or hiking trips
in and around Rome, curriculum days.
And above all, the UPS is a ‘school
that prepares them for life’, its specific
function. It does this through the vari-
ety and seriousness of its formation, its
attention to scientific and cultural
progress and instances which give life
meaning. It is inspired by an all-round
humanism which fosters eagerness in
students and puts them at the heart of
its intellectual and research efforts.
So the UPS aims clearly at being, and is,
Don Bosco’s University not only for
youth, but is youthful in its approach,
where the human being comes first
and above everything else. This is no
mere slogan, but an intent, a willing-
ness and – we believe – also a reality
that supports and becomes the atmos-
phere of its university education.
SALESIANS 2012
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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
Poland
Totus Tuus:
Salesian Family a Marian Family
6th International Mary Help of Christians Congress
Czestochowa, Poland
ere is a lively devotion to Mary Help of Christians
in the Salesian Family because of Don Bosco’s wish
that it be so.
18
SALESIANS 2012
The 6th International Mary Help of Christians Con-
gress, a Salesian Family event promoted by the As-
sociation of Mary Help of Christians (ADMA), took
place from 3-6 August 2011 at the Shrine of the Black
Madonna, Czestochowa. The Salesian Family regards
devotion to Mary under the title of Help of Christians,
as one of the charismatic characteristics of its
common spirit.
The Congress motto, ‘Totus tuus’, while reflecting the
holiness and Marian devotion of Blessed John Paul II,
also expresses our childlike trust in Mary Help of
Christians as we walk the way of faith with Her, de-
fending the important values of life, family, education.
This way we renew our commitment to being au-
thentic disciples and passionate apostles who bring
the Gospel to the young.
There is a lively devotion to Mary Help of Christians
in the Salesian Family because of Don Bosco’s wish
that it be so. He built the Basilica of Mary Help of
Christians in Turin, encouraged prayer, founded Con-
gregations and groups dedicated to Her in the
awareness that Mary has been the inspiration and
support of Salesian work.
Since 1988 five International MHC Congresses have

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been held: Valdocco in 1988, on the occasion of the Cente-
nary of Don Bosco’s death; Cochabamba (Bolivia) in 1995;
Seville (Spain) in 1999; Valdocco again in 2003 for the cente-
nary of the coronation of the statue of Mary Help of Christians
in the Basilica; Mexico City in 2007.
The Association of Mary Help of Christians (ADMA), founded
by St John Bosco in 1869, offers a way to holiness and apos-
tolate through the Salesian charism. In the Salesian Family
the Association emphasises and spreads Eucharistic worship
and Marian devotion for the evangelisation and advance-
ment of ordinary people and youth most in need.

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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
Mary Help of Christians Association
A born organiser, Don Bosco did not
leave devotion to Mary Help of
Christians simply to something spon-
taneous. He gave it stability with an As-
sociation which took her name. First-
hand witnesses saw in this institution
one of the initiatives most dear to Don
Bosco and the one with the widest
impact after that of the two religious
Congregations and the Cooperators
Association.
When presenting important docu-
ments, Don Bosco attributed the Asso-
ciation’s origins to “repeated requests”,
coming“from all parts and from people
of all ages and every circumstance”
during and after the construction and
consecration of the Church (now Basil-
ica) of Mary Help of Christians. He re-
ferred to the associates as “people
united in the same spirit of prayer and
piety paying homage to the great
Mother of the Saviour invoked under
the beautiful title of the Help of Chris-
tians”.
The following were proposed as the
aims of the Association:
» zeal for an increase in piety, spirituality,
worship: “to promote the glories of the
divine Mother of the Saviour”(art. 1);
» “spread devotion to the Blessed Virgin
and veneration of Jesus in the
Blessed Sacrament” (art. 2);
» make use of “words, advice, good
works and influence to promote dig-
nity and devotion in the novenas,
feasts and solemnities that occur
during the year in honour of the
Blessed Virgin Mary and the Most
Holy Sacrament” (art. 3);
» encourage “the spreading of good
books, pictures, medals and leaflets,
by taking part in processions in
honour of Mary most holy and the
Blessed Sacrament and by encourag-
ing others to do likewise; frequent
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Communion and attendance at Holy
Mass; bring Viaticum to the dying”
(art. 4);
» make great efforts “never to blas-
pheme or engage in talk contrary to
religion, and do their utmost to pre-
vent those under their charge from
doing likewise; they will also do all
they can to remove obstacles in the
way of the sanctification of Sundays
and Feast days” (art. 5).
The means were basically an intense
life of personal piety: “Sacraments of
Confession and Communion once a
fortnight or once a month, and assist at
daily Mass if one’s duties permit”(art. 6);
for the ordinary faithful, suitable brief
prayers were suggested in the morning
and evening, and for priests, the inten-
tion of praying at mass for all the mem-
bers of the pious Association: “These
prayers”, he pointed out, “will serve as
a bond to unite all the members so that
they form a single mind and soul and
give due honour to Jesus hidden in the
Eucharist and his august Mother, and
participate in all the good works done
by each member” (art. 7). Eight articles
under the heading ‘Spiritual Advan-
“ose united in the same
spirit of prayer and piety
paying homage to the great
Mother of the Saviour invoked
under the beautiful title of the
Help of Christians”.
tages’ dealt at length with the spiritual
growth of the members.
To increase the expansion of the Asso-
ciation Don Bosco managed to have it
erected as an Archconfraternity, with
the faculty of aggregating to it similar
associations already in existence or
later to be erected. This was granted by
Pius IX with the brief Sodalitia Fidelium
of 5 April 1870, which, however, limited
the aggregation to the archdiocese of
Turin. With a subsequent brief Exposi-
tum Nobis of 2 March 1877 the faculty
was extended to all the dioceses of
Piedmont. After the death of Don
Bosco, Leo XIII, first with the brief Ad-
motae Nobis preces of 25 June 1889,
granted the faculty of aggregation to
all the similar associations “erected or
to be erected in any church or public
oratory belonging to the Salesian Soci-
ety wherever they may be”; then with
the brief Cum multa of 19 January 1894
he conferred in perpetuo on the Rector
Major of the Salesians and his succes-
sors the faculty of being able “to validly
and lawfully erect other associations of
the same name, and institute them in
any place where houses and churches
of the Congregation existed and ag-
gregate the associations erected to the
above mentioned Archconfraternity”;
two years afterwards with the brief
Sodalitas of 25 February 1896 he
granted the Rector Major and his suc-
cessors the faculty of “aggregating to
the same Archconfraternity”, estab-
lished in the church of Mary Help of
Christians in Turin, other associations
with the same aims and of the same
kind canonically erected in any church
or diocese.
Finally, the Sacred Congregation for
Religious with a rescript of 31 July
1913 granted the privilege that the
Rector Major might canonically erect
the Mary Help of Christians Associa-
tion also in the houses of the Institute
of the FMA and aggregate them to
the Primary Centre in Turin.
SALESIANS 2012
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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
Brazil
Salesian Bulletin
at the Service of Life
by Fr Nivaldo Luiz Pessinatti, sdb
A conscious choice
If great challenges or catastrophes
lead to unusual solutions, life’s daily
routine does not always offer provoca-
tion for changes that often are just as
necessary. The press, which comes
from the same monotonous daily
routine, seems to be included in this
list. But the multiplier effect of the
press might be considered as one of
the major transforming events of
mankind.
Don Bosco understood this and
quickly put in place the use of this in-
novative communications solution. He
also gave it a life and shape which was
completely Christian.
The Salesian Bulletin, now appearing
in many languages and hues, confirms
the soundness and appropriateness of
this innovative Christian solution.
In February 1902, the Portuguese lan-
guage Bulletin informed Brazilians, the
Portuguese and their colonies of the
vitality and strength of a work which
had and would continue to have a
long story to tell.
The first Portuguese edition spoke elo-
quently and accurately of all the ingre-
dients and the wonderful treasury of
Salesian initiatives in Europe and the
Americas: texts full of detail, of life, and
high definition photos are some of the
indicators of this quality communica-
tion. Leafing through the first edition
(Year 1, no. 1 February 1902) and com-
paring it with those that followed, we
find ourselves faced with an account
of involvement in real life: news, testi-
monies of missionary dedication, arti-
cles by teachers, young people, lay
and religious.
More than being a simple depository
of ‘exotic’ cultural curiosities, this vehi-
cle of communication became a true
harbinger revealing projects dedi-
cated to the good of ones neighbour
and the defence of the lives of so
many people: one only needs to think
of how the ‘missions’ were presented.
During the difficult period of the First
World War, publication of the Salesian
Bulletin was interrupted. Just the same,
little by little, it returned to being a reg-
ular bimonthly of improved graphic
quality. The interruption to publication
during and after the Second World
War was longer: almost ten years!
From this unfavourable set of circum-
stances however, opportunity arose,
and was immediately taken advan-
tage of, to diversify and decentralise
the Salesian Bulletin’s publication.
In 1950 Salesian Brazil began publish-
ing the Brazilian Salesian Bulletin: Year
1, Number 1, drawn up, laid out and
printed in Sao Paulo, under the direc-
tion of the Provincial, Fr John Resende,
allowed it to be translated into Brazil-
ian Portuguese and style, while still
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maintaining its strict links with the
Salesian charism.
2012 sees an uninterrupted series of 62
years of publication.
From 1957 to 1972 the magazine ran
under the name of ‘Salesian Magazine’.
The change was intended to overcome
the reductive sense of ‘bulletin’ in
Brazilian Portuguese. But for the first
number in 1972, the original title came
back: Salesian Bulletin, and it remains
thus until today.
Successes and challenges
Development, dissemination and use
of the Salesian Bulletin were and are still
the constant concerns of its editors.
Over a long period the Brazilian edition
was sustained by the efforts and good
will of a single editor. Now the editorial
team is made up of SDB and FMA and
a Salesian Cooperator. The desire for
greater professionalism has been con-
stant: journalists, graphic designers,
printing, distribution.
For a good number of years the
Salesian Bulletin print run was some
20,000 copies. In the last five years it has
reached 100,000 copies. Also, in collab-
oration with the RSE (Salesian Schools
Network), it has produced a collection
of comics on the lives of Saints, Salesian
and other.
So there has been significant increase;
nevertheless the challenge of dissemi-
nation remains along with its use by
Salesian communities, meaning that
the Salesian Bulletin be seen as an in-
strument of Salesian formation and in-
formation for broad use in Salesian
educational and pastoral settings.
Various initiatives and strategies have
been suggested to parishes, schools
and social works, so the Salesian Bul-
letin may be used as a tool of Salesian
communication. Provincials are in-
volved in offering various kinds of sup-
port: motivating their communities,
expanding circulation etc.
An online Salesian Bulletin has been
seen as an important goal. But the reg-
ular, flexible nature of such a tool re-
quires new planning, a new platfrom
and new professional types for it to
become a true portal of reference for
Salesian communication in Brazil: it is
already under construction.
We have an important indicator of its
significance: some Masters candidates
at Brazilian Universities have chosen
the Brazilian Salesian Bulletin as their
topic for academic research either in
the communication or the social wel-
fare field.
In the meantime the Brazilian Salesian
Bulletin, through its bimonthly appear-
ance, is committed to being a tool fo-
cused on the service of life.
SALESIANS 2012
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RETURN TO DON BOSCO
Called to Hholiness
In the light of the Strenna for 2011 we are reminded that our basic call is to holiness.
e Postulator General’s Office is grateful for some of the stages reached by various
Causes and invites poeople to get to know and to pray to these witnesses who have
taken up the Gospel appeal. “Come and See”.
24 September 2010: Andrej Majcen
Ljubljana Rakovnik (Slovenia) - opening of
the Diocesan Inquiry into the Beatification of
Servant of God Andrej Majcen SDB (1904–
1999), priest and missionary, ‘Salesian patriarch’
in Vietnam.
29 October 2010: Augustus Arribat
On 29 October 2010, the Positio concerning
Augustus Arribat SDB (1879-1946) was delivered.
With his smiling, open demeanour, this son of
Don Bosco never alienated anybody. His slight
frame and ascetic looks might remind one of the
Curé d’Ars, but his smile and kindness were truly
Salesian.
18 February 2011: Constantine Vendrame
Shillong (India) – the Diocesan Inquiry con-
cerning Servant of God Constantine Vendrame
SDB (1893-1957) came to a close. He was a mis-
sionary who worked solidly at forming lay cate-
chists to evangelise their communities. As a good
Salesian he set in motion and followed up weekend
Oratories, and educated hundreds of children. He
exercised his Catholic Faith amongst Hindus,
Muslims and Methodists alike.
24
SALESIANS 2012
by Fr Pierluigi Cameroni, sdb
27 April 2011: Stephen Sándor
On 27 April 2011, the Positio regarding
Stephen Sándor SDB (1914-1953) was delivered.
He was a Salesian Brother, a martyr. His constant
concern was to be faithful to his Salesian vocation
as a Brother. Instead of fleeing abroad, he remained
in his country to save Hungarian young people.
24 May 2011: Jan Swierc
Conclusion of the Diocesan Inquiry into the
martyrdom of Servants of God Jan Swierc SDB
and his 7 companions, from the Krakow
Province, martyred at Auschwitz, and Franciszek
Miśka SDB, from Piła Province, martyed at
Dachau. ey were witnesses to Christ in one of
the darkest hours of human history.

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23 October 2011: Louis Guanella
Canonisation of Blessed Louis Guanella
(1842-1915). He was won over by Don Bosco
and his charism and founded Congregations ded-
icated to the education of the young, helping the
mentally ill, supporting the elderly especially
when they had nobody else.
7 June 2011: Anna Maria Lozana Díaz
Agua de Dios (Colombia), the opening of
the Diocesan Inquiry into Servant of God Anna
Maria Lozano Díaz (1883-1982), co-foundress of
the Institute of the Daughters of the Sacred
Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Drawn to the charism
of Blessed Louis Variara, she became his disciple
and faithful follower.
27 June 2011: Laura Meozzi
Laura Meozzi FMA (1873-1951) was de-
clared Venerable. She was the pioneer of the FMA
presence in Poland, and though experiencing ex-
treme poverty she opened houses for all kinds of
needs: orphaned or neglected children, young
girls, postulants and novices, Sisters; also for
refugees, the persecuted, sick...

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SALESIANS 2012
CREATING
A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Words and Ways 28
Come and See! 30
Following in His Footsteps 32
Volunteer, Vocation and Missionary Movement 34
Annual Altar Server’s Pilgrimage 36
The Proof is in the Pudding 38
Never Forget to Play! 40
World Youth Day, a Celebration of Faith 42
Salesian Youth Movement at the feast of Faith 44
“You are God’s hope and ours too” 46
Voluntary Service brings hope again 48
Youth Forum: Come and See 50
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SALESIANS 2012
27

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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Australia
28
SALESIANS 2012
Words and Ways
by Fr Frank B. Freeman, sdb
A visiting speaker, a revolutionary if not by
reputation certainly by name, was address-
ing a class of senior students on the need for dras-
tic social reform and the need for fire-eating
leaders to foment it. “Tell me,” he said, “Is there any
one of today’s leaders you would die for?” To his dis-
appointment silence reigned in the classroom. Until
one student spoke up, “No, but I am looking for some-
one to live for”. A lively discussion broke out among the
students, oblivious now to the visiting speaker, as to how
to discover such a person to live for. Names of recent rev-
olutionary leaders, who had strutted the world stage, were
thrown up for discussion but so many of them, after enjoy-
ing popular support, proved to have feet of clay. On obtain-
ing power, how quickly they adopted rich and opulent life
styles. Their self-aggrandising ways belied their fine words to
the masses: certainly not the type worth living for, let alone
dying for.
The visiting speaker felt he had been sidelined. In order to regain
their attention he put the question, “and how do you propose to
discover this real person you want to live for?” “Easy,” said the
same student, “Let’s see how he really lives behind the façade
of his revolutionary talk. Let’s see if his ways match his words”.
History is full of such leaders not worth dying for and
also leaders well worth living for: the New Testament
shows us two such leaders.
John the Baptist, that fiery revolutionary, whose mettle
was tempered in the hardness of the desert environment
over long years, was no dissembler. His revolutionary call
to repentance matched his lifestyle. Naturally enthusiastic
young men were attracted to him as the fulfilment of
their ideals for a better society, a man they could live
for.
But one day their leader did an uncharacter-
istic thing for one gathering disciples for a
mission. He pointed out one greater than
himself who was worth living for. “Behold
the Lamb of God… One greater than I. I am
not worthy to undo his shoe straps”. Now
some of his disciples, attracted by the idea

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At all times his words matched his ways.
He invited them to come and be with him;
they “came and saw where he was staying
and many remained with him”.
of following a greater personage, fol-
lowed him from a distance. Then Jesus,
aware that they were following him, di-
rectly questions them: “What are you
looking for?” Eager to know more
about him they ask him: “Rabbi, where
do you live?” Jesus then gives them an
invitation,“Come and see”. They “came
and saw where he was staying and
they remained with him”.
A hundred and fifty years ago, some
young men, living in the industrialised
city of Turin in Northern Italy, were at-
tracted to a young priest who was
making great efforts to help young
people to survive amid all the injustices
and exploitation of employers anxious
to make great profits. He, Don Bosco,
had arrived in the city having been
moulded by a lifetime of the rural
poverty and hardships of the times.
Living with them, he shared with them
not only his few worldly possessions
but the love of his own mother. He
taught them basic skills to better their
chances of employment and to
become good Christians and better cit-
izens. At all times his words matched
his ways. He invited them to come and
be with him; they “came and saw
where he was staying and many re-
mained with him”. They saw in him,
and in his mission, a person well worth
living for.
We, today’s Salesians of Don Bosco,
are their successors. We have learnt,
through our family history, how he
lived. We have heard his invitation
“Come and see”. With our idealism, we
“came and saw where he was staying
and remained with him”.
