AGCRM400-chavez-educate-en


AGCRM400-chavez-educate-en

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1. LETTER OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Let us educate with the heart of Don Bosco
«The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to preach
good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives
and recovery of sight to the blind; to set at liberty those who are oppressed,
to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord » (Lk 4, 18-19)
1. Educating with Don Bosco’s heart. 1.1. Vocation and the way to holiness. 1.2.
Preventive love. 1.3. Language of the heart. 2. Fostering the development of the
young to their full potential. 2.1. Shared trust in education. 2.2. Starting with those
at the bottom. 2.3. A new education. 2.3.1 Complexity and freedom. 2.3.2 Subjectivism
and truth. 2.3.3. Individual profit and solidarity. 2.4. The maturing of the faith of the
young in this context. 2.5. Response of the Salesian Family. 2.5.1. Returning among
the young with greater effectiveness. 2.5.2. Relaunch of the “honest citizen”. 2.5.3. Relaunch
of the “good Christian”. 3. Promoting human rights, in particular those of juveniles.
3.1.1 Human rights and personal dignity. 3.2. Salesian mission and children’s rights.
3.3. Let us try to present the same ideas in the language of human rights. 3.4.
Educating ourselves to educate for the transformation of every individual and of the
whole of society: for human development. 3.5. A text to which Don Bosco would be
ready to subscribe. By way of conclusion.
Rome, 25 December 2007
Solemnity of the Birth of Our Lord
Dear Confreres,
At the end of 2007, in which we have been working on behalf of life, in imitation of
our God, “the lover of life,” and on the threshold of 2008, which opens before us as an
“acceptable year of the Lord,” I address you with the heart of Don Bosco.
Since my last letter in which I presented to you the Africa – Madagascar Region, I
have had a very busy period with visits to the Provinces of the United States and to
the Vice Province of Canada, in the month of September; to the Vice Province of West
Africa on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the arrival of the Salesians in Nigeria,
and to those of Zambia and Mozambique, in the month of October; and finally to the
Province of the Middle East, which was followed by my journey to Argentina, in the
month of November.
To this one must add several important and significant events such as the departure
ceremony for the 138th missionary expedition, at the end of September, the
beatification of the Salesian Spanish Martyrs on 28 October, and that of Zephyrinus
Namuncurá, on 11 November.
These two beatifications serve to bring to a conclusion the whole of the six-year
period, which began with the beatification of three saints of practical charity (Bro
Artemides Zatti, Fr Louis Variara and Sr Maria Romero), and are a new appeal to give

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to our lives a high standard of ordinary Christian living to which John Paul II invited us
at the beginning of this third millennium.
In addition, while the Martyrs send us back to the letter on the Eucharist, since the
Eucharist does not exist without martyrdom and martyrdom does not exist without the
Eucharist, Zephyrinus incarnates holiness as the fruit of the action of the Spirit and of
Salesian pedagogy. There is no doubt that the missionaries sent by Don Bosco learned
from and reproduced the spiritual and pedagogical experience of Valdocco to bring
young saints to maturity. I don’t think there could be a greater stimulus for the new
Strenna that I now present to you.
As you will have seen from the title and from the contents that I already made known
to you, I should like to focus not so much on those to whom our educational work is
directed, as immediately on all the educators of the Salesian Family, who, like Jesus,
feel consecrated and sent by the Spirit of the Lord to evangelise, free from slavery,
restore sight and offer a year of grace to those to whom the work of education is
directed (cf. Lk 4, 18-19). The Strenna for 2008, therefore, is explicitly addressed to
members of Educative Pastoral Communities, to the Communities of educators, to
Pastoral Councils etc. in the vast world of the Salesian Family. It is intended to be an
appeal to re-enforce our identity as educators, to throw light on the Salesian
educative programme, to examine in some depth educational methods, to clarify the
goal of our efforts, to become more aware of the social failings of education.
We have been called precisely to this mission. The text of the Gospel of Luke that I
have chosen to introduce this Strenna, defines our vocation as educators in the style
of Don Bosco. Not by chance, in the Constitutions of the Salesians these verses were
chosen as the biblical quotation introducing “our pastoral education service.”
At the beginning of his public life, Jesus recognised in the text of the prophet Isaiah,
read in the synagogue at Nazareth, his messianic mission and declares in front of his
fellow citizens: «Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing » (Lk 4, 21).
This “today” of Jesus continues in our educative mission. Through our Baptism, we
have been consecrated with the anointing of the Spirit, and we have been sent to the
young to proclaim the newness of life that Christ offers us, to foster it and to develop
it through an education that liberates the young and the poor from every kind of
oppression and marginalisation. These situations of marginalisation prevent them
from seeking the truth, from being open to hope, from living with purpose and joy,
from constructing their own freedom.
The Strenna for 2008 follows closely on the Strennas for the two last years. Life is the
great gift of God, “the lover of life,” which he has entrusted to us as a seed so that we
may collaborate with him in making it grow and produce abundant fruit. This seed
needs “to fall into good soil,” in which it can germinate and bear fruit; this soil is the
family, the cradle of life and love, the first place where one learns to be human . The
family welcomes the gift of life with joy and gratitude, and provides the natural setting
suitable for its growth and development. But as with the seed, good soil is not
enough; there is also need for the patient and laborious efforts of the farmer, who
waters it, cares for it and helps it to grow. This farmer who helps life to grow is the
educator. This is what Don Bosco had to say about it: «Just as there is no barren or
sterile land which cannot be made fertile through patient effort, so it is with a man’s
heart. No matter how barren or restive at first, it will sooner or later bring forth good
fruit. It will begin by loving what is naturally good and ultimately advance to what is
supernaturally good, provided that a spiritual director (an educator) will cooperate
with God’s grace by prayer and effort in making it fruitful and beautiful » ( BM V, 236-
7).

