InTouch 12_1_11


InTouch 12_1_11

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AROUND THE USA
NCYC
“Our Christian Catholic faith tells
us that we need to be down at
the bottom of the hill looking up
to the King of the Hill,Christ the
King, on the cross. He is the King
of the Hill, and when we follow
that (path) we are placing our-
selves in righteousness before
God. We are placing ourselves in
the call to glory, and we’re work-
ing toward salvation.”
† Bishop Coyne of Indianapolis
“I would recom-
mend this experi-
ence to everyone
and anyone. It’s
amazing, but you
have to experience
it for yourself.”
Andres Neira,
Salesian Booth Animator, SUO
By Judy Wilber Alvarez
Indianapolis, IN – On November 17-19
the National Catholic Youth Confer-
ence (NCYC) gathered 23,000 youth,
adult leaders and parents to exlore
and celebrate what it means to be
Called to Glory. The process of the
weekend included keynote assem-
blies, workshops, communal prayer
and Eucharist. A thematic park also
engaged participants with people and
resources to foster their faith and abil-
ity to live as young Catholic Christians.
In the thematic park the Salesians of
St. John Bosco offered a carnival booth
where youth were accomapanied by
Salesian family members as they
played over 20 games. In this con-
text conversations were sparked and
prizes were won that declared what
Don Bosco himself would say, “It is
enough that you are young for me to
love you.”
The booth was the fruit of collabora-
tive planning between all four prov-
inces in North America, spearheaded
this year by Fr. Steve Ryan. With the
special assistance of Sr. Colleen Clair
and the sisters in the East, the carnival
theme came alive in a fun and orga-
nized way.
Booth animators included Salesians
from all four provinces, including sis-
ters, priests, brothers, pre-novices,
postulants and laity. Together they
were strong signs and bearers of God’s
InTouch 2 Dec. 1,.2011
love for all who visited.
For video highlights of NCYC
My Catholic Voice
NCYC electronic ‘holy shoutout
Catholic News Network
One Bishop’s View of Attending
NCYC
What’s with the Youth?
NOTE: The Indiannapolis Convention
Center and Lucas Oil Stadium have
proven to accommodate well the ever-
growing attendance at NCYC and so
this conference will return here in the
fall of 2013.

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AROUND THE USA NCYC CALLED TO GLORY
Frisbee prize tells
all: “It is enough that
you are young for me
to love you.”
Pre-novices demonstrate the magic of juggling
Sr. Ann Cassidy in NCYC high fashion
Snag the key and you win!
Stand up the bottle for vocations?
Spinning for a prize
InTouch 3 Dec. 1,.2011

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AROUND THE PROVINCE
SALESIAN FAMILY
Salesian
Cooperators
Ch r ist mas
Project 2011
May those who eat
Be bread for others!
The Watsonville Christmas Project headed by the Salesian Cooperator Groups
of Southern California, are reaching out to the needy. Our Christmas Project this
year includes:
1) Gifts for the migrant families of Watsonville. We are invited to bring in new
toys, clothing, and household items. ( Gathering of gifts ends on December
11, 2011)
2) The Saturday Oratory: a Saturday program for at risk children at a Salesian
center. This program aims at making healthy lunch with the kids, working on
budgeting, planning and healthy food choices and a reading incentive pro-
gram focusing on reading, book summary writing and oral presentations with
prize incentive at the completion of the program.
We have the opportunity
To support our Salesian Mission
o By bringing in the donations of new un-
wrapped toys, new clothing, and new
kitchen ware
o And/or by donating cash (checks payable
to Salesian Society)
o You may designate your gift for “Watsonville” and/or “Saturday Oratory”
At St. Joseph, gifts and cash donations can be brought to the 9:30 Mass on the
Sundays or mail to Sheila Kun, 8545 Silver Ridge Dr., Rosemead, 91770 (e-mail
Louiskun@yahoo.com) or c/o Fr. Joseph Paradayil, SDB, St. Joseph’s Salesian
Youth Renewal Center/Noviate, P.O.Box 1639 Rosemead, CA 91770, OR contact
your local Salesian Cooperator Center to make a donation.
InTouch 5 Dec. 1,.2011