In our schools, our youth centres, our
missions and parishes, we are Don
Bosco’s revolutionaries, working for
youth who are at the mercy of exploita-
tion by a materialistic society whose
godless gospel is a great hoax: namely,
that power, possessions and pleasure
give happiness.
So, to today’s youth, we issue the same
invitation of Jesus and Don Bosco:
“Come and see”, for here are leaders
well worth living for.
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Portugal
COME AND SEE!
by Fr João de Brito Carvalho, sdb
The Rector Major’s Strenna was dis-
seminated, in its essentials, in July of
the previous year, and became the
point of departure for planning at
province and local level. This allowed us
to see that the provincial and local
communities, pastoral and educative
communities and Salesian Family
Groups could take up the Rector
Major’s Strenna as a reference point for
the school year and other pastoral ac-
tivities throughout the year.
‘Come and See’ culture in
Portugal
In early January 2011 we published
1,500 pamphlets containing the Rector
Major’s commentary on the Strenna.
This pamphlet aimed at ensuring that
a copy was in the hands of every par-
ticipant when the Strenna was pre-
sented. On 15 January more than 600
people came together at Fatima (SDB,
FMA, other member groups of the
Salesian Family, and other lay people
who share responsibility with us) in
order to get to know its key idea:
“Come and See”. The commentary on
the Strenna was presented in summ-
mary form by the two provincials (SDB
and FMA) then further illustrated by a
DVD which the Congregation pro-
duced and sent around the world. The
meeting was coordinated by the na-
tional delegate for the Salesian Family.
As part of the plan to encourage a“cul-
ture of vocation” in each local commu-
nity, the Provincial, during his canonical
visitation to the communities, pre-
sented the Strenna and commentary
to the SDBs, lay partners, SF Groups,
Salesian Youth Movement, Parish
groups and so forth. Vocation teams in
each community were particularly in-
volved in this work. The DVD was espe-
cially useful, in its entirety or part
thereof.
In order to broaden the reach of the
Rector Major’s reflections, a copy of the
Strenna commentary was sent to key
civil authorities in the country, to dioce-
san bishops and to other provincials of
male and female religious communi-
ties.
At the Youth Ministry level
At national level, the province vocation
team supported local communities in
letting the Strenna be known, and in
accompaniment of youngsters show-
ing seeds of a calling to consecrated or
priestly life.
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The main activities undertaken by the
Youth Ministry Team were as follows:
Don Bosco Meetings: an initiative
which took place this year in various
communities to present the Salesian
vocation to young people through
regular meetings;
24 October 2010: a National youth
gathering in Mogofores as part of
the national Salesian Family Pilgrim-
age to the National Shrine to Mary
Help of Christians;
22-23 January: FlashBosco (for
teenagers) North and South;
5 February: Pre-teens Meeting, North
and South;
9-10 April: Easter for Youth – a youth
retreat at Fatima;
14-15 May: National SYM Day which
coincided with the 59th Salesian
Family Pilgrimage to Fatima – in-
cluding a youth forum on the
Strenna;
10 June: Province Day where young
people involved in the vocations dis-
cernment process were also invited;
18-22 July: National SYM Camp for
pre-teens and teenagers, with voca-
tion culture as its main theme.
Salesian Family Groups
Under the guidance of the National
Salesian Family Council, which meets three
times a year, the idea of a culture of voca-
tionwastakenup. Thisbecamepartoffor-
mation occasions and Salesian Family
retreats and was the central theme for the
two national pilgrimages to the Mary Help
of Christians Shrine at Mogofores and the
international Shrine at Fatima.

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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Thailand
Following in his footsteps
by Fr Dominic Savio Amnuai, sdb
“Come and See” is the Salesian 2011 Strenna.
It is the appeal from our Rector Major to
work for vocations in the Salesian world. It is
the Call for all of us to return to St John
Bosco, our founder, and to go back to Jesus
our teacher of Love, in order to know what
Don Bosco thought, what he said and
what he did, and follow his steps in our
Salesian daily life.
Nowadays the Salesian Congregation
in ailand has four centres of
vocational guidance to form our
youth to become Salesians
and to continue our
Salesian works in
the future:
St Theresa of the Infant Jesus
Centre (Hua Hin) founded in 1947
(1947-1970) and closed for around
ten years (1971-1980). en it
opened again in 1981 and continues
as an aspirantate for youth from all
over ailand, except Chiang Mai
Diocese. Our aspirants here study at
Hua Hin Vitthayalai School.
St John Bosco Centre (Doi
Saked Chiang Mai) founded in 2009
is also an aspirantate for youth from
Chiang Mai Diocese. ey study at
Sarasat-Chiang Mai School.
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Holy Family Centre (Nazareth
Banpong) founded in 1990, is an as-
pirantate for older young people
completing their secondary studies.
ey study at Sarasit School Ban-
pong.
St Peter’s Postnovitiate (Sam-
pran) founded in 1977, is the house
for Postulants, Novices and Post-
Novices. ey study philosophy at
Saengtham College.
From
these four
centres for young
people who wish to
follow in Jesus’ footsteps,
our youth have the chance to
form themselves in the Spirit of
Don Bosco. Everyday, they have
time to study, learn the Salesian
Spirit, practise it in various fields and
find their real vocation as Salesians.
We say that “these centres are the heart
of our Salesian Congregation”.
SALESIANS 2012
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Ecuador
Vocation and Missionary Movement
by Fr Juan Cárdenas, sdb
Rafael Correa, the current President
of the Republic, is one of the more
than 2000 young people who in their
earlier years left home for a year for ex-
perience as a Salesian volunteer in the
mountainous Cordillera de los Andes
region at Zumbahua, an indigenous
community and mission station 3,500
metres up.
Gabriela Jiménez, after a formation
process was sent to the Ecuadorian
jungle to share the Salesian spirit with
the indigenous Achuar at the Wasak-
entsa mission.
The Salesian volunteer movement in
Ecuador, involving a full year of service,
began in 1971. Four decades later it has
undergone a process of evolution and
consolidation as an opportunity for
social commitment for young people.
Since 1980 FMA communities have
opened their doors to take in young
female volunteers and now take part
in a joint effort with their Salesian
confreres. Somewhat later, in the 1990s,
the Daughters of the Sacred Hearts of
Jesus and Mary came in on the scheme
and set up a formation process known
in Spanish as JUVOMI - Juvenil (Youth-
ful), Vocacional (Vocational), Misionero
(Missionary). The volunteer movement
envisages three stages, a ‘before’ (pre-
volunteer), a ‘during’ (the actual time as
a volunteer) and an‘afterwards’(“volun-
teers forever” or VPS in its Spanish
acronym). Most of the young volun-
teers come from Salesian communities
and their works.
The volunteer movement now has a
strong social, church and vocational
component.
» volunteer activity is presented as an
opportunity for citizen involvement
with a view to strengthening the
social fabric, solidarity and democ-
racy.
» young volunteers are sent to 40
Salesian communities and 8 female
religious communities which are not
Salesian but are in the local church.
Here they work in close collaboration
and develop a true sense of Church.
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e volunteer movement plays
a major role in allowing young people
to have an experience of life helping
those who are very poor.
In the past twenty years the volunteer
movement has been a unique source
of vocations for the Province. Fr
Marcelo Farfán, the Provincial, indicates
that as part of the Province Vocation
Plan the volunteer movement plays a
major role in allowing young people to
have an experience of life helping
those who are very poor; they “come
and see” and while some then choose
to be Salesians, everyone has a very real
experience of Don Bosco in their life.
What started out as a personal initiative
then became a province and even an
inter-province choice. We currently
have a single Salesian Family-wide vol-
unteer project, one that works towards
teamwork in all respects: leadership,
coordination, communion and re-
sources, in order to strengthen the mis-
sion volunteer movement in Ecuador.
Both male and female volunteers are
in roughly equal numbers, and twice
yearly we send out some 80 to a
100 young volunteers. Similarly, the
Province also welcomes international
volunteers from Austria, Germany, Italy,
the United States. We see to it that
young people are part of the life and
activity of the communities, and in an
appropriate setting for an apostolic
experience and a life of faith. We also
do our best to see that they are per-
sonally accompanied. It is a chal-
lenge to accompany young people
as they conclude their experience as
volunteers, to see that they become
active citizens who maintain a Christian
viewpoint on life.
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Poland
Annual Altar Server’s Pilgrimage
by Bro. Robert Gajewski, sdb
The annual Altar Servers Pilgrimage (Known as
PIM in Polish) is an extensive gathering of Altar
Servers from the Salesian Province of St. John
Bosco in Wrocław, Poland.
For the past 30 years, in the first days of May, the
youngsters have been coming to spend a few
days at the Sanctuary of Our Lady Help of Chris-
tians in Twardogóra to celebrate what it means to
be an Altar Server and to compete in all kinds of
games.
Over this period we estimate that some 20,000
young altar servers have taken part in an event
that normally sees around 700 coming together
annually.
The gathering is an enormous logistic enterprise.
The 100 or so organising staff and referees are
young Salesians who effectively run the entire
event. The altar servers are accommodated in dif-
ferent locations in Twardogóra: schools, kinder-
gartens and dormitories.
The games take place in the town at different
sport facilities and in the oratory at the church.
The participants are recruited mostly from our
Salesian centres but also include representatives
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e participants are recruited
mostly from our Salesian centres
but also includes representatives from
non-Salesian parishes.
from non-Salesian parishes. They have a wide
choice of 30 different games, both individual and
group, in 4 age categories as well as all kinds of
other activities, sports, liturgy, quizzes on the lives
of the Saints. Every day the altar servers attend
Mass. Evenings are dedicated to so-called ‘cultural
recreation’ (music, fun games, acting) as well as
spiritual formation (evening prayers, church serv-
ices, ‘goodnight talks’).
The annual PIM Pilgrimage in May is the crowning
effort for these altar servers. In the course of the
year, in different places of our Province, mini-gath-
erings of the kind take place where the youngsters
take part in different sports: football, volleyball,
basketball, swimming. There is also place for spiri-
tual and liturgical formation. The points which the
different teams collect at these mini-events are
then added to the main event in May so we could
say that the idea of the festival is kept alive
throughout the whole year rather than just for a
few days in May.
People from the local community and the city
council as well as our benefactors and volunteers
are involved in the organisation of the event.
The Pilgrimage has its own anthem, logo and its
own internet website: www.pim.salezjanie.pl
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Malta
The Proof is in the Pudding
by Fr Paul Formosa, sdb
Run by an experienced team of lay youth leaders under the direction of Fr Paul For-
mosa SDB, the Salesian Pastoral Youth Services (SPYS) seeks to develop and imple-
ment a programme of holistic formation for young people; this is achieved through
a number of seminars and other activities aimed at gathering young people
from all walks of life.
For a number of years now, one of the main activities undertaken by SPYS
has given Maltese young people the opportunity to go on voluntary work
experiences abroad with other Salesian communities, focussing on com-
munities in developing countries. In fact, SPYS has, over the years, forged
a very strong relationship with a number of Salesian communities in India
and Ghana, although it has also sent volunteers to other member organ-
isations of Don Bosco Youth-Net ivzw, which encompasses Salesian or-
ganisations from 13 EU countries.
The journey does not however start and end with the experi-
ence away from Maltese shores. Rather, at SPYS we consider
the experience to be a journey that commences well in
advance of the visit to the overseas community. A
meeting is in fact held at the beginning of the year
to inform prospective volunteers about the types
of experience that SPYS can offer, and in which
interested youths get the chance to listen to first-
hand experiences and start to get a better appre-
ciation for voluntary work and for the Salesian
spirit.
This is then followed by a series of activity-filled sessions,
during which the prospective volunteers are given the op-
portunity to learn about Don Bosco and the preventive
system, and discover and reflect on a number of situations
and experiences that they may encounter along the journey,
for example being in a different culture, or being in a com-
munity which lacks a number of luxuries that are taken for
granted in the volunteers’ day to day lives. They are also
given the opportunity, through sessions aimed at identi-
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fying their inner skills, to discover them-
selves (and their creative selves!) in new
ways they hadn’t previously explored.
The truth, however, is that no amount of
preparation sessions can come close to
matching the experience itself. While each
experience is like no other, all former
volunteers share many things in
common: they all thoroughly enjoy
the experience with the children,
be it telling jokes, making children
smile, playing games, giving ed-
ucational talks, painting faces,
helping the children with some
homework, making arts and crafts,
or teaching!
Truth be told, however, it is gener-
ally the case that the real students
turn out to be the volunteers
themselves, because for every
little bit of English, or mathemat-
ics that they teach the children,
the same volunteers learn a lot
more in respect of appreciation
of the many things they have got
but often, however, take for
granted. They may say that the
proof is in the pudding, but we
like to think of the proof as being
volunteers returning to Malta
humbled by the experience,
and keen to return again on
another future voluntary
work experience!
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Bolivia
Never Forget to Play!
by ea Ricchiuto
I made the mistake a few times, and I will never
make it again. I forgot to play. When I became frus-
trated with the girls during estudios, my first thought
was get to my computer and it will all be better. My
computer is my link back to my life in California, but
that currently isn’t my home. My home is in Bolivia,
and I can’t run away from it by turning on a computer.
Estudios ends at 5:00pm and Rosario begins around
6:30 pm. This leaves the girls an hour and a half to
gather their clothes from the line, eat a snack (me-
rienda), and most importantly play. This is the best
time to play because the girls are just released from
sitting, and they are ready!
Once they have all had their snacks, the numbers start
to gather and the screams are heard across town. The
girls have a few different games they love to play, but
most importantly they just love to scream. I now
remember why I love working with my all boys
camp… no screaming. The big girls are very athletic
so I stay out of all the games they play, to avoid a ball
being pelted at my head. It’s a special version of
dodge ball that scares me!
I stick to the little ones during this time because they
have an energy level that is astonishing. A few days
ago I was lucky enough to enjoy the company of 5
little ones and a soccer ball. It began with us kicking
the ball in a circle, which turned into‘monkey-in-the-
middle’, with all the girls trying to get the ball away
from Becca (volunteer from WA) and me. In the end I
was dribbling around and through the girls, as if they
were cones that were trying to trip me. I was holding
my own until the swarm around my feet grew so
large that I could barely move without stepping on
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them. The best part of it all was their incredible
laughs!
Estudios is the hardest part of my day, but if I remind
myself that I get to play, it some how makes it all
better. I no longer retreat to my computer for comfort.
I play! It is easy to run away to my room and only
come out when needed, but that isn’t why I am here.
I am here to love and show these youth what love is.
I realize more than ever that my six months here are
very short. I complain about missing people, but it’s
only for six months that I will be missing my family,
my fiancé and my friends. I will miss these kids for the
rest of my life.
I am learning many lessons that I wouldn’t learn any-
where else in the world. I was placed in Hogar Casa
Main in Santa Cruz, Bolivia for a reason. I will never
know the exact reason, but I know that I am doing
what the Lord has asked of me. The Lord works in very
mysterious ways, and I am watching his blessings in
front of me every day. Every time I have a problem
with a girl I remind myself that she was placed here
for a specific purpose, and it might be for me to help
her or her to help me. Every laugh and giggle brings
me that much closer to God. After being here at the
Hogar, I will never again forget to play!
After a month long formation with
VIDES, ea Ricchiuto was sent as Salesian
Lay Missioner to Bolivia in mid-January
2011.
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Spain
WYD World Youth Day,
a Celebration of Faith
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World Youth Day was described by Benedict XVI as ‘a celebration of faith’.
The reason is clear: these events breed an atmosphere of joy, sharing and enthusiasm
that offers both a wealth of opportunity to reflect and, above all,
encounter Jesus through the sacraments and prayer.
The Madrid World Youth Days were no exception. Young people from all over the world gath-
ered to listen to the Successor of Peter and receive guidance from him on how to be a Catholic
in the modern world. And while young people readied themselves for the occasion – through
catechesis, confession, Masses, Stations of the Cross and much more – they gave colour to
the city, welcomed strangers, made new friends, sang and danced in the streets and
subways,… expressed, that is, the joy of living that is characteristic of young people when
they have dreams and believe in something (or better yet, Someone) to hope for.
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Spain
WYD MADRID 2011
e Salesian Youth Movement at the feast of faith
by Gian Francesco Romano
The WYD kind of scene is just made for a sit-
uation like the Salesian Youth Movement
(SYM), a movement which grew out of Don
Bosco’s educational style and has always inte-
grated enthusiasm and devotion, festivity and
prayer, the pro-activity of youth and confi-
dence in their pastors and teachers. The SYM
found Madrid to be a natural habitat, and in
the encounters with the national delegations,
seeing the circumstances of other young
people and movements, listening to key fig-
ures of the Movement such as Fr Pascual
Chávez and Mother Yvonne Reungoat, and of
the Church in the Pope and the bishops, the
SYM found new stimulus and strength for the
challenges ahead.
There were some very special moments for
the Salesian Youth Movement at this year’s
World Youth Day. The ‘Steadfast in Faith’ Vigil
and Festival was certainly one of them.
Salesian Youth Ministry in Spain, which in-
cludes the Salesian Sisters, started working on
it two years in advance: two years of work for
an event which lasted, all up, for about 8
hours. That might seem a huge investment of
resources – human, time and of course
money – but it was aiming for incalculable re-
sults. And it left the 7,000 young people who
thronged the huge courtyard at Atocha with
a heartfelt conviction, a sense of family and
unity, and something to remember forever:
that it is wonderful to be involved as young
Catholics working for the salvation of other
young people, and that the journey, if you
are in the company of a group of friends as
vast as the world is vast, is both joyful and ex-
citing.
