I love to the end: Fr. António Cesar Fernández
I t is a hot day, February 15, 2019, in Nohao, in the province of
Boulgou, in Burkina Faso. Three Salesians arrive at the customs
office, coming from Lomé, Togo, going to the Ouagadougou
mission. An armed group of guerrillas also arrives. They kill five
government officials. The attackers take over the car of the
Salesians. They see a religious, already an old man; they take him
aside. The terrorists talk to each other in a low voice. They lead the
honored priest into the forest. Three shots are heard. Only the
guerrillas return; they put their motorcycles into high-decibel
movement and leave a cloud of dust behind them.
There, on the soil of Burkina Faso lies the body of the Salesian
Antonio César Fernández. It's a Friday and it's the ninth hour (15.00).
It is his Good Friday. Like the Savior; instead of 3 nails, there were 3
hits;
not on the hands and feet, but 2 on the stomach and one on the
head. For Christ, Calvary was
the culmination of his journey, of his ‘YES!’ to the Father and of his
dedication to humanity; Fr César reached the end of his pilgrimage to African lands, after 72 years of life,
55 as a Salesian of Don Bosco, 46 as a priest and 37 as a missionary. It is the end of a journey of love for the
Lord and for young Africans. Don Bosco said that when a Salesian dies at work it is a day of glory for the
Congregation; how much more so, if he succumbs giving his life in martyrdom.
The month of February (25th) the Church celebrates the Salesian Protomartyr Saints: Versiglia and Caravario.
They loved their adopted people; gave their lives for them. They were also taken to a forest and shot there.
Father César is the proto-martyr priest of 2019. In 2018, violence took the lives of 39 priests of the Church.
Cesar always liked to be the first. He was in the first group of Salesians to found the flourishing presence of
Don Bosco in Togo. He always wanted to be the first; but first in the eyes of Jesus: first in serving, first in
taking the first step, rather than be the last. "Whoever wants to be the first becomes a servant of all,
because the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve and give his life as a ransom for a
multitude" (Mk 10: 44-45).
The death of Fr. César brought great sorrow to his family and his compatriots at Pozoblanco in Spain. He is
mourned by his Salesian brothers who feel the loss of a dear brother, a point of reference in the province,
someone who knew how to inculturate Don Bosco's charism in those lands. He had been the master of
novices for 10 years. The simple people and youth of Burkina, Togo, Benin, Senegal, Mali, Guinea, Ivory
Coast and other places mourn him. He had walked among them doing good to all.
As Father Faustino said: "It was the point of arrival of a life offered out of affection and love ... He bore so
much fruit in life that they will continue after his death." He reminds us of Jesus' words: "If the grain of
wheat that falls to the earth does not die, it remains alone, but if it dies, it bears much fruit" (Jn 12,24).
His testimony has become a permanent proclamation of the Gospel. His joyful Salesian life is a call to the
young to live a full and happy life, loving with all their heart.
The testimony of consecration that he left us in that little
video circulating on the net is exciting. His words are spon-
taneous, simple and profound; they sum up a life of dona-
tion:
"I am 50 years a Salesian, I am perpetually professed. What
I can tell you is that living Salesian life, the Salesian voca-
tion, is a grace of the Lord, a never-ending chain of thanks.
The only thing I can say is that I have received many benefits
from the Lord – my contact with young people, the young
people in the several places where I was taught to be a Salesi-
an and to be what I am now ... This is an act of thanksgiving
because I do not deserve this vocation. So, thank you very much,
Lord. I encourage those who feel this vocation to truly realize
it ... Although it is not easy, it is a joy to be able to serve the
Congregation and the young.”
In heaven, he continues to give thanks for his Salesian vocation, for the blessings that the Lord granted him
in the missions; for the grace of living with and for the young ... and now he will also sing: "Thank you for
giving me the palm of martyrdom." "Thank you!"
Fr. Martín Lasarte sdb
Witness of Salesian Missionary Sanctity
Fr. Pierluigi Cameroni SDB, Postulator General for the Causes of Saints
Blessed Alexandrina Maria da Costa (1904-1955), Portuguese, Salesian Cooperator
and a great mystic of the Eucharist. This is how she expressed her longing for
holiness: "Your Resurrection, O my Jesus, raises my soul to that love and grace that
my heart desires so much. I want to be holy! ... I will suffer so that vanity, thirst
for domination, immodesty and wasteful use of money may disappear from the
world. I will suffer for the expansion of the missions so that the word of Jesus may
spread everywhere, the only truth ... My desire is that all men be holy."