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AROUND THE PROVINCE
SOCIAL COMMUNICATION
An Advent Journey
Dear Salesian family,
Through these technologies youth
Advent is a good time to explore the
meaning of Salesian social communi-
cation. After all, the coming of Jesus
into the world was above all the com-
munication of God’s love for us, incar-
nating his love in human terms so we
have developed new places to be and
new ways to communicate. However
rich with connectivity these spaces
may be, they are not unlike the streets
of Industrial Turin where a wrong turn
could lead to trouble.
could better know and love him. Sale-
GC26 describes this reality and our
sian social communication is rooted in
Salesian response: “We also feel chal-
the incarnational love of God.
lenged by the new technologies of
In the life of Don Bosco this love trans-
social communication and by the edu-
lated into a lived experience with
cational challenges they pose. Today’s
young boys abandoned to the harsh Judy Wilber Alvarez
communication opportunities have
realities of Turin during the Industrial
Revolution. There Don Bosco was
the first to love,
Province Delegate
for Social Communication
become an habitual way for young
people to meet, exchange ideas, and
get involved quickly
drawing youth
and with great
into relationship
through reason,
MEDIA MATTERS
mobility, but
also in an imper-
religion and kind-
ness. His love
was creative not
Memoirs of the Oratory of St. Francis de Sales
The Autobiography of St. John Bosco
sonal and virtual
way. The culture
of personal me-
only of personal
(1989 edition with footnotes)
dia can com-
relationships
but also of com-
munity, creating
Now available to download at:
http://salesianfamily.org/resources
promise one’s
ability to mature
in personal re-
environments of
lationships and
welcome, friend-
ship, growth and
faith where the
young could dis-
cover their pur-
pose in God’s
loving plan. Don
Bosco, as dis-
San Juan Don Bosco - Padre y maestro de la juventud
This video chronology of the life and work of Don Bosco was pre-
pared by Salesian Social Communication experts in Brazil and then
translated from Portuguese into Spanish by Marcelo Mejia, the
Province Delegate for Social Communication in Ecuador. It is a valu-
able resource for the study of Don Bosco in our Spanish-speaking
communities. Enjoy!
exposes young
people especial-
ly to the danger
of very negative
encounters and
dependencies;
this is the ‘play-
ground’ where
ciple and apostle
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1Vvym4c-Zg
we need to be
of Jesus, brought
present in order
God’s love to the
to listen, enlight-
world of the young
in his day, and we are called now to
the ways we live the preventive sys-
tem, educating youth to the fullness
99).
en, guide” (GC 26,
do the same.
of life and faith. However, given the In this season of Advent let us go to
Salesian social communication wants circumstances of today’s world, Sale- these playgrounds with the creative
to foster the dynamic reality of this sian social communication particularly love of Don Bosco.
love in all our works. As such Salesian hopes to accompany the young who In Mary our Help,
social communication is rooted in all
so readily inhabit the digital spaces
made possible by new technologies.
Judy
InTouch 6 Dec. 1,.2011

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ADVENT
AFTERNOON OF REFLECTION
for SALESIAN YOUNG ADULTS
COME TAKE A MOMENT
AND STOP FROM YOUR BUSY SCHEDULES
AND SPEND AN AFTERNOON IN PRAYER AND REFLECTION
ON GOD’S WORD
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
NORCAL: DON BOSCO HALL
BERKELEY, CA
SOCAL: ST. JOSEPH YOUTH RENEWAL CENTER
ROSEMEAD, CA
TO REGISTER, PLEASE CONTACT
THE PROVINCE YOUTH MINISTRY OFFICE
SDBYOUTH@SALESIANYM.ORG OR CALL 415-866-3300
InTouch 7 Dec. 1,.2011

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MISSION ANIMATION
Inter-America Mission Animation Meeting
by Juan Carlos Montenegro
Cumbayá, Ecua-
dor – From Octo-
ber 30 through No-
vember 3, the 3rd
continental mis-
sionary seminar
for the Americas
was held in Ecua-
dor. Organized by
the Salesians’ Mis-
sions Council in
Rome, the meeting
brought together
delegates for mis-
sion animation
from 21 provinces
throughout North,
Central, and South
America. Also partaking in the meet-
ing were members of the General
Council for the Missions: Fr. Vaclav Kl-
ement, General Councilor of the Mis-
sions, Fr. Alfred Maravilla, Fr. Stanislaw
Rafalko. The meeting was facilitated
by Fr. Rafael Borges, member of the
General Council for Youth Ministry.
The meeting offered an in-depth look
at the role of the “DIAM,” or the Mis-
sion Animator, as it pertains to the
individual province and the congrega-
tion overall. As part of the gathering, 6
provinces presented their “best prac-
tices” in order to shed some light on
what other provinces are doing to help
foster a missionary culture.
It was very inspiring to see everything
that is going on in the different prov-
inces. Many ideas were gathered and
future goals were made that need
to be shared and discussed with our
Province Mission Animation Team.
It is amazing to see how much was
learned, taught, and shared.
On a personal level this meeting has
challenged me to see new ways to
develop a missionary culture in our
province. This is
a challenge that
I am going to
share with the
Missionary Ani-
mation Team to
see where we
can improve and
grow. There is a
lot of work to be
done. As Fr. Vi-
ganó said, “The
Salesian Missions
are an essential
feature of our
charism.”
DON BOSCO
Track JACKET
Cost of the Sweatshirt
$35 for S, M, L and XL
$40 for 2XL
To Place Your Order
Actual color is more sky blue.
Email or fax the following information
to Gina Robles at sdbyouth@salesianym.org
Name:_____________________________________________________
Address:___________________________________________________
City:____________________________State:____________Zip:_______
Phone:__________________________Email:______________________
Quantity:_____________ Size(s):_______________________________
Make checks payable to Salesian Youth Ministry and send to
P.O. Box 1639
Rosemead, CA 91770
InTouch 8 Dec. 1,.2011