The goal was achieved. During the afternoon
Festival the youth witnessed the beauty of
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the variety of people and traditions,
songs and dances, stories and art, and in
the evening program – centred on the
Gospel passage of the house built on
rock – and in the words of Fr Chávez and
Mother Yvonne – they acknowledged
their concerns and responses to them; in
Eucharistic adoration and prayer they
found the true reason for their pilgrim-
age.
Something similar happened on Satur-
day 20 August, before and during the
prayer vigil held at Cuatro Vientos. In the
morning the SYM youth from all around
the world gathered at the College at
Carabanchel to make the pilgrimage to-
gether to the former Madrid airport. It
was an opportunity to have fun again
with organised dances, but mostly it was
time for thinking about commitment,
pledges made by the young people
before returning to their countries: to
go out and meet other young people,
support them in their difficulties and
walk with them on their journey of faith,
foster opportunities for volunteer activity,
create strong bonds and a sense of be-
longing, give witness, evangelise and
show what it means to be happy as a
young Catholic.
listen to an 84 year old man, except for
the firm faith and conviction that this
man would lead them to Jesus? And
what else could provide the strength to
sing for the Pope and pray through a
raging storm, kneeling in the mud that
ruined their sleeping bags and clothes?
Only the enthusiasm and the joy of
being so many and so different, yet
united by the same faith. And how does
one understand why hundreds of thou-
sands of young people, almost as one,
suddenly knelt for Eucharistic adoration,
forgetting all the context and practical
difficulties around them, unless one im-
putes a firm faith? There is no doubt that
World Youth Day in Madrid was a true
celebration of faith.
Later in the day the ‘steadfastnes in faith’
of all young people – not just the SYM,
but all those present at Cuatro Vientos –
emerged in pure form, in its entirety and
for the world to see on television. With-
out faith, in fact, one could not explain
what happened. What could urge half a
million or more young people to remain
several hours under the scorching sun to
Fr Soler Rosendo,
National delegator for Youth Ministry
Spain
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Chile
“You are God’s hope and ours too”
Rector Major’s visit to Chile Salesian Province
by Fr Juan Bustamante, sdb
Young people from the Salesian
Youth Movement, come and see!”,
the Rector Major, Fr Pascual Chávez,
shouted, and a thousand young people
immediately got on their feet, came
down from the stands and gathered
around Don Bosco’s successor. Without
a doubt, this was the moment that best
described the Rector Major’s encounter
with the members of the Salesian Youth
Movement (SYM) on Saturday 26 March
in the context of his visit to Chile. From
there on it was a joyful. festive, en-
counter involving Don Bosco’s repre-
sentative today and today’s youth.
One by one the Rector Major answered
the questions from the youngsters, talk-
ing to them in their midst, just as if he
were meeting up with good friends
who had not met for some time. “I really
am very happy spending this time with
you, because you are the raison d’etre of
my existence; you are God’s hope and
ours too, and that’s why I love you all so
much” said Fr Pascual.
One of the questions was about conti-
nuity – how they could carry their SYM
spirituality forward into adulthood. Fr
Pascual answered by saying that the
SYM was just one stage in a boy’s or a
girl’s life, where they experience fascina-
tion for Don Bosco and his spirituality,
and where they form a group to ensure
they are not alone. “If you only knew
how many youngsters today live alone,
and then you look around to see how
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many have come together here to
share love and life, faith and everything
that Don Bosco means for us… how-
ever, it is one more step, since we are
not going to stay young forever. The
most important thing is that the SYM
helps you to make courageous and
decisive life choices, as did Laura
Vicuña, Dominic Savio, and Ceferino
Namuncurá”.
The Rector Major also told them that
life could be lived in two ways: perfunc-
torily, or creatively. “Living it perfuncto-
rily”, he said “is like just going to the
office where what you do may have
little bearing on how you really live.
Jesus tells us ‘My Father is always at
work and so am I’, meaning that if we
are creative we are always generating
something new, our own life, our envi-
ronment, whatever surrounds us. I
would like to finish my life having been
fruitful, having really created some-
thing, not simply by passing through
life without leaving a footprint, and it all
depends on how we experience what
we do”.
He finished by recalling that Don Bosco
did things in such a way that his
youngsters became apostles of other
youngsters, young people for the
young: “Today, like yesterday”, he
added, “the only alternatives are wel-
coming ones: family, an intense spiri-
tual atmosphere which is able to
generate ideas for being committed,
generous”. He called on young people
to be giants, with everything depend-
ing on our ability to offer them high
goals for them to achieve.
“e most important thing
is that the SYM helps you
to make courageous and
decisive life choices, as did
Laura Vicuña, Dominic
Savio, and Ceferino
Namuncurá”.
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Japan
Voluntary Service brings Hope Again
by Fr Daniel Masaharu Torigoe, sdb
The strong earthquake and subse-
quent tsunami which struck the
Japanese archipelago on 11 March
were the most devastating events to
have hit the country since the end of
the Second World War.
In the difficult situation after the
tsunami there is a glimmer of light and
hope in the solidarity and readiness of
young people to help. “In this tragedy,
one of the most moving things has
been the generous response of the
young Japanese” Fr Yasutaka Mura-
matsu, Provincial Secretary and Dele-
gate for Salesian Voluntary Service told
the Fides Agency at the time.
“Young people, Christians and non-
Christians, are getting together and
they want to go to the stricken areas at
once to offer their services, their energy
and their enthusiasm to help the vic-
tims, giving some hope through their
smiles. It is very moving to see how
much love they have for their neigh-
bours. It is a lesson for all of us educa-
tors”.
Some young students from Salesio-
Gakuin High School in Yokohama have
undertaken to help as far as they pos-
sibly can in the rebuilding of the areas
hit by the earthquake and the tsunami
back in March 2011. This is something
which gives fresh hope to the local
people and makes the young people
involved reflect and grow in maturity.
Fr Daniel Masaharu Torigoe is the Prin-
cipal of the school in Yokohama. Like all
the members of the Japanese Salesian
community not directly affected by the
disaster, right from the beginning he
tried to make himself useful in helping
and comforting people from the most
northerly regions hit hardest by the
earthquake, the tsunami, and then the
nuclear danger.
“However, in the early months the con-
sequences of the devastation and the
fear of radioactive contamination pre-
vented us from taking young people to
the area. We had no real idea of what
sort of help we could give. On my own
I visited the area in May to find out
what could be done, but the whole city
was destroyed, nothing remained,
everything had been swept away.
There was no place for the students or
young people who were not profes-
sionally qualified”, the Salesian said.
As the months passed, the situation
improved and the Salesians found a
safe place where they could work with
the students. In fact in Shiogama city,
in the diocese of Sendai, a diocesan
Voluntary Service Centre was set up
supported by Japan Caritas which was
being coordinated by a Salesian,
Brother Francesco Fukagawa.
In June Fr Torigoe suggested to the
young people that they should
become personally involved in the re-
construction of their country and pro-
vide moral support for the victims.
“Surprisingly”, he says, “more students
than I expected wanted to take part
and I divided them into four
groups, with five students and a
teacher in each”.
On 12 July the first group
left for Shiogama City;
the second were
there between 19
and 21 July, the
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“I received a lot from people here, I was encouraged by their smiles,
their positive ways of looking at the reality, their living together,
helping each other”.
third between 25 and 27; the final
group went from 18 to 20 August.
Under the supervision of Brother Fuka-
gawa and other leaders, the young
people spent two whole days cleaning
up the houses, the streets, the beaches,
clearing the grass, collecting bags of
sand, clearing mud from the drains and
visiting old people left alone.
life” one of the young volunteers said.
“First of all, I thought I was going to do
a lot of work for people. But there
were so many things to do. And I
couldn’t do much. On the contrary, I
received a lot from people here, I was
encouraged by their smiles, their pos-
itive ways of looking at the reality, their
living together, helping each other”,
another says.
The experience made a great impres-
sion on the youngsters: “I noticed
what they lost is not merely their
property, but their memories, their
own lives. I felt bad about me having
my home and living a comfortable
“What we did seems to be insignifi-
cant”, said a third, “nonetheless, what
we did does not mean nothing at all.
We can hand good will over to the
ones who come next. And then it will
turn out to be significant!”
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CREATING A CULTURE
OF VOCATION
Uganda
YOUTH FORUM: COME AND SEE
One way to listen to God’s call through the disciples
and find a way to respond.
by Fr Jean-Paul Ruriho, sdb
The Youth Forum in Africa Great Lakes Province is a wonderful
opportunity for reflecting on the Rector Major’s Strenna with young
people.
This particular forum, held towards the end of December 2010 at the
Salesian Parish in Bombo, Uganda, was the second such forum
organised by the Province.
The young people came from three countries in the Province: Burundi,
Rwanda and Uganda. All told there were 300 youngsters, and they
came together for three days to reflect on the Strenna for 2011 and
especially to see how they could respond to it in their own lives.
After listening to what was presented to them, they had time to share
their experiences with the Salesians in their various countries.
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Our encounter with God:
An encounter with the Salesian
charism, the appeal to become
involved with the Church
In a family atmosphere, the young people were
reminded several times of Biblical examples
speaking of the encounter between God and
man, amongst others the case of Samuel, and the
Virgin Mary when she was asked to become the
Mother of God. For ourselves it is anchored in the
fact that we seek the meaning of who we are and
we look for meaning in our lives. The first part of
the Rector Major’s Letter speaks of “Come”, an in-
vitation to come to the Lord who calls us daily. But,
as was the case for the people in the Bible, we
need someone to help us listen more attentively.
Coming from Burundi, Rwanda, and Uganda, each
one had made a long journey in order to listen
more attentively to the Lord.
One could see that the Forum was a unique occa-
sion for the young people to make new connec-
tions, share the same charism, even though they
were coming from different countries.
The youngsters were reminded that their en-
counter with God has to be realised through their
daily life. Each person need only open his or her
eyes to see the ways God manifests himself.
“Dear young people, the Salesians who are with
you in the classroom, on the sports field, in the
playground, are real invitations to you to come”,
the Rector Major indicates through the Strenna.
“You too can stay with the Salesians after meeting
them. Staying with the Salesians today means re-
sponding to the appeal that the Lord makes to
you every day: you can stay by becoming a
Salesian of Don Bosco, Priest or Brother, Salesian
Sister, Salesian Cooperator or by taking an active
part in associations animated by the Salesian spirit,
or simply by different life choices in which you can
radiate the Salesian spirit received during the time
spent with the Salesians”.
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SALESIANS 2012
52
SALESIANS 2012
I Will Be With You 54
A School with a Mission Vocation 56
A week in the Salesian Mission 58
Journey to the Soul’s Centre 60
Catechists in Mission 62
Helping us Pray Today 64

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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL
STYLE
Parish Missionaries Respond to God’s Call 66
Come and See the SYM 68
Rock Out Youth Poverty 70
Salesian Network Keeps Schools Closely Linked 72
Children Looking for God 74
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SALESIAN
VOSCAALTEISOINAANLS S2T0Y12LE
Austria
I Will Be With You
by Ms Sophie Wöginger
Pupils at the Dominican school in
Vienna attend presentation of the
Bible published by Don Bosco Press for
children and had a chance to meet the
author, the Bishop, and a Salesian
who sang with them.
“Every story in the Bible has a happy
ending. God always has the last word”,
the auxiliary bishop of Vienna,
Stephen Turnovsky (46 years of
age) told the 150 children
packed into the Centre.
Dressed in black, at the
centre of the ‘Don Bosco
Haus’ hall in Vienna, he
was smiling. Bearing the
title ‘I will be with you’
the new Children’s Bible
was being presented. It
is published by Don
Bosco Verlag.
Bishop Turnovsky, for his part, is the
bishop responsible for Youth Ministry
in the Diocese.
Initially the bishop was sitting along
with the pupils. Fr Alfons Friedrich (52
years of age), the Director of Don
Bosco Verlag, Munich, was conducting
the morning’s events. When invited to
come forward, the bishop expressed
his gratitude for the event. He said
that he loved the bible very much. “If
I had to choose a book to keep, I
would choose the Bible. I have read it
from beginning to end. It is a moving
and wonderful book”.
The other guest was Fr Rudolf Os-
anger (60 years of age) Salesian Provin-
cial, Austria, who was very happy to
accept the invitation. The children
were immediately taken by his happy
smile. They were not yet aware that
Fr Rudi was the composer of
many of the hymns they knew.
Some of these were sung
during the Mass they had just
attended. Fr Osanger knows all
about how to address young-
sters: “I have brought something
for you to sing today and I have
discovered that you already know
it pretty well. Your teacher whis-
pered this to me”. And smiling, the
provincial took his guitar and began
to sing Freude kann Kreise ziehen. The
children began to dance and clap
their hands. “All together”, Fr Osanger
cried in a loud voice and everyone
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"If I had to choose a book to keep, I would choose the Bible.
I have read it from beginning to end.
It is a moving and wonderful book”.
sang one more verse at the top of their
voice.
The presentation went on. Lene Mayer-
Skumanz is a children’s author and very
well known in Austria. Fr Friedrich, as
the Director of Don Bosco Verlag has al-
ready been involved in publishing some
of her works, including a life of Don
Bosco. Both were very happy with this
new Bible. Lene Mayer-Skumanz, as-
sisted by an actor, recited a number of
passages from it. Later she signed and
wrote notes in the new books.
Little Paul, speaking for all the children,
handed over a gift copy, though a little
nervously, to the bishop. Fr Friedrich
spoke to the bishop at the conclusion:
“May I ask you to give a blessing” and
Bishop Turnovsky turned to the chil-
dren: “I invite you to focus and think for
a moment, prepare for the blessing”. He
bowed his head briefly and raised his
hand for the blessing making the Sign
of the Cross: “May Almighty God bless
you, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Amen”.
The children were given a Holy Picture
with a prayer. This was to put in their
new Bible. It would remind them of the
day the bishop was with them.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Argentina
A School with a Mission Vocation
by Juan José Chiappetti
Victorica is a city located in the west-
ern zone of La Pampa province, and
is the main habitation in steppe lands
that look more like desert than green
prairies for grazing cattle or for cultiva-
tion.
The Salesians arrived in 1896 and little
by little began a missionary effort that
covered an area of some 400 square
kilometres. From there they extended
their efforts to a further seven localities.
“This is a Christian community that has
given much help to the work of the
missionaries, and many have gone out
from here to evangelise Santa Isabel
and the Salado coast”, says Fr
Jorge
Ledesma, the Rector of this Salesian
community.
The Salesian Family here lives in a state
of ongoing mission at work especially
through the parish and school with
youth groups and projects. But the
highpoint of this mission effort has
been achieved by setting up a mission
school with few similar precedents
around the world.
A new kind of school
In 2008, taking advantage of
charismatic common effort
and the fact that they
were close by one another, Don Bosco
and Mary Help of Christians Colleges
set up a school bringing together both
these branches (SDB and FMA) of the
Salesian Family. One school holds the
secondary while the other has the pri-
mary classes and together they make
up more than 650 students, boys and
girls, most of them from struggling
families. The Salesians of Don Bosco
(SDB) and the Salesian Sisters (FMA)
have come together in this endeav-
our after a time of discernment
that began years back, resulting
in a new work which is much
more than the simple sum of
its parts.
Going much further
than their original
institutes, the decision
meant not only better
study opportunities for
those enrolled but that
students, teachers and
parents together have
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Don Bosco’s presence in these parts has a special character because the
Salesians and Sisters are working side by side with youngsters and
adults, helping to build a more just and inclusive society
an educational and institutional setting
that is much stronger than it was
before.
Regarding primary education in partic-
ular, the experience has been most sig-
nificant since it has combined the two
primary sectors to achieve a much
more complete result. As the principal,
Amalia Martínez, and vice principal, Pa-
tricia Manso put it: “Coming together
was much easier than we had imag-
ined it would be. Working together this
way was and still is a unique experi-
ence, since it was the first time this had
been achieved, but more importantly
because of the way it strength-
ened our sense of community
and taught us how we must
help each other increasingly
each day”.
here are lower middle class or poor, so
fees are accessible for them – no more
than 40 pesos. We keep them low so
that school fees are no barrier to
anyone wanting to come to the
school”. But in all this however “in the
idea that we put to students and their
families”, the missionary nature of the
school holds particular relevance: “in
mission territory, formal education
cannot avoid this side of things”.
Don Bosco’s presence in these parts
has a special character because the
Salesians and Sisters are working side
by side with youngsters and adults,
helping to build a more just and inclu-
sive society. “The dream is that, as a
community made of of Salesians, Sis-
ters and lay people we can continue to
work together in ministry. We provide
communion and involvement so that
we are all building Church together,
and we grow together”, says Sister
Susana Sotelo, Superior of the FMA
community.
For her part, Silvia Torres, staff
representative and member
of the secondary pastoral
team comments that “many
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
France
A week in the
Salesian Mission
by Fr Jean-Noël Charmoille, sdb
For the past eight years, each year one
Salesian school benefits from a week
of ‘mission’: a team of 15 to 20 Salesians
(SDB and FMA) who come from the var-
ious places where they work and pro-
vide leadership, time for reflection
and celebration involving young
people and adults. The idea is
to change their daily lives
and provide some im-
petus for a pastoral
approach.
A mission was once seen as a week of
preaching, confessions and celebrations
in a parish led by a Religious, often
maybe a Capuchin or a Franciscan. In our
Province, not all schools have the benefit
of a religious community. The catechist
has usually been replaced by a school
pastoral leader, a lay person formed for
the task, but often formed for a com-
pletely different role.
The adult teams running the schools are
the ones who have to look to the spirit,
the school climate, often without much
remuneration, and they are taken up
largely by matters of daily management.
So to provide support, give ideas, give a
boost to the adults and give the students
a sense of meaning at the heart of their
scholastic endeavours, the idea came
about to set up ‘Salesian missions’. The
idea took on: many schools have sought
to benefit from this much appreciated
pastoral push.
