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February Study Guide 2012
Key
  Historical
  Figures
  (continued)
  
Excerpted
  from
  
Don
  Bosco
  
Builder,
  Arthur
  
Lenti...
  
Under that reign, Cavour carried the authority of the King, but
that would end by 1848. Despite Don Bosco’s appeal to his
obedience to the archbishop, the Marquis called a meeting of his
city council at the residence of the archbishop who was rather ill
at that moment. The council decided definitively to block all of
Don Bosco’s meetings as a threat to public securtiy. This ban would
last for 6 months until Cavour fell ill. In June 1847, the city guards
were called off.1 During this illness, Don Bosco often visited the
sick Marquis and garnered favor and even financial support from the
sick man. It was during this time that Don Bosco became familiar
with his sons Camilo and Gustavo. A subsidy of more that 300 lire
came to the Oratory annually until 1877. In the following year, an
anti-clerical shift was apparent.
King Charles Albert
King Charles Albert clung to a throne presiding over the
region of Piedmont at a precarious interval between the Napoleanic
occupation and the anti-clerical and unifying forces of a new form of
government on the rise—a government seeking national unity and
freedom from monarchies. The king was fully aware of the growing
sentiment, especially during those years of Restoration, and did all
in his power to suppress any movement toward a constitution. A
movement that would deal the king a rattling blow began in 1831
under Giuseppe Mazzini; it was another secret movement called
“Young Italy.”1 The notes in the Memoirs of the Oratory English
translation offer many insights into the significance of such secret
societies and their impact on the life of a young clerical student,
John Bosco. It is suggested there that his founding of the Societa
dell’allegria was an innocent imitation of such groups but for vastly
different reasons.
During the 1840s, King Charles Albert faced the rising
tensions between the Kingdom
of Sardinia and the Austrian
Empire.
Austria was
occupying Venice, Lombard,
and Tuscany among other
states in the northern peninsula.
A note of interest in the MO,
English Translation is the fact
that Don Bosco tolerated the
games of the boys playing with
wooden rifles, “the Italians”
versus “the Austrians.” At the
hieght of these games the
famous incident of the boys
destroying Mama Margaret’s
  
ArchBishop
  Gastaldi
  
For
   a
   closing
   comment,
   it
   bears
  
repeating
   that,
   neurotic
   and
   unreasoning
  
though
   he
   is
   made
   to
   appear
   in
   the
  
Biographical
  Memoirs,
  Gastaldi
  was
  proceeding
  
from
   clearly
   defined
   premises.
   He
   was
   truly
  
concerned
   with
   clergy
   reform
   and
   formation;
  
he
   was
   particularly
   sensitive
   and
   protective
  
with
   regard
   to
   his
   own
   seminary
   program;
   and
  
he
   saw
   Don
   Bosco’s
   recruiting
   and
   formation
  
practices
   as
   a
   threat.
   Add
   to
   this
   his
  
unimpeachable
   conviction
   that
   it
   was
   his
   right
  
and
   his
   duty,
   as
   ordinary,
   to
   ascertain
   the
  
suitability
   and
   worthiness
   of
   candidates
   for
  
ordination,
   whether
   secular
   or
   regular.
   After
  
all,
   as
   Desramaut
   aptly
   remarks,
   Salesian
  
candidates
   had
   not
   lived
   in
   a
   closed
   seminary
  
community;
   they
   did
   not
   reside
   in
   monasteries
  
away
   from
   the
   world;
   they
   claimed
   to
   be
  
preparing
   themselves
   intellectually
   and
  
spiritually
   while
   fully
   engaged
   in
   activities
   of
   a
  
largely
   secular
   nature.
   And
   the
   ordinary
   was
  
being
   asked
   to
   confer
   orders
   on
   such
  
candidates
   without
   the
   possibility
   of
  
ascertaining
   their
   suitability.
   Further,
   he
   could
  
not
   discount
   the
   real
   possibility
   that,
   once
  
ordained,
   they
   might
   choose
   to
   return
   to
   the
  
diocese.
   In
   conscience,
   therefore,
   as
   well
   as
   in
  
virtue
   of
   Church
   law
   in
   force,
   the
   archbishop
  
felt
   obliged
   to
   examine
   Salesian
   candidates
   on
  
the
  subject
  of
  their
  “vocation,”
  that
  is,
  religious
  
formation,
   and
   on
   their
   real
   suitability
   for
  
priestly
   ministry.
   Nor
   did
   he
   wish
   to
   see
  
presented
  as
  Salesian
  candidates
  for
  ordination
  
his
   former
   seminarians
   who,
   after
   leaving
   or
  
after
  having
  been
  dismissed
  from
  the
  seminary,
  
had
  been
  accepted
  by
  Don
  Bosco.1
  
No
   doubt,
   throughout
   the
   distressing
  
developments
   of
   the
   confrontation
   that
  
followed,
   misunderstandings,
   frustration,
  
anger,
   spite,
   and
   even
   unworthy
   motives
  
  
played
   a
   part.
   But
   the
   conflict
   can
   be
   neither
  
explained
   nor
   understood
   merely
   in
   those
  
terms.
  Real
  issues
  and
  real
  points
  of
  view
  were
  
involved
   that
   had
   larger
   reference
   than
   the
  
character
  of
  the
  protagonists.
  
  
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