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InTouch 9 Dec. 1,.2011

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In the missions I am learning what is true happiness
During my childhood Uruguayan
missionaries in Angola some-
times visited us. When I was 15
a Salesian priest invited me to join the
group Juventud Misionera Salesiana
where I had my first missionary experi-
ences in the poor suburbs of Montevi-
deo. At 18 I entered the aspirantate. At
24 I had in my heart the certainty that
my Salesian vocation meant leaving
everything and going out to wherever
Jesus wanted to take me. The follow-
ing years were years of much personal
prayer and discernment, in the mean-
time, the inner desire to realise this
call continued to increase. The help of
my spiritual director as well as that of
my Rector in the theologate, who ad-
vised me wisely and prudently, were
crucial.
I wanted to be a missionary ad gen-
tes, even if in Uruguay there are many
people who do not practice their faith
because being a missionary does not
come from an idea nor from a personal
desire but from the certainty of having
discovered the call of God that teach-
es us to share what we are and have
from our poverty and not from what is
superfluous for us. I want only to be
faithful to the vocation I have received
and follow it without looking back.
I feel that the Course for New Mission-
aries was a gift from God! It has helped
me become more clearly aware that
the missionary vocation ad gentes is
for life, that you cannot set out to the
deep and yet continually look back at
the shores you have left behind. It also
taught me to accept with humility that
one arrives in the new mission like a
child, with the need to learn, to listen,
to respect and that it is normal that
sometimes this situation produces im-
patience or anger. Finally, the course
has confirmed to me the idea so old
yet ever so relevant to make Jesus the
centre of my life, to give him all my
heart once and for all!
It is now 3 years that I live in the poor-
est neighborhood in the city of Luanda
called “Lixeira” which means “rubbish
dump”. However, for me, Lixeira is a
great school of life where God really
dwells. In this school I learnt in a short
time from our Oratory animators: One
day they came with sad and angry fac-
es. Talking with them one of them told
me, “one of those white people who
arrived ... we were in their home and
they told us that it was time for the
family meal so they told us to come
back later. We felt very bad”. There I
understood that in this school there
is always room for one more at home,
or 2 or 10! Here hospitality and care
for others is so natural which, unfor-
tunately, we have forgotten in our cul-
ture because we live surrounded with
gates, alarms and sometimes the best
friend is “virtual”. The hug, the smile,
the bread, the roof is not something
that is denied to anyone because to-
morrow it will be your turn to eat or
sleep in my house. This is the lesson
of solidarity from the poor, the friends
of Jesus!
Thus, in this school I am learning that
the essential things in life are few,
that happi-
ness is in
little things,
or rather in
one: Jesus
Christ! I knew
it before, but
now, here in
the “rubbish
dump” with
them, I feel it,
I experience
it and enjoy
it endlessly as
long as God permits.
Fr. Santiag Boix Puig
Uruguayan, missionary in Angola
Salesian Missionary Intention
BRAZIIL -- Missiionary Volluntteer Serviice
That all the Provinces of Brazil may foster the growth of the missionary volunteer movement.
The materials and video for Salesian Mission Day 2011 offer insights from the experiences of some Provinces of Brazil.
The growth in volunteer Service is understood both in the quality of educative
proposals - pastoral and vocational guidance of young people involved, and the
involvement of the whole Salesian community. We want to involve children and
young people of all ages, from experiences of the Missionary Childhood Society
to missionary voluntary service among young adults.
We want to accompany the groups from the experience of short intense periods
(Christmas, Easter, summer and winter holidays) to long-term commitment or
choice for life.
InTouch 10 Dec. 1,.2011