A courageous kind of
leadership which has borne
fruit
When a school is chosen, we start by
preparing the teachers and school man-
agers. We explain what will happen: they
need to accept our timetable for the
week, since the school routine is going
to be completely upset. We take a ‘play’
approach for the students: the ‘mission-
aries’ move through the classrooms or
they catch up with everyone in the play-
ground or in the gym. A main topic is
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chosen, then developed according to
its different aspects: personal or human
point of view, point of view of meaning
or values, religious point of view. There
are varied approaches: activities and
small groups, sharing ideas around a
story, wide games, vigil, celebration…
Everyday in the courtyard or during
lunch time the Salesians and Sisters
mingle as part of the life of the school:
they are closer to the young people,
share their games, their questions, their
problems. Many question the meaning
of their lives but without knowing who
to talk to about it. It becomes an incred-
ible opportunity for dialogue. The God
question is never far away, and the ‘mis-
sionaries’ are not slow to raise it. What
place does the ‘Other’ have in my life?
Why do we have talents if we don’t
share them? How do we find signs of
God in our lives? If they are not yet ready
for a Eucharistic celebration, celebration
can take other strong symbolic forms:
sharing, forgiveness, solidarity…
Life, faith, every topic is
tackled
The leaders try to loosen the tongues
of the young people, and adults as well.
During the exchanges, once confi-
dence has been established, the ques-
tion of vocation comes up, and often
enough a youngster will pose a per-
sonal question:“What does one have to
do to become a religious?” Then there
are informal moments, personal proj-
ects to be expressed: “Well, I’d like to
be a specialist teacher for the handi-
capped, like my mum”. And then there
are comments about the Religious
who run the event: “They were great!
We thought they’d all be oldies like in
the parish!”
One Principal told us: “As Principal, I
appreciate this formidable work by
the Salesians, and thank them very
much. I was able to see our students
differently: some who were timid
shone out, others who seemed more
normally boisterous showed wisdom…
to put it bluntly, I was surprised. The
adults too were great, taking part in
the games and working in with the
mission, each in his or her own way,
either by helping the students in their
activities, or helping out with the lo-
gistics. Finally, speaking personally, I
was able to talk very freely about God
and the youngsters’ faith with the
Salesians: it has been personally en-
riching”.
In many schools, the ‘mission’ has
given a boost to the pastoral plan,
adults have got going again, relation-
ships between them and the kids has
improved, the climate has changed.
Each one comes to understand better
what Salesian pastoral leadership is all
about, the reference to Don Bosco is
clearer, and is owned once again.
We are now preparing for the eighth
year of this mission. It will be in Alsace,
at a technical school.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Kenya
Journey to the Soul’s Centre
I“ t was the best experience I have had
in my young life” remarked one
youthful participant in a leadership-
cum-retreat at Don Bosco Youth Edu-
cational Services (DBYES). In our busy,
modern world, it can be difficult to find
space and time to stop, reflect and be
still. This is precisely what DBYES offers.
Its serene and peaceful surroundings
welcome anyone who wants to stop
and take stock of life. Here one finds
true pilgrims to the soul’s centre, or
people who seek a way to their future.
DBYES offers variety: residential confer-
ences, retreats, various seminars, all
aimed at helping anyone, especially
young people. Whether in the chapel,
or out in the garden, these beautiful
by Fr Sebastian Koladiyil, sdb
surroundings far from the hustle and
bustle of life could be just the ticket to
help one get in touch with oneself and
nature, and renew ones strength for re-
turning to the demands of everyday
life.
DBYES was established in 2000 when
the Salesian Theologate at nearby
Utume was moved to a newly built lo-
cation. DBYES is a youth-friendly centre
focused on empowering, accompany-
ing and animating young people,
youth ministers, catechists, teachers,
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DBYES can also be considered a religious theme park
with its specialised reflection walks for youth and adults
where one can take an inward journey, physically, through
the prayer garden.
parents and other leaders by training
them in life-skills: self awareness, self as-
sertiveness, self esteem, care for the
body, interpersonal skills, communica-
tion, stress management, problem
solving, goal setting, planning, decision
making, caring for the spiritual self, ca-
pacity building, leadership training,
value education, time management,
study methods, handling emotions,
career guidance, relationship and
friendship skills, peace building, inter-
personal skills, media education, know-
ing ones sexuality and living with
differences so as to transform the soci-
ety. All these are offered at the one-day
morning-to-evening, or residential fa-
cilities.
Campus Ministry, School Chaplaincy,
Youth counselling and School Retreats
are offered on a regular basis and
on special request. Each year DBYES
reaches out to thousands of college
and school students, parish youth,
teachers and youth minsters.
Some 20 kilometres from Nairobi’s cen-
tral business district, in the tranquil and
picturesque outskirts at Karen, DBYES
can also be considered a religious
theme park with its specialised reflec-
tion walks for youth and adults where
one can take an inward journey, physi-
cally, through the prayer garden dedi-
cated to the memory of Fr Philip
Valayam, murdered as he was returning
to DBYES after midnight Mass in 2005,
or through multimedia offerings. There
is a journey of self-discovery, ‘River
Mee’, the journey into ones origins;
‘Nazarene Lane’, the journey of life; the
‘Road to Youth, Teen Commitment’, and
a beautiful chapel filled with rich
African art. The prayer garden at DBYES
is truly a place where “Come and See”
becomes a lived reality.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Guatemala
Catechists in Mission
by Fr Heriberto Herrera, sdb
Catechists, men and women, are the
Church’s real treasure in the
Salesian mission in Carchá and Raxruhá,
Guatemala.
The word “catechist” may mislead us
unless we know something of the truth
of this in the Salesian mission. The
native catechist is someone who has a
vocation as a religious leader, who
takes on the task of encouraging the
community in an ongoing way.
There are catechists with already
dozens of years of service behind them.
They receive no financial remuneration
for their work. They work as a team.
They enjoy prestige in their commu-
nity.
The catechist team coordinates and
encourages Sunday religious services.
Ordinarily, they preside at the service
because of a shortage of priests. When
visiting the communities, catechists
offer invaluable support.
Catechists specialise in particular kinds
of catechesis: there are catechists for
the younger children, older youth, bap-
tisms or marriages, the sick, the elderly,
and musicians. Catechists also cate-
chise other catechists as trainers. To this
we can add their role as extraordinary
ministers of the Eucharist: The most
faithful and those with the most pres-
tige in the community accept this role.
How many catechists are there in our
Salesian mission? Not even the mis-
sionaries themselves know exactly how
many there are. A rough estimate
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shows that the number is at least four
thousand. It seems an exaggerated
figure but that’s the promising reality
of it. In fact, the preference now is to
talk about ministers instead of cate-
chists.
To look more closely at the phenome-
non, we can picture this scenario. The
priest comes to a community one
Sunday (called a centre, because it
brings together several nearby villages).
The baptism catechist speaks to the
parents and godparents who have
been preparing for the sacrament. The
paperwork is done by the catechist.
The marriage catechist does similarly
for couples preparing for their wed-
ding.
Another catechist presents a sheet with
a carefully prepared list of the Mass
servers.
The music catechist has written down
all the hymns to be used at Mass.
The children’s catechist already has
them organised in the pews, singing or
acting out biblical scenes.
The ushers have prepared the decora-
tion of the church, and along with their
wives they have already prepared the
lunch for the whole assembly.
After Mass, several catechists (adult or
youth) go to the microphone to inform
the community about upcoming
meetings or activities.
It is clear that the future of missionary
vitality lies in this legion of generous
catechists. The challenge is to pro-
vide a solid formation, so they can
successfully express the essential
content of Christian faith in their own
culture.
There have been various efforts in this
regard. Young catechists in December
prepare the courses to teach the fol-
lowing year. Along with the priest they
identify the most important issues.
They then develop the content as a
team, develop training materials and
schedule the group meetings. It is ad-
mirable they way they show their abil-
ity to give life to the faith. There is
nothing of the tedious, classic bore-
dom that the word ‘catechetics’ some-
times evokes.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
United Kingdom
Helping us Pray Today
Working in a Salesian School – Working from the Heart
SwF atch & byFrAnthonyBailey,sdb
orty years ago, our schools in Great
Britain were well-staffed with Salesians of
Don Bosco (SDB). As the number of voca-
tions fell and Salesians began to retire from
event, we did not close any of our secondary
schools. Today we have more students in our
schools than ever before. Most of our
schools have lay leadership and staff and
teaching, we began to consider what to do they are very much Salesian schools. We
with our schools. We even raised the ques- now know that we were asking ourselves
tion, how many SDBs do we need to teach the wrong question. We should have asked
Pray in a Salesian school to keep a school
‘Salesian’? It was felt, at the time, that
the answer to this question
would determine which
schools we would
have to close.
the question, How do we support our
Salesian schools to ensure that they remain
Salesian?
A Salesian province has a duty to support its
schools. Staff have a right to know what is
In the expected of them when they are appointed
to work in a Salesian school. Every province
will have devised various support systems
for its schools. One small part of that
Don
Bosco
support is in the work of publi-
cations. For the last ten
Publication
years the staff of
Don Bosco
Publi-
Swatch & Pray by David O’Malley SDB
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marises the essentials of our Salesian Pre-
ventive System, is given to everyone who
works in our Salesian Schools. However,
when we display our books at teacher
conferences we make this booklet avail-
able for anyone to take, free of charge.
Participants at conferences always appre-
ciate a gift.
While being aware of the needs of the
staff and young people in our own
Salesian schools, most of our publications
have a wider remit; they are designed for
all Christian schools. For example the
book entitled The Christian Teacher: Shep-
herd of Loving Kindness by David O’Malley
SDB, while being firmly based on Salesian
principles, is widely appreciated in Chris-
tian circles and is used in teacher-training
courses.
cations have sought to
provide some of this
support by encouraging
Salesians to collaborate in
the creation of publications
which staff will welcome,
since these publications will
help them in the education of
the young people entrusted to
them. Some publications have
been written specifically for the
staff in our Salesian schools, for ex-
ample the booklet Working in a
Salesian School – Working from the
Heart. This short booklet, which sum-
A recent interesting development has
been the introduction of Swatch & Pray, a
60 page card-resource of prayers, actions
and reflections for use with young
people. It brings together the Church tra-
ditions of praying with the body and with
the heart. These prayers are designed to
be used in large groups, small groups or
individually. The swatch can be given to
an individual to choose a prayer or the
leader may select an appropriate prayer
for that day. The activities and reflections
lead from life experience into prayer. We
have had a very positive response to
Swatch & Pray from many Catholic schools
and orders from Anglican schools. All
enjoy praying in this Salesian way.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Dominican Republic
Parish Missionaries
Respond to
God’s Call
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e main objective of the group is holiness through the practice of virtue,
and salvation of one’s neighbour through a life of intense apostolate
in a parish setting.
The Caribbean nation of Santo
Domingo has been blessed by the
presence of great missionaries who
planted the seeds of the Gospel, as
did St John Bosco, in such a fruitful
way that it produced a hundredfold.
Such is the case of Fr Andrés Németh
Herczeg, a Hungarian missionary
with typical Salesian ingenuity who
worked tirelessly for the salvation of
souls and, as one of his most precious
legacies, left a group of women who
consecrated themselves to God in
and from the world, cooperating in
the building of God’s kingdom: they
called themselves Parish Missionaries
of Mary Help of Christians.
On 8 December 1961 as part of the
celebrations for the Solemnity of the
Immaculate Conception, St John
Bosco Parish in Santo Domingo was
the setting for the first group of
young women to pronounce vows of
poverty, chastity and obedience, and
thus consecrate themselves to the
Lord to serve him as Parish Missionar-
ies of Mary Help of Christians. Thus a
Secular Institute dedicated to parish
work came into being.
The main objective of the group is ho-
liness through the practice of virtue,
and salvation of one’s neighbour
through a life of intense apostolate in
a parish setting. They work for the
poorest of the poor, especially young
people of all ages, and in the spirit of
Don Bosco’s charism.
The apostolic zeal which they have
embraced has enabled them to
immediately spread the kingdom
through their work in the parish, a
work of teaching catechetics in for-
gotten slum areas and in public
schools, as a faithful response to God’s
call. They believe He has invited them
to become holy by giving their lives
to develop a future for people who
were born without true knowledge of
Him. They are currently working in
by Fr Pablo Abreu, sdb
Holy Family, Doña Chucha parishes,
Altagracia Boys Town and St Do-
minic’s School, all in the Dominican
Republic’s Capital.
They are at the service of the Church,
taking in orphan children, the ex-
tremely poor or at risk. They offer
them a place to live, food, education,
health, recreation, and a well-rounded
human and religious formation, both
personal and social, but they espe-
cially offer them the love that has
been denied these children.
As Luke’s Gospel puts it, these
women accompany and await the
Lord (cf. Lk 8: 1-3): they have experi-
enced a personal encounter with
Jesus through their efforts to turn
sorrow into smiles. From this en-
counter they gain the strength, rein-
forced by charity, which turns them
into authentic proponents of the
Gospel, which says: “Look, there is
the Lamb of God” (Jn 1:36).
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Canada
Come and See the SYM
by Fr Michael Pace, sdb
The tension between a ‘maintenance’ and a
‘mission’ Church is written into our Salesian DNA.
Don Bosco’s pedagogy built on sacramental pillars,
our devotion to the Pope, and our trust in Mary Help
of Christians make us ‘at home’ in a maintenance
church, while our youth-centred ‘da mihi animas’
urges us to be cutting-edge in facilitating the
encounter between youth and Christ.
68
SALESIANS 2012
This tension finds healthy resolution
in the Salesian Youth Movement
(SYM). More than any one ‘work’ ever
could, the SYM reflects a church that is
harmoniously ‘maintenance and mis-
sion’. This is the kind of church the
young need to experience when they
come and see the Salesians.
In Toronto, for example, we have only
one Salesian work: St. Benedict Parish.
It is a fine work, but a come and see lim-
ited to it would be incomplete because
it cannot adequately express the scope
of the Salesian mission carried out in
Toronto. The Salesian mission passes
through the work, but is not limited to
it. On the other hand, when we invite
the young to come and see expres-
sions of the SYM, they experience a
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that, while based at St. Benedict,
reaches far beyond the parish’s
boundaries, possibilities and person-
nel.
A few examples will suffice to illus-
trate this point. The Salesian Leader-
ship Retreat (SLR) is a three-day
‘baptism’ in Salesian youth spirituality.
Annually, it reaches 120 Toronto high
school students. Originally animated
by the SDBs, it has been kept alive
over the past ten years by dedicated
lay teachers from 8 non-Salesian
schools, none of which have a
Salesian on staff, and all but one of
which lie outside our parish bound-
aries.
Summerdaze Day Camp is a six-week
summer ‘Oratory’experience that has
become a school of formation in
Salesian youth ministry. Campers and
counselors ‘graduate’ from it imbued
with the Preventive System, and go
on to become protagonists who de-
velop other youth ministries both in
the parish and beyond.
Noteworthy also are the ‘salesianized’
ecclesial movements that enrich the
Toronto SYM. The Don Bosco Council
of the Knights of Columbus has a
strong Salesian identity, while the
youth branch of the Knights draws its
inspiration from the saint whose
name it bears: Dominic Savio Squires
Circle. Our pan-Canadian World Youth
Day (WYD) group coordinates young
people from three Salesian works in
Surrey (British Columbia), Toronto
(Ontario) and Montreal (Quebec). This
Canadian group joined other national
SYM groups in Spain in August 2011
to experience the SYM at the interna-
tional level.
Finally, the SYM introduces Toronto
youth to fruitful SDB-FMA collabora-
tion. VIDES opens the doors to the for-
eign missions, while Duc in Altum has
forged SDB-FMA links in the service of
spiritual accompaniment and voca-
tional discernment.
Clearly, the SYM opens a broader
window onto the Salesian mission
than any one work ever could. Imag-
ine what kind of fruit a come and see
might bear if every confrere asked
himself: What can I do to develop the
SYM? What will I do to develop the
SYM?
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
United States
Rock Out Youth Poverty
by Delano Perera
On a wet
Sunday, January 30,
2011 many teens gathered
together at Saint Joseph’s
Salesian Youth Renewal Center to
take a stand against world poverty.
The day was filled with talks, music,
food, exhibits, and Mass to finish the
day.
I was born in Sri Lanka, where I have
seen many poor people on the
streets. This event reminded me
how lucky I am to have a roof over
my head and food on my plate.
When I first heard about the
recession, I wondered if I
would end up on
the street, just
like
the people I had seen back in Sri
Lanka. Sometimes it is so easy to
forget the poor on the street.
The food served that day was not any-
thing fancy. It was food that a poor
person would eat in a regular day:
peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
plain bread, beans and tortillas, rice
with yams, fruits, and boiled potatoes.
Not the most pleasing food, but it was
truly a reminder of how blessed we
are.
Both of the guest speakers spoke to us
about how poverty and disease take
millions of lives each year. What really
touched me was when I heard that 93
percent of the world’s population
makes less than 50 dollars a day.
We ended the day by
celebrating
mass and the feast
of Saint John Bosco,
who lived in the 1800s and
brought the poor boys off the
streets and gave them a home.
Even though Saint John Bosco has
passed away, his spirit will always be
in those who serve the poor. He is
truly a perfect model for us. It is some-
times easy to forget about the poor
and abandoned. This event woke me
up and energized me to work for
the poor and follow Don Bosco.
We have to “See Don Bosco and
Be Don Bosco”. Let’s try to
end world poverty by
2015.
Delano Perera is a third
year student at St. John Bosco
High School, Bellflower, CA.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Brazil
RSESalesian Network
Keeps Schools
Closely Linked
Rede Salesiana de Escolas
Nearing ten years of existence, the Salesian Schools Network
strengthens links between the educational institutions which make it up,
inspiring action focused on educational management and investment
in the ongoing formation of teachers.
by Fr Nivaldo Luiz Pessinatti, sdb and Ms Ana Cosenza
Almost a decade has passed since the Salesians of
Don Bosco and the Salesian Sisters took on the task
of building up an educational network bringing together
their schools throughout Brazil in a proposal based on
the pedagogical principles left them by Sts John Bosco
and Mother Mazzarello. It has been a long slow road in-
volving more than 100 schools belonging to the RSE en-
couraging them to adopt the proposal, and in turn
contribute their experience to building up the Network.
By now well consolidated, the Network provides conti-
nuity for the consistent work carried out by its governing
board (currently made up of Fr Nivaldo Luiz Pessinatti,
SDB, and Sister Ivanette Duncan, FMA) and has entered
a new phase. “It is time to complete this project, to help
schools on a day to day basis, showing that networking
also uses the same teaching material”, says the super-
intendent of the Network, Professor Dilnei Lorenzi.
The new challenges for the RSE include greater focus on
educational management, strengthening links between
schools and investing in ongoing formation of staff.
Educate by evangelising and evangelise
by educating
“Today the discussion is not about whether or not we
should network, since this is already a reality. It is a case
of how to do things better, with greater awareness for
quality schooling”, says educational leader, Kátia Stocco
Smole. This is why the challenge in the educational field
is, amongst others, the constant updating of teachers. In
2011 it has involved both national and local levels, serv-
ing approximately 5,100 teachers.
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“Educate by evangelising and
evangelise by educating”.
“e Network aims to give this
motto greater consistency,
by showing how it needs to be part
of the school routine”.
If excellence is a teaching goal, the major difference of
RSE comes from the fact that quality teaching is
achieved when it brings with it the Salesian charism.
So says Pastoral Care Coordinator, Antonio Boeing. For
him the main challenge is to make the whole school
understand what it means to “educate by evangelising
and evangelise by educating”. “The Network aims to
give this motto greater consistency, by showing how
it needs to be part of the school routine. It does not
matter whether one is a teacher or a coordinator,
teaches Religion or Physics: no-one can ignore the
principles of Salesian education”.
Network management
The project of integrated administration began to be im-
plemented in RSE in 2010. Its aim was to promote best
practice in management and extend the network con-
cept to administration. The first step therefore was a di-
agnostic one for educational institutions. This phase has
already begun, with survey data on the school, city and
region where the school is, the competition it faces etc.
The reports produced will be the basis for the other
phases of the project: implementation of management
software, definition of a centralised model of operations
and deployment model of management control.
The other challenge for the RSE is to consolidate the brand
of Brazil’s major Catholic school Network, highlighting the
differences in its pedagogical and pastoral approach both
for its own and its external public: the eighty five thousand
students in the Network today. The 2011 communication
campaign took the line that the young people, from the
many regions of Brazil, are key players, by highlighting
issues such as ethics, awareness, solidarity, innovation and
entrepreneurship.“We have demonstrated the role of the
RSE in guiding and preparing a new generation of citizens
for Brazil’s future”, concluded the Communications and
Marketing head, Célio Ballona Júnior.
Preparing teaching materials in today’s digital language
is the new task for all network professionals and ‘enthu-
siasm for life’ remains the slogan and horizon for this ed-
ucational effort being built up collectively.
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SALESIAN
VOCATIONAL STYLE
Burkina Faso
Children Looking for God
by Bro. Jacques Nagalo, sdb
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SALESIANS 2012
On 3 April 2011, more than 330 children gathered in Saint
John’s Church, Bobo-Dioulasso (Burkina Faso), a small
mission station belonging to St Dominic Savio Parish, for the
2011 ‘March for God’ organised by the children’s coordina-
tion team. Accompanied by their leaders and group lead-
ers, the children came from the oratory, as well as
catechetics and youth groups, and were organised into
seven groups identified by different-coloured badges. They
headed out for Koffin, a small village at the northern exit of
Bobo. after deacon Paul-Frédéric, from the diocese, gave
them blessing to send them on their way. Bubbling with
excitement, the pilgrims headed out in search of God.
Hymns and prayers marked their progress as they covered
the kilometres. The children sang happily and with their
normal enthusiasm.
Along the way there were seven pauses for prayer. Once
they had arrived at Koffin, after some welcomes, they care-
fully followed the presentation by Brother Christopher sdb,
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Benedict XVI for the World Vocations Day. Tactfully, and
despite his lack of practice, the speaker won the attention
of the youngsters and helped them understand the es-
sentials of the Pope’s message. It was an opportunity for
them to better understand some matters concerning vo-
cation.
Everyone then went into their groups to answer some
questions on the topic that had been presented. Mid-
morning, Fr Paul sdb, the local Youth Ministry Coordina-
tor, presided at the Mass. The liturgy was led by the
young people themselves. Following the Mass a cut
lunch as well as food offered by the Youth Team was
shared between friends and with the leaders. Various
games, songs and some time to relax filled the remainder
of the day. In mid-afternoon 30 of the youngsters set off
on the return journey, happy to have spent a pilgrimage
together for a day seeking God. Did they find him? The
million dollar question! The future, and each one’s voca-
tional story will tell!
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SALESIANS 2012
SALESIAN
VOCATION
TODAY
Don Bosco Žepče 78
Prague: Encountering Today’s Youth 80
Connecting the World: Medellin to Sihanoukville 82
Priests’ Films Promote Rights and Evangelisation 84
Sixty Years Sowing Life 86
Leading to the Future 88
Alborada is a Lively Place! 90
Proclaiming the Word in Kiriwina 92
Good Morning Tale with a Twist 94
Evangelisation by Example in ZMB 96
Project Life – a Home for Young Refugees 98
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Croatia
Don Bosco Žepče
by Fr Tihomir Šutalo, sdb
The Salesians arrived in Bosnia at the
invitation of the Archbishop of Sara-
jevo and the local Croatian Govern-
ment. They wanted to offer signs of
hope to a suffering population, to
people uncertain as to what the future
held in store. In 1997 construction of
the new Centre was begun and the
Salesians began their pastoral work by
taking up their activity in a school – it
was a State school.
Political, financial and social uncertainty
were in abundance, but with the help
of Providence, the work began to grow.
Many people and organisations from
the international community have
become part of the project, and we
can truly say that we have been
touched by the hand of Provi-
dence in such
a way that by 1999 a Technical Institute
opened with the first 72 pupils, and the
following year a Secondary school.
School Centre
Today, 16 years after the first Salesians
came, and after 11 years of KŠC Don
Bosco activity amidst young people in
Žepče, we can proudly show how
much has been built up for so many
and what we are continuing to achieve
in the Institute. The school is by now
nearly 80% complete in construction
terms. It is well equipped and certainly
much better equipped than the state
schools in the same area. The School
has 60 staff, most of them with the ap-
propriate degrees and training for their
various subject fields.
The Secondary school has 200
pupils, and
the Technical school 350 pupils, distrib-
uted as follows:
» 4 classes of economics (4 year)
» 4 classes of mechanics (4 year)
» 3 classes involving hydraulics welding
and turning – 3 year)
» 3 classes of electronics ( – installation
and autoelectronics – 3 year)
We are unable to respond to everyone
who seeks a place, since so many fam-
ilies seek a better future for their chil-
dren through our schools. The chief
difficulty is that 80% of our pupils who
complete their secondary and univer-
sity preparation, or work preparation,
leave the country (for Croatia, Italy, Ger-
many) and often they do not return.
This is a problem for us because we are
aware that the young people do not
see any hope if they remain in their
own country.
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Oratory – Youth Centre
Thanks to a project sponsored by VIS
and financed by the Italian Ministry for
Foreign Affairs, and after we built an
area where young people could come
for activities, we have begun an oratory
with youngsters from the local area,
and we try to bring in as many as pos-
sible from the urban area. This charac-
teristic Salesian oratory work in Bosnia
and Herzegovina was unknown in the
area before the Salesians came, so we
are pioneering activity of this kind. At
the moment our main concern is to
open our doors to everyone who
wishes to come and be part of a wel-
coming, calm place where everyone
can find something that responds to
their tastes. Our weekend oratory at-
tracts some 250 youngsters with a
team of leaders to look after them. The
second characteristic activity is forming
leaders and educators in general so
that in the future we will have a team
to whom we can entrust the future
work for young people. At the core
of our weekend oratory work is the
Sunday Mass which is a time for meet-
ing up and sharing in the community
around the Lord.
Our challenges
The small religious community is made
up of three priests and a brother in
practical training, who do their best to
be Don Bosco for today’s youngsters
through their witness and tireless
effort. But there are still difficulties in
the nation, many uncertainties, many
things lacking which affect the nation’s
youth, many of whom do not believe
that they can hope to achieve much
more than simple survival if they remain
there. Of the 30,000 inhabitants 5,500
are of school age – primary, secondary.
This indicates that the youth population
is about a third of the total. But what
awaits them afterwards? What are the
education models in place? What will
society give them? What kind of adult
models do they have? Unfortunately
the answers are somewhat limited and
not acceptable for us as Salesians. We
would like to offer them alternative
models and life choices, help them see
and believe that the future is especially
in their hands. The Lord never tires of His
people, and will continue to be the Lord
of history depsite human sinfulness.
Don Bosco Žepče is just one of the
drops of Divine Mercy that has fallen in
this beautiful place, a paradise that
human wickedness has turned into a
vale of tears. Such is the story of civilisa-
tion, but one redeemed by the Lord,
where through and at times despite us,
He is still present.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Czech Republic
Prague:
Encountering
Today’s Youth
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SALESIANS 2012
The Salesian Province based in Prague
was freely able to recommence its activities in 1990,
after the long period of the communist regime. The
Province was founded in 1927 and after a period of
expansion and new foundations (Frystak, Ostrava,
Praha, Pardubice), it was repressed by Nazism and
then completely dispersed after the advent of the
communist regime in 1948. All communities were
closed and declared to be outside the law by the So-
cialist State. Many confreres were arrested and
thrown into prison or concentration camps for
many years. For a good 40 years everyone had to
adopts a style of life so different from the religious.
Despite all this, many confreres remained faithful
to their vocation and worked secretly as Religious,
also carrying out a work of vocation ministry. New
priests were ordained to work with the young, espe-
cially during holidays, but also during the year.
After the fall of the regime in 1989, Salesians
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official novitiate, full of candi-
dates in the first years following the fall of
the regime. Salesians from Bohemia returned
to the houses where they had worked, including
during the period between the two World Wars
(Praha, Brno, Ostrava, Pardubice) and founded
Salesian communities in two other cities (Teplice,
Ceske Budejovice, Zlin, Plzen).
The main area of Salesian work today is in
youth centres (in some cities the Salesians work for
Gypsy youth), then parishes, social communication
(Portal Publishing House in Praga, Don Bosco
Media Centre in Brno, TV Noe in Ostrava, Jabok
School for social pedagogy and theology), missions
In Bulgaria, a country where the majority of the pop-
ulation is Orthodox, at Kazanlak, Stara Zagora, a
work for Gypsies.
Ten years after setting up new foundations for
Salesian and community life, here too Religious Life is
undergoing the same challenge which worries all of west-
ern Europe: the drastic decrease in vocations. Despite this
Salesians are working with many young collaborators, to
organize volunteer movements for young people who are sent
around the world, known as SADBA and Cagliero. The
Province also welcomes other volunteers coming from abroad
to help in Salesian work.
To foster new vocations, the Salesians are organising reflec-
tion days for vocational discernment (COME IN, meetings with
SDBs, Salesian spirituality gatherings).
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Colombia - Cambodia
Connecting the World:
by Fr Albeiro Rodas, sdb
In November 2010, Laura Villadiego, a reporter
from EFE (Spanish language News Agency,
equivalent to Reuters, or API in English), visited
the Social Communication and Journalism Sec-
tion of Don Bosco Technical School in Si-
hanoukville. The resulting article, Periodismo
joven en el corazón de Camboya (Youthful
journalism in the heart of Cambodia)
was reproduced by newspapers
such as El Mundo and El Tiempo in
Spain, and Latin America. The
Spanish media were amazed at
how Don Bosco Tech had man-
aged to open a school of journalism
and communication in a country
with not a few difficulties in freedom
of expression and at how young
people from vulnerable communities
were able to access technologies and
information.
The attention of the press attracted
the attention of the radio and I re-
ceived some calls from Colombian
radio stations wanting to know about
the project. Before returning on holi-
days to Medellín (a journey that took some
50 hours from Phnom Penh, through Bangkok,
Frankfurt and Bogotá), I was contacted by
Medellín City Mayor. “Could you offer
some workshops in communica-
tion to our Fuerza Joven pro-
gramme?” My answer, as a
Salesian, was of course “yes”.
Force) is a program set up by Medellín’s Mayor
for young people from the poorest quarters of
the city, victims of urban violence or vulnerable
youth who might otherwise end up in gangs.
Don Bosco Parce
I called my experience with Fuerza Joven, Don
Bosco Parce. ‘Parce’ is Colombian Spanish slang
for ‘friend’in Medellín. Every morning a car from
the municipality with some program leaders
picked me up from the family home in Barrio
Castilla and brought me to another barrio in the
city to meet a group of youths involved in a re-
socialisation program. I asked however that the
groups be small, between 15 and 20 each, so the
youngsters could better profit from the experi-
ence.
I began with a cultural exposition about Cam-
bodia and our communication training program
for young people like them. These Medellín
youth from the poorest barrios - portrayed very
often by the media as violent and the inspiration
of several movies on urban violence - were ob-
viously quite curious about this ‘newcomer’.
Then there were the stories of young people like
‘Fuerza Joven’ (Youth
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Medellin to Sihanoukville
them, living precisely on the other side
of the planet (Cambodia is 12 hours
time difference from Colombia), to
gradually draw their attention. Many of
them had more than one tattoo on
their bodies and now they wanted
their names in Khmer!
After the cultural section on Cambodia
and many questions from my ‘parces’,
we came to the communication work-
shop. I explained to them that we
cannot not communicate. Everything
in our society means communication
and every community develops its
own codes of information.
Then I explained what I managed in
Cambodia in our social communica-
tion and journalism section.
What must we, as young people, com-
municate?
There are four elements we, as
young people,
must communicate in order to im-
prove our standard of life, make peace
and exchange our gangs for video
cameras, the Internet and the like.
1. Hope: We should communicate
hope for our society with our values
and talents. As young citizens, we
should show our cities to the world.
2. Development: We talked about
improving our standard of life as every-
body’s right.
3. Tenderness: Tenderness means
beauty and aesthetics. The transforma-
tion of Medellín is a good example over
the last two decades. We have built
great parks, libraries and tourist com-
pounds in poor and marginal places
that made the city more attractive and
international.
4. Tolerance: We should communi-
cate tolerance. It is respect for the other
as he or she is. We give importance
to humanity.
We love everybody because every
person is a son or daughter of God, so
everybody is my brother and my sister.
To end the workshop, we created a
video. The Parceros of Medellín sent
messages and questions to their
Cambodian peers in Sihanoukville.
They talked about their city and their
own traditions. In April, once I crossed
three continents once more, back to
Cambodia, I filmed the Cambodian
youth answering and sharing with their
Medellín friends.
We hope that these experiences of
communication with young people
will bring good results to our societies.
I offered the municipality of Medellín
the possibility of a youth program like
this with something else in mind. The
social communication and journalism
section’s aim is to create leaders in
communication to multiply the expe-
rience. It would be a dream to create a
Don Bosco Parce social communica-
tion section in Medellín if we
get the required support.
Don Bosco dreams all the
time… all the time…
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
India
Priests’ Films,
Promote Human Rights
and Evangelization
by Fr C.M. Paul, sdb
Two Catholic priests dabbling in mainstream
cinema for almost a decade claim their two
feature films help indigenous people gain dig-
nity and assert human rights. The two Salesian
filmmakers have been working for over two
decades among the Kokborok people of
Tripura in northeast India bordering
Bangladesh. Their first film, the 132 minute
‘Mathia’ (2002), creates awareness of the social
evil of witch-hunts, while the second 95
minute film ‘Yarwng’ (2008) highlights the
plight of people sacrificed on the altar of de-
velopment. They are Guwahati Salesians,
Joseph Kizhakechennadu (producer) and
Joseph Pulinthanath (director).
Fr Pulinthanath has teamed up with a third
award-winning Salesian filmmaker, Fr Jiji Kala-
vanal, of DB IMAGE Kochi for a docufilm enti-
tled ‘The HAND of Don Bosco’. The shoot
covering seven states of Northeast India
(Assam, Arunachal, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizo-
ram, Nagaland and Tripura) is a homage to
Salesian pioneers, on the eve of the first-ever
Don Bosco Relics Pilgrimage to Northeast India
which began on 1st May 2011.
When ‘Mathia’ (Bangle) won first prize at the
Niepokalanow (Warsaw) festival 2004, Tripura
State’s first international film award, the Kok-
borok Sahitya Academy (Literary Society) or-
ganized a public event in the state capital
Agartala to congratulate the crew.
The Minister for Tripura State Tribal Welfare, Mr.
Aghore Debbarma, granted INR 200,000 (4,000
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“Our effort has not been to make a film
that people will necessarily like but to make a film
that will hopefully excite”.
Euro) as a lifeline to salvage the priests’ sinking
motion picture company “Sampari Pictures”, rid-
dled with huge debts.
Six years on, the priests’ second film ‘Yarwng’
(Roots) received Tripura’s first national film award
from the President of India, Mrs. Pratibha Patil, 19
March 2010, in Delhi.
Evangelization through culture
promotion
“See, cinema is a lot about images and no image
is neutral. The very process of engaging oneself
dynamically against these images can be enrich-
ing individually and collectively. They challenge,
criticize, uplift. Our effort has not been to make
a film that people will necessarily like but to
make a film that will hopefully excite,” clarifies
Pulinthanath.
Besides, these two films have helped to remove
much of the mistaken notion that the State’s 2 per-
cent of Christians are not rooted in the local cul-
ture.
spokesman Pulinthanath casts aside his usual
reticence and finds eloquence.
Stoutly refuting the accusation he says, “It is
not true! People who say this presume that
the Church sees no merit in local cul-
tures. Perhaps they are basing them-
selves on some archaic, outdated
perceptions of isolated instances.
Over the last 50 years (since Vatican
II) the Church has been the outspo-
ken champion of the promotion of
indigenous culture…”
If one seriously investigates, one
would find that church has con-
tributed to culture through mother
tongue education, script evolution,
local festivals, cultural and linguistic
research centres, art academies
and anthropological
museums: the list is
only indicative, not
exhaustive.
The numerous works of evangelization, develop-
ment and social service that the Church in Tripura
and the whole of North East India carry out, at
times to heroic degrees, will be most effectively
enhanced by the present project as it focuses on
culture and its crisis in a changing society.
When it comes to the oft-heard accusation that
the Church is destroying the culture and language
of peoples in Northeast India, Tripura Church
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Mozambique
6 0Sixty Years Sowing Life
by Fr Rogelio Arenal, sdb
Servant of life
The Salesians attempt to offer an all-
round development of poor young-
sters and ordinary people in the various
political and social circumstances to be
found in the young nation of Mozam-
bique.
Many, already at work and responsible
for a family, are sincerely grateful for the
human and professional education
they received and which gave them a
chance to make progress in life.
Over these years of growth we try to
offer different responses in the four
provinces of Mozambique and by
means of the eight Salesian communi-
ties:
» The school at Moatize together with
some small rural schools.
» The St Joseph’s Home and boarding
establishments at Moamba and In-
harrime for poor youth or those from
rural areas.
» Technical education: Moamba, Tete,
Inharrime, Lhanguene and Matola.
Given the appeal from the Govern-
ment and society for qualified work-
ers in technical areas, the Salesians
have created educational setups that
have already shown results. There is
networking through the Technical
Secretariat for Professional Schools.
The request for technical education
was met by setting up the Don Bosco
Higher Institute for Pedagogy and
Technical Teacher Training.
One interesting work is the care given
by rural communities in the Moatize
Mission through the agricultural devel-
opment project for teaching poorer
populations how to benefit from their
own agricultural resources.
Announcers of Christ
In all the works where the majority of
the young people are not Christian,
there is a first proclamation of Jesus.
These educational centres are also a
source of evangelisation.
The Moatize and Moamba missions in
the rural area, with many Christian
communities spread through the
interior, and the city parishes in
Lhanguene and Jardim, are important
direct evangelisation centres for thou-
sands of young people, as well as for
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accompanying Christian families.
A new work for the Vice Province is the
setting up of the ‘Emmaus’ Spirituality
centre in Matola, as a place for meet-
ings and retreats for various groups of
young people.
Seeing life as a vocation
The Salesian Youth Movement brings
the different groups together and
strengthens the vocation of the young
people as ‘leaders’. Every year, various
formation gatherings, prayer opportu-
nities, live-in occasions at different
stages of growth give the SYM some
substance.
The Salesian Family is growing through
Salesian Cooperator groups, ADMA
and the Past Pupils, which offer the
possibility of experiencing the lay vo-
cation in the Salesian spirit.
The best and most important result
is vocations to consecrated Salesian
life. In 2011 the local Mozambican
Salesians already made up 50% of the
Vice Province. Don Bosco’s charism is
being enriched. To form these Salesian
vocations the Vice Province has an As-
pirantate at Matola and a Prenovitiate
at Moamba. The novitiate, which in-
cludes novices from Angola, is at Na-
maacha.
Despite our relatively small numbers
(57 confreres) and lack of resources, we
continue to sow the beauty of life in
the hearts of young Mozambicans, an
experience of encounter with Jesus
through service of their brothers and
sisters.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Lithuania
Leading to the Future
Lithuania and the Salesians
by Fr Alessandro Barelli, sdb
Don Bosco was already known in
Lithuania in the late nineteenth
century, then in 1909 a young Lithuan-
ian, Antanas Skeltys, decided to become
a Salesian. Arriving in Turin illegally with-
out papers, he asked to be accepted
among the sons of Don Bosco. After a
few decades, by now a Salesian priest,
he began an extensive information
campaign on Don Bosco and Salesian
life in his homeland. Every summer he
returned from Turin and inspired many
young people through his presentation
of the Salesian charism and Don Bosco
in diocesan parishes. Within ten years,
hundreds of young Lithuanians studied
in Italy and of these, more than 60 of
them left for the Salesian Missions. The
first Salesian community in Lithuania
was only opened in 1934, a school and
aspirantate which nurtured many voca-
tions. Unfortunately, the Second World
War froze the shoots of this Salesian
spring. Many Lithuanian Salesians fled to
the West where they devoted their en-
ergies to the extensive Lithuanian dias-
pora. Those who remained at home
were dispersed and forced to live as
diocesan priests, in times of persecution.
After the restoration of Lithuanian
independence in 1990 Lithuanian
Salesians around the world and the re-
maining survivors in Lithuania decided
to come together and begin the typical
pastoral activities of Don Bosco. Unfor-
tunately with the passing of the years,
despite great enthusiasm, the forces
available were limited. To help them,
the Congregation sent young priests
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from Poland and Italy, many of whom
are still working alongside local
confreres in the cities of Vilnius and
Kaunas.
The social and religious circumstances
were strongly influenced by the years
of Soviet occupation, and particularly
among young people there is a strong
tendency to relativism, materialism and
religious indifference. And this is pre-
cisely the setting for Salesian pastoral
activities.
Vilnius
The capital of Lithuania has a popula-
tion of 600,000, divided between
ethnic Lithuanians (60%), Poles (30%)
and Russians (10%), often at logger-
heads with one another. The Salesians
are in the working-class suburb of Laz-
dynai, where they have the St John
Bosco parish with 45,000 inhabitants.
The parish ministry is bilingual, Lithuan-
ian and Polish, and in addition to the
typical work of catechetics for young
people, and charitable support, service
to parishioners, the parish has become
known over the years for its youth
focus through the weekend oratory,
after-school care for children in need,
the summer camps and day activities,
youth centre, youth and pastoral min-
istry groups, and religious education in
state schools. Another activity regarded
as important and much appreciated
throughout Lithuania is the Salesian
Bulletin, published in Lithuanian since
1927 and distributed free to all readers.
The Salesians also provide spiritual as-
sistance for the Lithuanian Don Bosco
Volunteers group.
Kaunas
The Salesian community at Kaunas is
situated in the poor suburb of Pale-
monas, once famous for its industrial
setting which has now fallen into
disuse. Our Lady of the Rosary Parish,
with 10,000 inhabitants, does its best
to meet the religious, social and finan-
cial needs of the people. Besides the
normal activities of the parish, cate-
chetics, and Caritas, we could high-
light the other more typical Salesian
daily oratory and recreational summer
camps held both in the parish and in
the countryside. A great treasure is
the common effort between the
Salesian community and the Salesian
Sisters, who run an after-school pro-
gram each day for children in need
and manage the teaching of the
Catholic religion in the two local pri-
mary schools. Linked to the Salesian
community there is also a small group
of Salesian Cooperators and another
group, ADMA.
Prospects for the Future
The various youth activities result in the
Salesian charism being increasingly
more appreciated and better known.
Young people have shown much inter-
est and not a few want to help as lead-
ers. Also thanks to the Salesian Bulletin
making us more widely known nation-
ally, we have taken in several young
people who want to learn more about
Salesian life, though for the moment
there are no new vocations. We are con-
fident for the future, provided we can
strengthen our works and our visibility.
Given the amount of work facing us, the
physical forces of the Salesians operat-
ing in Lithuania are meagre. A major dif-
ficulty in strengthening the Salesian
presence in Lithuania is that the lan-
guage is not easy and it requires several
years for someone to be able to work
independently. Moreover, the shortage
of personnel is being felt everywhere
and sending people abroad is not so
straightforward a solution. The Lithuan-
ian people, who have undergone vari-
ous occupations, have always had to
defend their identity tenaciously and
this also affects full acceptance of out-
siders, especially if they are far from the
local mentality… it is a challenge for the
Salesian future in this country: being
able to fit in in a visible way, while re-
specting local traditions and values.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Mexico
Alborada, a Lively Place!
by Fr Waldo Gómez Pacheco, sdb
I came to MéridaYucatán just eight months
ago, where I found Alborada Oratories 1, 2
and soon to be 3 (the future Xotlán College).
It was all so different to what I had imagined,
like another country, another people, other
customs, a different climate, different ways
of speaking. There is always something to
learn; to be truthful, I have little time to
spend lying around doing nothing!
Alborada is so varied in its activities: there’s
indoor and outdoor soccer for boys, girls, old
and young; there are workshops, fashion and
design and culture activities, air-conditioning
and refrigeration repair, pastry-making, elec-
trical trades, adult education courses, English,
computers, a symphony orchestra, guitar
groups, improvement courses. In Alborada 2
there are fewer courses at present but this is
growing. Alborada 3, the school, will start
with its first primary classes in 2012.
Like everywhere else the Salesian mission
here is full of challenges, since kids are
the same anywhere with their
dreams, challenges and aspira-
tions. The teenage girls tend to
let their hair down at their
mothers’ bidding, as a sign
of growing up as they
enter secondary school,
and the boys are, well, as
rowdy as any kids are in
2011!
Our work consists of
giving Good Morning or
Good Night talks in the
workshops and another of
10 or 15 minutes before
games. Alborada is also
known as the Mary Help of
Christians Chaplaincy, for all in-
tents and purposes a parish with 6
chapels, groups of all kinds: lay minis-
ters, liturgy, marriage and baptism prepa-
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Each Salesian generation has the noble and responsible
task of handing on the witness to faith and being God’s
instrument through Don Bosco’s exciting charism.
ration, teenager groups, Christian Family
Movement, pastoral centres, Salesian
Cooperators, care for the sick,
Marian groups (Guadalupanos
and ADMA), catechism, and
even aerobics! We also look
after the spiritual needs of
our lay partners.
We are given moral and fi-
nancial support by our pa-
trons and by people who
like what we do, and to
whom I say thank you in the
name of the entire Salesian
Work. We send them the
Salesian Bulletin each month:
Thank you!
In general we are much appreci-
ated despite our faults. People seek us
out, looking for Salesians who are
human, with feelings, but maybe with the
same faults and failings as themselves but
who love God as they do.
The really rough kids are fewer now but
they haven’t quite disappeared; I have
been able to mix with a number of them
and we play together almost every day.
I call them the ADR, los amigos del resistol
or‘Friends of Resistol’, the substance they
regularly sniff. They are Don Bosco’s kids
today, difficult to love as always: just
when we think they are on the improve,
they surprise us by failing yet again, as if
to say: why bother wearing yourself out
for the likes of us? There’s no point…
that’s when the only solution is to love
them – and love them a lot.
Each Salesian generation has the noble
and responsible task of handing on the
witness to faith and being God’s instru-
ment through Don Bosco’s exciting
charism.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Papua New Guinea
Proclaiming the Word in
Kiriwina
by Fr John A. Cabrido, sdb
I arrived in Kiriwina two years late! Fr Sonny Fa-
jardo, our Salesian parish priest for the Tro-
briand Islands, popularly called the ‘Isles of
Love’ by the Polish self-styled anthropologist
Bronislaw Malinowski, first invited me to give a
Bible seminar for his parish leaders in early
2009. Unfortunately, heavy rains during that
time had caused a shortage of yam crops and
the parish initiative had to be scrapped. So
when Fr Sonny renewed the invitation late last
year, I speedily accepted it not only for a chance
to explore Kiriwina’s coral paradise but also to
help out a confrere.
My luggage was definitely overweight. I had
to bring all my teaching equipment including
handouts, a laptop and even a projector! More
than that, Fr Timothy Choi took the occasion
to beef up Fr Sonny’s pantry with canned
goods and other food stuffs. To top it off, Fr
Albert Swer also sent an air pump for the
parish bicycle!
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After an unusually pleasant (and
punctual!) flight with Airlines PNG, I
landed in Losuia to an unforgettable
sight. The airport was a tiny structure
whose perimeter fence was packed
with people. It seemed that half the
island’s population of 40,000 was
there to ogle the new arrivals or await
the latest mail. Mercifully, Fr Sonny was
already around to help retrieve my
luggage once these were flung with
total disregard on the grassy ground.
The Bible seminar began the next day,
09 May (Monday) and was attended by
some 120 parish leaders. These came
from the island’s six Catholic commu-
nities. Mixed with the predominantly
elderly crowd were some 15 ‘youths’.
Apparently, in Kiriwina, to be called
‘youth’ meant that the young person
was an‘out-of-school’drop out. When I
inquired why there were not that many
young people (since the villages we
passed by all seemed like ‘children-fac-
tories’), the parish elders gently ex-
plained to me that now was their time,
and that the ‘time’ of the youth would
have to wait for the future.
For the next five days I gave three lec-
tures and/or conducted workshops
daily, two in the morning and one in
the afternoon until 4:30 PM. The 15
talks spanned the entire Bible and in-
cluded bible sharing sessions, dances,
drama and art. In 2002 I had given a
similar seminar to the village folk of
Kelologeia and Kurada in Normanby
Island. What struck me with this latest
venture was the eagerness and consis-
tent number of participants. Never in
the next five days did we go below 100
attendees. Believers belonging to the
United Church and a local ‘Rema’ faith
community (including their pastor!)
were also there. Participants who be-
longed to the ‘nearby’ villages walked
to and fro daily, i.e. anywhere from an
hour to an hour-and-a-half journey on
foot. Others were accommodated in
the parish and school compound. In
the evenings, for relaxation, we showed
some movies which were eagerly
awaited and attended by all the village
children. To commemorate the beatifi-
cation of our dearly beloved John Paul
II, we viewed a two-part Italian pro-
duced film on his life (in English, of
course). But the highlight of the noc-
turnal movie-viewing was a Jackie
Chan film which had the village people
roaring with laughter. During my stay,
the community of sisters, Daughters of
Mary Immaculate (PIME Sisters), gener-
ously cooked our meals. That was a
welcome respite, since in the parish
house there was no electricity and
barely any running water. Benignly, at
least the parish house was well-
screened so the ever ubiquitous mos-
quitoes were left outside (!) even if the
invasion of millipedes was not kept at
bay.
I flew out of Kiriwina the next Sunday,
15 May, deeply impressed by the
warmth of the people and the paucity
of opportunity and the dearth of hope
for the island’s youth. The valiant efforts
of missionaries past (MSC and PIME)
and those present (Reparation Sisters
in Gusaweta; PIME Sisters in Wapipi;
and Fr Sonny) are truly inspiring. I
deeply pray that our ‘sharing of the
Word’ may sustain the people of Kiri-
wina in their trials and nurture their
faith.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Hungary
In the third district of Budapest,
the door of the building number 79
in Kiscelli street stands wide open early
in the morning – Gábor Vitális,
a Salesian priest since November 2009,
waits for pupils every school day,
with breakfast for youngsters who would
otherwise be left hungry until lunch.
Good Morning Tale
with a Twist
by Erzsébet Lengyel
The work begins at 6 in the morning each
day: Fr Gábor and his helpers – adults and
younger ones alike, set the tables in the cellar
of the oratory building, prepare tea and lunch
packs. The children come from 6.45 and can
stay until 7.45, so there is also time for personal
conversations and for a short morning prayer.
“When I heard that many pupils go to school
on an empty stomach, I was literally shocked.
I knew that I have to give breakfast to these
kids, but I also knew that there isn’t a penny to
spare. The provincial encouraged me: Don
Bosco had no money either, still he did much
for the youth… We haven’t organised any
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large-scale call for donations, we have
only advertised in the church; I
preached about it, and a dear benefac-
tor wrote about our cause in the local
newspaper. Right the day after, a pen-
sioner came and gave 1000 forints
(about € 4) for the children’s breakfast
– this was the first, then others fol-
lowed… and the “Breakfast program”
began. When we ran out of money, I
prayed: if it’s God’s will for us to go on,
he will also give us the opportunity –
and in a wonderful way, there was
always an unforeseen donation from
which we could feed the kids the next
day. A little wonder…”
There are three elementary schools in
the vicinity of the Salesian community.
Father Gábor asked the management
of the schools to inform the pupils in
need that there is this breakfast oppor-
tunity.
“On the first occasion there were four-
teen children who came”, he recalls.
“We didn’t know who they were and
what their circumstances were. Then,
the rumour slowly began to spread
and from the initial 15-20, there soon
grew a merry group of fifty. Thanks to
our kind benefactors, we could serve
tea or chocolate milk with cookies,
bagels and little packs, which the chil-
dren could take with them to school”.
Father Gábor and his helpers have dis-
tributed 10,000 packs over one and a
half years.
About seven o’clock, Father prepares
Morning Prayer for the children.
“We have thought much about how
we could include the prayer”, says
Father Gábor “for most of the children
are not religious; they are not even
baptised. First, we just displayed the
words of the prayer on a board, which
the children slowly managed to learn.
With time, some of them also started
learning some religion; but with a tricky
little idea, we began to bring a little
piece of religion to everyone”.
“The nearby Don Bosco confectionery
stood by us from the beginning; they
send a little dessert now and then”, the
young Salesian tells us. “Those who
take breakfast await the small cakes,
and in addition, for a little ice-cream,
they can bring back the empty bags of
cake, which are stamped with the
Salesian logo. Our idea was to include
a little quiz in these bags, which they
have to fill in to deserve their dessert.
These questions are very simple of
course, but thanks to them, we can
smuggle a ‘mini religion lesson’ into
every week for our pupils.
We know that most of these children
are at a disadvantage; they are in need
and they live in difficult circumstances,
although they are not required to
show any proof of this. The children
can tell us their daily worries; they can
share their pain or fear. They write their
homework, if they still have to, mem-
orise poems, and celebrate birthdays,
Christmas and Santa Claus together…
In the last week of June we even or-
ganised a summer camp for the chil-
dren, and thanks to that, the bond
between them hasn’t weakened, but
has became even stronger. It was
wonderful to perceive the change
going on in these children! These little
‘everyday holidays’ forged this occa-
sional breakfasting group into a real
community.
But this requires a huge financial and
human sacrifice. Many give and have
given money, food and help for this
programme, which is so permeated
with the love of Don Bosco. This little
early morning help really has became
an example of Christian love and sacri-
fice ‘in use’”.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Zambia
Evangelisation by Example in ZMB
The Salesian mission in ZMB carries out for
the most part a pastoral and educational
work for young workers from the four coun-
tries which make up the Province (Zambia,
Zimbabwe, Namibia and Malawi). Although
certainly the Salesian presence in ZMB began
mainly with mission parishes, over the past ten
years these parishes have set up small job
training centres for youth and adults. It is a
work which helps a population with poor re-
sources to direct its development opportuni-
ties towards a much more competitive level
and helps people face up to the challenge of
an emerging industrial society. The youth and
adults who frequent these centres also form
part of the catechetics program for out tech-
nical schools, and through the education of-
fered them, they also gain all the benefits of
education to the faith; in this way faith and cul-
ture become part of the work of education
and evangelisation offered by the Salesian
mission.
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by Fr Javier Antonio Barrientos, sdb
The influence of this educational and pastoral
thrust in technical schools and parishes is
helping to evangelise young people who
would otherwise not be so much faith in-
volved. Many of the young people in our cen-
tres gradually become missionaries of other
young people, inviting them to share their life
and faith in extracurricular programs which
the Salesians offer.
A number of young people from other faith
communities including those from traditional
African religions have been introduced to a
process of faith and conversion which has
happily culminated in a decision to be bap-
tised and become part of the Catholic Church
which continues its evangelising mission by
example.
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SALESIAN
VOCATION TODAY
Germany
Project Life,
a Home for Young Refugees
Text by Katharina Hennecke / Christina Tangerding / Claudia Klinger
Photo by Wolfgang Maria Weber
A certificate in Persian script with a
picture of his father is all that re-
mains from Mohamed Asif Dorani´s
former life in his native country of
Afghanistan. He does not have any fur-
ther documents, a passport or other pic-
tures. Due to his spiritual and physical
development German authorities have
estimated his age at 16. June 1 was set as
his date of birth.
Asif Dorani fled from Afghanistan in No-
vember 2008. His younger brother Abdul
Samad (18) was kidnapped from their
home town by the Taliban about five
months ago. The parents worried about
the safety of their second son and there-
fore sent him to far-off Germany with the
help of smugglers. The journey was ad-
venturous and sometimes life-threaten-
ing. But Asif somehow survived. Now he
lives in a home for young people in
Munich called ‘Salesianum’, where the
Salesians of Don Bosco have initiated
‘Project Life’. It is an aid project for unac-
companied under-age refugees.
Asif lives on the third floor of the Sale-
sianum with ten other boys who all had
to flee from their native countries be-
cause of different emergency situations.
They have three single rooms, four
double rooms, two kitchens, a common
room, a bathroom and a shared lavatory.
Social workers and educators look after
the group of boys round the clock. They
support them in everyday affairs like
cooking, washing and cleaning. They ac-
company the young refugees in admin-
istrative procedures and help them
complete the required forms and write
letters. They keep in touch with any other
contact points and the school. Primarily
the educators help the young and largely
traumatized refugees work through their
experiences and open up a future in Ger-
many, step by step.
Every time Asif talks about his life, bad
memories return: the war in his home-
land, the kidnapping of his brother, the
farewell to his parents and the almost
two-month odyssey from Afghanistan to
Germany. He does not know exactly how
long this wandering took, but he remem-
bers that they changed cars frequently.
Project Life
Every year hundreds of under-age refugees arrive in Germany without parents.
ey flee usually under life-threatening conditions from war, dictatorship, pursuit,
expulsion, hunger and disasters. ey are in a foreign country without their home,
families and friends. For that reason the Salesians of Don Bosco in Germany have
started ‘Project Life’. Since August 2009 eleven unaccompanied under-age refugees
live in youth center Salesianum in Munich. Here they find a home and get help in
everyday life. Besides they get a pedagogical and pastoral accompaniment to work
through their traumatic experiences. e goal of the project is to guide young people
in their life, to prepare them for the future and to strengthen them in managing life.
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They were locked up in twos or in
a threesome in a stuffy, dark car
trunk or in boxes on a load floor of
a transporter. They feared for their
lives. When Asif finally reached
German soil, everything happened
very quickly: A push in the back
woke the boy up from sleep.
Somewhere in a dark area the
smuggler shooed the refugees
from the load floor of the trans-
porter. They found a railway plat-
form, took the train and asked their
way to Munich.
In the meantime Asif has gained a
foothold in Germany and he has
dreams for the future: he wants to
be a car mechanic, to live without
fear and to have enough money for
food. He can also imagine having a
wife and children, but in Germany,
not in Afghanistan, says Asif. Does
he believe that he will see his
brother once again? He shakes his
head. “Dead”, he says. “I think, he is
dead”. And hastily he wipes tears
from the corner of his eyes.
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SALESIANS 2012
INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
“If your leg doesn’t heal – no Profession!” 102
Youth Leader Becomes a Salesian 104
“I will give you shepherds after your own heart” 106
“What God has planned for you no one can take away” 108
Volunteer Forever! 110
From Vietnam to Japan – with Love 112
Peace is Possible When Church Takes the Lead 114
Don Bosco’s Dream in a Chinese Woman’s Son 116
Don Bosco of Tonj: “The vocation of every Salesian is tied to
Mary Help of Christians” 118
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
India
“If your leg doesn’t heal, no Profession!”
Bro. James Marcus, sdb
James Marcus was born 25th June 1971,
made his first profession on 24th May
1994 and perpetual profession in 2000.
Presently he is the principal of the
Technical Institute at Don Bosco Fatorda
while being director of the oratory and
person in charge of the youth there.
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SALESIANS 2012
James Marcus comes from a large family, being
the 5th child in a family with nine children. His
parents had moved to Sulcorna along with the
Salesians who pioneered there. Coming from a
small hamlet near Sagayatotam in Tamil Nadu,
the family struggled to bring up the children in a
new place with no support from their immediate
families. To add to this, there were financial prob-
lems. James admits, “We came up the hard way.
It was a hand-to-mouth existence for us for sev-
eral years”. Till the age of 6, little James did not
see the walls of a classroom since there was no
school in the locality. But he has fond memories
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adventure – fishing, hunting and
trekking; catching reptiles and having
close encounters with bison, wild cats
and other wild animals in the forests of
Sulcorna.
As James goes down the memory lane,
he recounts his first experience of the
Salesians – Fr Moja, the man with the
long beard, and Bro. Ludvick, the great
farmer. But his interest and admiration
for Salesian life was inspired by Fr
Daniel Venia who was known among
the workers as ‘Chicken Father’. James
spent many years of his childhood in
the company of this great man who
showed special affection for this lively
child. Fr Venia lived a life of simplicity,
always trusting in the providence of
God which he expressed through his
constant refrain, “No problem!”
James grew up in the Salesian board-
ing at Sulcorna even when his family
moved out of the place for a short
while. Initially, James had a great inter-
est in being a CID inspector. Though
he was good in sports and studies, he
confesses that he lacked self-confi-
dence. He distinctly remembers how
on one sports day he had made up his
mind to settle down for the 2nd place
on seeing some African sprinters on
the track. To his surprise he bagged the
gold medal and was also declared the
sportsman. It was during the same year,
some Salesians came to give a vocation
talk. But James was not among the 12
boys who responded. Fr Michael Mas-
carenhas, the Rector of Sulcorna, who
was transferred to Fatorda invited
James along with a few other boys to
do their technical studies.
After 2 years of technical studies, Fr
Michael encouraged James to go to
Lonavla. Without considering much,
he agreed. The superiors found him
good and he was sent to the novitiate.
It was here that James came to under-
stand his Salesian vocation. For eight
months he suffered with a thorn in his
leg in spite of all medical care. At this
time he was told “If your leg has not
healed, you will not be able to make
your profession”. However, from
March 19th (the day the applications
are submitted) to 24th May (day of 1st
profession) the leg gave no trouble.
James made his profession but the leg
would continue to trouble him for an-
other 8 months until one day while
playing basketball a piece of the thorn
came out by itself never to trouble
him again.
After the magisterio course in Kalyani,
Calcutta Province, Bro. James com-
pleted his practical training in Matunga
and Pinguli while also completing his
CTI (Central Training Institute) during
those years. Having completed his
diploma in polytechnic, he is presently
pursuing his engineering studies while
being fully involved in the Salesian
apostolate at Don Bosco Fatorda.
James accepts that though he may not
have consciously made a decision to
be a Salesian brother he is most happy
to be one. He finds it easy to be with
the young, sharing their lives, listening
to their stories, helping them to unbur-
den themselves, guiding them in their
life decisions, and encouraging them to
go on. He says, “As a priest, I wouldn’t
have had all this time for the young”.
He feels totally at home with the poor,
especially youngsters coming from
deprived situations.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
Benin
Youth Leader Becomes a Salesian
‘My vocation’: Arnaud tells his story
by Fr Jean Baptiste Beraud, sdb
Arnaud is a Salesian student of theology at Yaoundé.
He tells the story of how his activity with ‘six boys
and four girls’ helping their classmates at college set him on
the path to Don Bosco.
“I was born on Saturday 2 February 1980 in Benin. My family
was a good Catholic family, a monogamous family – not all are!
I am the third of three children. I learned to pray when I was
three years of age thanks to fact that our family prayed of an
evening before bedtime… already by the time I was seven,
while I was in the pre-catechetics class, I wanted to be a priest
because I was attracted by the nice vestments the priest
wore when he said the Sunday Mass!”
Arnaud became an altar server, then joined a vocations
group. He goes on to tell us:
“Fr Fermin Nuevo, then parish priest and also
chaplain to the vocations group, gave me a book
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by Teresio Bosco on Don Bosco’s life. Thanks this I opted
for Salesian life, because I saw that I could be a priest
while continuing to work actively in education and for
the betterment of the young.
In Year Five I was deeply moved by the harm that I saw
happening when some of my classmates were sent
away from school. They were often sent away for failing
to pay their school fees. After looking at the situation,
I realised that at least 90% of these students who had
been sent away ended up paying their school fees by
the end of the year, but in the meantime a good
number of them had missed many of their classes, and
so they failed.
Faced with this situation I decided to take action, and I
loaned some of my classmates some of the money
they needed so they could continue to follow their
course. I had about six thousand francs with me as
pocket money which I had never touched. But I soon
saw that I could not really do great things with so little.
So along with some other friends, we set up an associ-
ation called the ‘Association des Jeunes pour la Con-
struction de notre Avenir (AJECA)’ or, Youth Together for
Building our Future. There were ten of us (six boys and
four girls), all in Year Four. We organised all sorts of ac-
tivities to help our classmates financially. During the
longer holidays we held lots of football, basketball
competitions…, offered holiday courses, and also sold
school materials. After some five years we were well
known to all the young people in the area and in sur-
rounding areas. We had become leaders.
Thanks to these competitions I discovered the Salesian
work at Cotonou for the first time, but it was not until
1999 that I really found out about this educational mis-
sion on behalf of the young and especially for the poor-
est of them”.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
Spain
“I will give you shepherds after
your own heart” (Jer. 3:15)
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SALESIANS 2012
by Fr Sergio Oter Díaz, sdb
On 30 April 2011, in the Salesian
community at Paseo de Ex-
tremadura (Madrid), three young
Salesians were ordained. Carmelo
Donoso was ordained Deacon, while
Guzmán Pérez and I, Sergio Oter, were
ordained priests.
“I will give you shepherds after your
own heart” was the motto chosen for
the diaconate and priestly ordinations.
It was not chosen in order to remain
just on the invitation to the ordination,
or just as a reminder of that very special
day. It is a slogan that I would want to
be the fundamental basis of my life as
a Salesian priest, a verse from the Book
of Jeremiah which I would like as a
summary and synthesis of what it
means for me to be consecrated to the
Lord.
And it is the Lord who has chosen me,
not me who chose Him, who pre-
sented himself before me for me to
carry out His mission. The priesthood
has been, is and will be a true gift, a true
gift from God. He has truly led me
down this path that really leads to true
happiness, true love. It is God who has
come to me and called me. It is God
who has sought me out, and who,
again and again, has been there along
my way to make a real gift to me.
The Lord has chosen me to serve his
people, the great people of God. He
has chosen me to give my life, without
any reserve. He has chosen me to co-
operate in building his kingdom, here
and now. He has chosen me to pass on
to young people, through my own life,
a message of hope that comes from
the Lord’s Pasch. And finally, he has
chosen me to serve his people in the
image of Christ, the Good Shepherd.
“I will give you shepherds after my
own heart” says the Prophet Jeremiah,
which means my heart must be
shaped after the Heart of Jesus, the
heart of the one who has called me to
follow him along this way that leads to
complete happiness, a happiness that
fills and floods everything. A heart
filled with God, the heart of an authen-
tic shepherd, a generous heart, a heart
dedicated solely and exclusively to
others, a humble heart, a heart com-
mitted to the very end.
Doubtless that the daily celebration of
the Eucharist is a true impulse for me
to help me in this beautiful, relevant
task of making Jesus’ command real:
“Do this in memory of me”: to be a
witness of God’s love for the young,
especially the poorest of them, a
person of communion and a zealous
pastor of the flock whom God entrusts
to me in the equally wonderful task of
bringing young people to Jesus.
These are the key to my living as a
Salesian priest. “I will give you shep-
herds after my own heart” marks out
who I am and what I do, my life and
action. God wants me to deal with
young people after his own heart, the
heart of the Good Shepherd.

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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
India
“What God has planned for you
no one can take away”
It was on 21st March 1970 that God
sowed the seed in the beautiful
garden of Victor and Shakuntala Mota.
Little Anisio was born in Mozambique
(East Africa). This second child among
three boys of the Mota family was
always looked up to as the most
loving and caring child. “Living in
Africa was fun and challenging” is
what he expressed to us. The locals
with their own customs, cults and re-
ligion did not make the practice of
Christianity so easy, but that was no
obstacle for Anisio to prepare himself
to become a disciple of Jesus. At the
age of 5 he would return from the
Church and begin to preach to his
siblings behind closed doors, and
would almost be close to the sermon
he had heard during the Sunday
mass.
When he was 11, he returned with his
family to Goa. Having the handicap of
language, as Portuguese was the only
language he could speak, Anisio really
struggled but wasted no time in
learning English and Konkani. In
school, at Loyola’s Margao, Anisio was
not only learning Languages but
began to play and participate in
almost all the games in the school.
After his VII, he expressed his desire
to become a priest. He first spoke to
Fr Francisco Ataide, then Assistant
Priest Holy Spirit, Margao, to which
Anisio belonged. Fr Ataide wasted no
time in sending him to the Diocesan
Seminary at Saligao. Under the spiri-
tual guidance of Fr Ataide, Anisio
grew and bloomed well in the Semi-
nary till his XII standard.
Then came the time of making a firm
decision about his calling. During the
summer holidays while helping out in
the parish with the summer activities
for children, he met a young enthusi-
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Fr Anisio Mota, sdb
Made his first profession in 1993 and was ordained a priest
in 2003. Presently he is working in Don Bosco Ganv,
Quepem – Goa as the Vice-principal of the School and
Junior College. He was the vocation promoter of the
Konkan Province for several years. He is much sought after
as a resource person for youth animation.
astic Salesian priest who left a lasting
impression on him. Through the en-
couragement of Fr Dominic Savio,
Anisio accepted the invitation to
Follow Christ in the Don Bosco style.
Recalling that experience Anisio nar-
rates, “I did not know who Don Bosco
was, but this young man made me feel
that Don Bosco was just waiting for
me… I liked Don Bosco’s personality,
his love for youngsters and the many
works he carried out; nothing could
stop me from following Don Bosco”.
“Yes, my parents did not want me to
join Don Bosco as I had to go to Lon-
avla and other places in Maharashtra
for my formation,” recounts Anisio and
then adds, “But remember What God
has planned for you no one can take
away. I fought my way with my parents
and got Fr Dominic Savio to convince
them. Yes, I won that battle, the battle
I’d fought for Jesus”. Finally, Anisio was
ordained a priest on 27th December
2003. The day is significant – it was the
birthday of his first vocation promoter,
Rev. Fr Francisco Ataide. “My ordina-
tion was like a birthday gift to him,”says
Anisio.
As a Salesian Priest, Fr Anisio is deeply
involved in youth work. He loves to be
with the young and the young feel
very much at home with him. They
know he is always there for them – to
counsel and to guide. His heartwarm-
ing sermons are always inspiring. Many
of these youngsters want him to bless
their marriage or seek his blessings
before leaving for foreign shores.
He went through a brief period of sick-
ness, having a near-death experience.
He begged God for life; God gave it to
him and now he has promised to live it
for God’s glory. After his miraculous
recovery, he continues his work with
the young. While in Benaulim, as the
Director of the Youth Center and Vo-
cation Promoter for the Province, Fr
Anisio gave his heart and soul in all
that he did – animating youth groups,
visiting schools for vocation promotion,
organizing summer clubs and holiday
camps, animating retreats and youth
paschs. He says with great joy that the
most rewarding moment of his life was
when six young promising boys came
forward to join the Salesian congrega-
tion, being impressed with the Salesian
way of life.
When asked whether he had any diffi-
culties in responding to God’s call, he
says, “I have gone through hard times,
people have misunderstood me, but
God knows the truth, hence nothing
deters me. I became a Salesian Priest to
serve the youth and to be a brother to
them. I will not do anything that takes
me away from the young”.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
Austria
Volunteer Forever
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by Bro. Peter Rinderer, sdb
In July 2006 I left for Mexico. I was 19 and had just fin-
ished high school. My destination was the “Proyecto
Salesiano Tijuana” for a year of volunteer work with the
Salesians. This experience of service to children and their
families has never come to an end, but instead has
lengthened into a new form: Today I am a Salesian!
I used play games every evening with the youngsters
who came to the Mary Help of Christians Oratory in Ti-
juana. I did this along with with some young leaders
and a few adults from the neighbourhood involved in
leadership.
I also taught English and computers and helped in
parish ministry. On one occasion a twelve year old asked
me:
“Why have you come here?”
“Giving makes me happy! I want to use my strength to
help others”, was my answer.
It wasn’t that I was able to achieve great things during
my time as a volunteer. I think the most important thing
was to be close to the youngsters in the oratory. During
this year I read a fairly extensive life of Don Bosco.
After the aspirantate, the novitiate, then I did my phi-
losophy and education studies and began my practical
training at ‘Don Bosco Flüchtlingswerk’. I am working
in a Home with 16 young refugees who arrived in
Austria without a family and need so much help. Often
overwhelmed by experiences of war, they are now in a
totally different situation and are starting out on a new
life. “Here in the Don Bosco House they look after us
well”, said a young Afghan.
I help them with study and have fun in their free time
playing volleyball or football. We give these lads new
hopes of building a better future!
Volunteering was the beginning of an adventure, a vo-
cation that God placed in my heart. That year of service
in Mexico led me to give direc-
tion to my life: Where is my place?
What do I want to be? I found my
answers during my year as a volun-
teer and said: “I want to be a vol-
unteer forever
in the style of
Don Bosco!”
I was fascinated by his life from the every first moment
and thought: For me, Don Bosco is a way of life. He was
convinced that God wants to use our hands to do good
and he spent all his energies on behalf of poor children.
Today we need a lot of people like Don Bosco, in Mexico
and even in Austria! This thought remained in my heart
and after much prayer and lengthy discernment I de-
cided: I want to be a Salesian in the service of youth!
Five years later I found myself in Vienna.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
Vietnam - Japan
From Vietnam to Japan
with Love
John
Le Pham
Nghia Phu
ese five young Vietnamese missionaries have
brought a breath of fresh air to the formation
community at Chofu. ey have not yet received
their mission cross from Turin, but they are
carrying a not always easy cross in a country not so
easily permeable to the Gospel.
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Joseph Nguyen Giao Hoa
Before coming to Japan five
years ago I studied some Japanese, think-
ing to become a Salesian priest in my newly
I was a
adopted country. It was during my experience work-
Salesian as-
ing with young people at the oratory that I dis-
pirant in Viet-
covered my vocation to be a missionary. The
nam and my
example of my Japanese confreres has
four years with
helped me a lot and in a particular
Joseph Nguyen Khac Diep
the Salesians and
way the missionaries. A seri-
especially the contact
ous difficulty I feel is that
I am a post-novice study-
with the ethnic minori-
Christianity does
ing philosophy. Before coming to
ties in K’long in Vietnam lie
not attract the
Japan as an aspirant to Salesian life
behind my missionary voca-
Japanese.
perhaps it was more the spirit of adventure
tion. Being with the young and
than the missionary vocation that attracted me.
speaking of God’s love to them
During the prenovitiate I found myself in crisis
helps me be a better person. The
but then came to understand more clearly that
Japanese language is difficult. I am
being in this country means being a missionary
doing my best to get to know Japanese
with the task of spreading the Gospel of Jesus.
society and culture.
However for now I am but a missionary in
formation.
Andrew Tran Minh Hai
I must be honest and say that when I came
to Japan as a Salesian aspirant my mission-
ary vocation, if indeed it existed, was weak
and insecure. It was towards the end of the
novitiate that I felt myself called to share
with others the graces received and the
spirit of the Gospel, and I owe this to the ex-
emplary lives of the missionaries I have met.
Living in Japan and assimilating the culture
is not easy. St Paul’s words here are a help
to me: “It is no longer I who live, but Christ
who lives in me”.
Joseph Nguyen Duy Hun
I arrived in Japan four years ago as
an aspirant after two years of preparation in
my native land, Vietnam. I have to admit that my
vocation to be a missionary began here. It was a
discovery more than something which came
about naturally. In fact, working with youngsters
at the oratory, almost none of whom were
Christians, I discovered that I was being called
to be a missionary for their sake. My fellow
Vietnamese have been an important
source of support for me and of course
the help of Mary our Mother. Japan is
very much a developed nation and it
is difficult to spread the Gospel.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
India
Peace is Possible
When Church Takes the Lead
Archbishop Menamparampil
22 Ott. 1936, Born in Kelara India
24 May 1955, First Profession
02 May 1965, Ordained Priest
24 nov. 1981, Ordained Bishop
10 July 1995, Archbishop 0f
Guwahati
by Fr C. M. Paul, sdb
Church people negotiating peace in
a conflict situation may not be
considered a ‘politically correct act’,
especially when a Catholic archbishop
takes the initiative. But when the
Church leaders and eminent citizens
from the warring factions join him in
the conflict resolution process “it is
making the Word of God come alive in
the lives of people,” says Salesian Arch-
bishop Thomas Menamparampil of
Guwahati.
Over the last 15 years, the archbishop
has successfully led seven major peace
initiatives. The Joint Peace Team (JPT)
of Northeast India under his leadership
intervened in the following conflicts:
Bodo-Adivasi (1996), Kuki-Paite (1998),
Dimasa-Hmar (2003) and Karbi-Kuki
(2003), Dimasa-Karbi (2004), Bodo-
Muslim at Udalguri (2010) and Rabha-
Garo (2011).
It all started with a missionary Sister vis-
iting relief camps where over 250,000
took shelter following conflict between
Bodos and Adivasis-Santals in 1996.
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“Most of the children are sick and all of
them will die,” she reported.
“These words hit me hard and roused
me from my sense of helplessness
before a massive problem,” the soft
spoken archbishop recalls.
Over 500 people died, hundreds of
houses were torched, and people
rotted in 42 camps.
“I began by bringing into the field
persons with little competence for of-
fering relief, but a lot of good will:
seminarians, candidates, novices. I
kept informing the public what we
were trying to do. Learning of our
work, people came: nurses, doctors,
university students and volunteers
from all over India. We joined hands
with the other Churches and sought
help from non-governmental agen-
cies”.
Over 400 volunteers worked in turn for
half a year bringing relief to people in
the camps.
Even the Chief Minister of Assam vis-
ited the camps and praised the work.
That is how JPT came into existence
bringing together sober, moderate, far-
sighted local people. When they make
an appeal for peace, everyone listens.
The 75 year old archbishop is not dis-
couraged by heartbreaking moments
in peace-making despite much fatigue
and enormous effort, sometimes
ending in total failure.
He recalls a flicker of hope when a
Muslim group said, “we came only be-
cause Archbishop Thomas invited us to
this peace meeting,” or when some
Presbyterian or Baptist friends quote
his writings on peace saying, “as ‘our’
Archbishop suggests”.
In recent years, JPT ventured beyond
peace initiatives making a drive for a
‘corruption-free society’. Archbishop
Menamparampil’s 78-page booklet en-
titled Probity in Public Life was used as a
reference when ecumenical Church
leaders in Mizoram passed norms for
a corruption-free election recently.
The dramatic change of guard in that
northeastern state owes much to this
call for probity in public life. The arch-
bishop adds, “youth groups like the
Bodo Students’ Union ask me to give
talks on peace and ‘Ethical Awakening’.
They read my articles and booklets.
Possibly the Assam Students’ Union will
be next”.
Besides being a special invitee to the
Synod of Bishops for Asia and on the
Word of God, archbishop Menam-
parampil is currently president of the
Northeast India Bishops’ Conference;
National Chairman of the Bishops
Commission for Education & Culture;
and Chairman of the Federation of
Asian Bishops Conference Commission
for Evangelization.
A member of several Vatican Commis-
sions, archbishop Menamparampil is a
recipient of the prestigious Mumbai
based Maschio Humanitarian Award
1998.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
China - Mongolia
Don Bosco had a missionary dream in Barcelona during the nights between 8 and 10 April 1886,
which included the future of the Salesian work in China. It is a dream which is being realized over
different stages of history.
In 1906 Fr Louis Versiglia, together with five other missionaries, was sent to Macau by Don Rua. From
there the Salesians then set up in Hong Kong and other cities in China. In 1946, Fr Mario Acquistapace
arrived in Beijing, believing that it was the city that Don Bosco had seen in his dream. ere he founded
a House for orphans and poor youngsters and rapidly spread devotion to Mary Help of Christians
among the faithful. After only a few years, the Salesian work was also developing rapidly and vocations
were flourishing.
Suddenly, in 1949 the communist occupation of China dispersed the dream and Salesians were expelled
from Mainland China; the work was reduced and entrusted to Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan.
e number of Salesians dropped to the present one hundred and ten with the majority being
now quite advanced in age.
Don Bosco’s Dream in a Chinese
Woman’s Son
116
SALESIANS 2012
by Fr Pedro Leong, sdb
In 2006, despite a shortage of person-
nel, Father Paul Leung, a young priest
holding several important posts in the
province, obtained permission from
the Rector Major to be a missionary to
Mongolia where he began work for
poor boys in Darkhan. When he was
asked why he had insisted so much on
going to the missions, leaving behind
many important tasks in Hong Kong,
he replied simply: “If I was baptized
and came to know God, it was because
there were good missionaries around.
Now here in Hong Kong many of my
fellow citizens have plenty of opportu-
nity to hear the Good News, enjoy the
rich fruits of evangelisation. How can I
be so selfish as not to share what I have
received with so many others who
have no chance of hearing anything
about God, and have nothing at all?”
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arrived in Darkhan in 2005, there was
not even one Catholic in the city. No
one knew who Jesus Christ was. Now,
when Fr Paul was recently appointed
to be the first parish priest of Mary Help
of Christians Parish in Selenge Aimag, a
vast province which includes Darkhan,
22 times larger than Hong Kong, he
found out there were already around
150 Catholics because of the hard work
of the missionaries. Some of them are
now preparing themselves to be cate-
chists or Salesian Cooperators. And he
is now preparing to build a shrine ded-
icated to Mary, Help of Christians.
Fr Paul recently came back to be beside
his dying mother. We learned that this
mother of our first missionary was a
very wonderful woman, mother of five
children. She was not a Catholic but
always remained an honest non-Chris-
tian woman.
As Fr Paul himself told us, when he was
still a young college student after he
graduated from a Salesian school in
Hong Kong, one day he asked for his
mother’s permission to be baptized
and his mother answered, ”No prob-
lem” but then added, “You should
never be a missionary”. After about a
year, he told her that a certain priest
had telephoned him, and instinctively
she asked, “Priest? Do you also want to
be a priest one day?” “Yes”, Paul an-
swered. She didn’t say a word but
closed herself in her room for three
days weeping, carrying all the pain of
her son’s mysterious plan in her heart.
Then she generously gave her consent:
“Take good care of yourself then… if
one day you cannot stand the hardship,
you are always welcome back home”.
Years later Fr Paul had been sent to
Rome to study. One day he gave her a
call indicating that he was going to
spend a long summer holiday visiting
another country. She immediately
twigged that he might be heading for
some dangerous place and advised her
son: “Please, be careful if you are going
to countries in trouble”. In fact Fr Paul
went to Albania to serve those under
persecution.
Then, again after some years, Fr Paul
told her that he would like to be a mis-
sionary to Mongolia to spread the
Good News and probably would be
away from her for a long time. She
again remained a generous, always
available mother, saying, “Son, I know
you are always restless, but you must
know that it is very cold there, so put
on more clothes, eat more and when-
ever you are free, come back to see me”.
From then on she took great care of
him and gave full support for all that
her son was doing in the missions. She
was always proud of him.
Don Bosco’s dream for Salesian work
in China and Fr Paul Leung’s calling as
a missionary are hard to fathom for
many of us. The explanation can only
be that God has a marvellous plan for
the future of our Province and we are
to cooperate with him to make it
happen.
On 25 March, the China Province wel-
comed the solemn arrival of Don
Bosco’s Casket in Hong Kong. In the
welcoming ceremony at Tang King Po
School, organised by the Youth Min-
istry Office, to our great surprise Fr Paul
appeared among us with six Mongo-
lian young people and one Salesian
cleric. They danced and sang before
the Relic. The following day, during the
public veneration of the relic, some
priests and sisters, and some young
men and women from the south and
north of China came to see Don Bosco.
They had learned of the event through
the press or Internet.
Do we have reason to say that this may
be a sign that now is the time for Don
Bosco’s dream to be fulfilled? Are we
ready and well prepared for that possi-
bility? The question remains.
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INSPIRING
TESTIMONIES
Korea - South Sudan
“The vocation of every Salesian is tied
to Mary Help of Christians”
by † Fr John Lee Taeseok, sdb †
In Korea devotion to Mary Help of
Christians is not as strong as devotion
to her under other titles: Mary Queen
of Peace, or Our Lady of Mercies. This is
why, before I became a Salesian, I had
neither heard of nor ever said the invo-
cation: “Mary Help of Christians pray
for us” that we Salesians would say at
least three times a day.
I would like to recall a brief story of my
own vocation.
At the time I had
come to under-
stand the Lord
was calling me, I
had a wonder-
ful experience
of Mary Help
of Christians.
When I de-
cided, with
much joy, to set out on the path to be-
coming a Salesian, I suffered some anx-
iety about the fact that I needed to tell
my mother about it! Since my father
had died when I was 10, my mother
had to struggle a lot so I could go and
study medicine. Thanks to her many
sacrifices, I was able to become a
doctor. It was at that point that I could
begin to help my mother and pay her
back for the many sacrifices she had
made without asking anything of me
in return. This made it very difficult for
me to tell her about my decision. In fact
it was almost impossible for me to do
so. I made many attempts but never
succeeded because every time I
looked at her, I lost courage. I also tried
to tell one of my sisters to whom I was
very close and could talk about many
things with ease. But I couldn’t even tell
her! Three months went by without
me saying anything.
One wonderful day, when I went to
see my sister, I stood there as-
tounded, mouth open. My sister
had already found out about
my decision through a
dream she had had
the previous
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Don Bosco of Tonj!
Fr John Lee Taeseok
evening. However, my sister then told my
mother about my decision by telling her of the
dream. All my problems were resolved at that
moment.
However I had not worked out at that time that
this was Mary Help of Christians at work until I
heard, for the first time from my novice director,
that the vocation of every Salesian is tied to
Mary Help of Christians.
I had not asked Mary for her help. But Mary was
aware of my problem and quietly helped me.
This was the first experience I had had of Mary’s
help. It was such an important experience for
me because through it I gained such a real
image of Mary as the Lady who loved me very
much. This enabled me to understand Mary as
‘Help of Christians’and I learned to adopt the at-
titude we must have when we help others: be
attentive to their needs and ready to give them
all necessary help. From then on I was able to
speak with certainty to young people about the
presence of Mary Help of Christians…
Mary is not a special privilege just for Salesians.
She is the Help of all Christians. But we Salesians
are very grateful and sensitive to Mary as Helper.
With this sensitivity Don Bosco chose Mary Most
Holy as his inspiration, Mother and Teacher of his
Congregation…
Born: 19 Sep. 1962 (Pusan, Korea)
Graduated in medicine, Inje University: 1987 (Pusan)
First profession as a Salesian: 30 Jan 1994 (Daejeon)
Final profession as a Salesian: 27 Apr 2000 (Rome)
Ordained priest: 24 Jun 2001 (Seoul)
Joined Sudan mission: 1 Nov 2001
Diagnosed with cancer: Nov 2008
Died: 14 Jan 2010 (Seoul)
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While I was reflecting on the life of
a great priest, Fr John Lee Taeseok,
I wanted to tell his story and share
his valuable, beautiful life as well
as repay a deep inner debt. I de-
cided to hold an exhibition in
memory of his life.
As Fr John Lee put it in his words,
love itself, the virus of love will
overcome time and space.
I wish deeply for this virus to
spread endlessly to all whom we
meet in God's great plan.
I pray sincerely that all the seeds
Fr John Lee has planted bear
great fruit and bring peace to this
land.
Artist, Michaela Kang Hyunjoo
anks to
Editorial team:
Fr Filiberto González Plasencia,
Councillor for Social Communications
Members of the SC Department
and Bro. Hilario Seo, from Korea Province
Translators:
Too many to single out individually, but sincere
thanks to translators from Africa (French);
Central and South America (Spanish and
Portuguese) and both Salesian and lay; Europe
(for the remaining languages, including: English,
Italian, Spanish, French, Portuguese and Polish)
Special thanks to:
Salesian Bulletin editors from around the Salesian
world and their Provinces, who provided the bulk
of the articles, with support from the Regional
Councillors
Salesian Mission and Development Offices
Artist Michaela Kang Hyunjoo
Printing:
Publishing House Don Bosco
Bratislava, Slovakia
Publisher:
Direzione Generale Opere Don Bosco,
Via della Pisana 1111, Casella Postale 18333,
00163 Roma-Bravetta, Italy
For further information:
redazionerivistesdb@sdb.org
www.sdb.org
Salesians of Don Bosco
SALESIANS 2012

13.4 Page 124

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