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I think it appropriate here to repeat what I have already said elsewhere. This year’s
Strenna is not meant to propose a new topic as though those of previous years were
definitely over and done with. I am convinced that pastoral educational work cannot
be understood and carried out spasmodically, with stops and starts; it is just like
farming which requires a long-term approach, planning, care and attention, and above
all, great dedication and love. In this case we are dealing with the best form of
agriculture: culture that is the cultivation of men and women. In this way the topic
chosen this year is certainly a continuation of those of the family and of life.
Here then the Strenna for 2008:
Let us educate with the heart of Don Bosco
to develop to their full potential the lives of young people,
especially the poorest and most disadvantaged,
promoting their rights.
At the beginning of this commentary on this annual spiritual and pastoral programme,
that the Strenna is meant to be, I recall a significant appeal made by P. Duvallet, for
twenty years the collaborator of Abbé Pierre in the apostolate of the re-education of
the young, that he addressed to us Salesians: «You have works, colleges, oratories for
the young, but you have only one treasure: the pedagogy of Don Bosco. In a world in
which youngsters are betrayed, squeezed dry, crushed, exploited, the Lord has
entrusted to you a pedagogy in which respect for the young person, for his greatness
and his frailty, for his dignity as a son of God prevail.
Preserve it, renew it, rejuvenate it, enrich it with all the latest discoveries, adapt it to
these twentieth century creatures and their tragedies that Don Bosco could not know
about. But for heaven’s sake, preserve it! Change everything, if necessary lose all
your houses but preserve this treasure, forming in thousands of hearts the way to
love and to save the young, which is Don Bosco’s heritage.»1
It would be difficult to find a more pressing appeal than this. Aware of the greatness
of our vocation as educators and the gift we have received in Don Bosco’s pedagogy,
truly a “pedagogy of the heart,” we want to commit ourselves to seeing the prophetic
words of this eloquent testimony become a reality today.
In practical terms the Strenna is intended to focus on:
the subject of Salesian pedagogy and the Preventive System, as a response to
the need we educators have for further reflection and formation on it so as not
to lose its richness;
the valid contribution that we can make, through education, in responding to
the huge challenges of life and of the family;
the promotion of human rights, in particular the rights of juveniles, as a way of
seeing that our commitment to education makes a positive contribution to all
cultures.
1. Educating with Don Bosco’s heart
Educating with the heart of Don Bosco means for the educator cultivating in one’s own
heart and then allowing them to overflow “reason, religion, loving kindness,” making
1 AA.VV. “Il Sistema educativo di Don Bosco tra pedagogia antica e nuova”, Atti del Convegno
Europeo Salesiano sul sistema educativo di Don Bosco, LDC Torino 1974, p. 314

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loving kindness the key factor, the practical application of what religion and reason
propose. It is a matter of living the Preventive System, which is a love that knows
how to make itself loved (cf. C. 20), with a renewed presence among the young,
consisting in affective and effective closeness, in participation, in accompaniment, in
animation, in giving witness, in vocational promotion, in the Salesian style of
assistance. Above all what is needed is a renewed option especially for the young who
are poor and at risk, seeking out situations of evident or hidden deprivation, having
confidence in the positive resources of every young person, even the most damaged
by life, committing our whole lives to their education.
“Don Bosco’s love for these youngsters was a matter of practical and timely gestures.
He was concerned about their whole lives, responding to their more obvious needs
and sensing those hidden. To say that his heart was given entirely to the young
means that everything that was his, intelligence, heart and will, physical strength, his
whole being was directed towards what was best for them, fostering the development
of their full potential, wanting their eternal salvation. For Don Bosco, therefore, being
a man of the heart meant being totally consecrated to the well-being of his boys and
devoting to them all his energies, until the last breath!”2
To understand the well-known expression of Don Bosco “education is a matter of the
heart of which God alone is the master” (BM XVI, 376)3 and therefore to understand
the Preventive System, to me it seems important to listen to one of the best known
experts on the holy educator: “Don Bosco’s pedagogy is identified with everything he
did; and everything he did with his personality; and the whole of Don Bosco is totally
summed up in his heart.”4 This then is his greatness and the secret of his success as
an educator: Don Bosco knows how to balance authority and kindness, love of God
and love for the young.
1.1. Vocation and the way to holiness
There is no doubt that the explanation for the capacity of Salesian education to bridge
the years, to become inculturated in the most varied contexts and to respond to the
needs and the expectations of young people that are always new is the unique
holiness of Don Bosco.
A happy combination of personal gifts and circumstances led Don Bosco to become
the “Father, Teacher and Friend of Youth,” as John Paul II proclaimed him in 1988. His
innate talent for getting close to young people and gaining their trust, his priestly
ministry which gave him a profound knowledge of the human heart, and his
experience of the effectiveness of grace in a boy’s development, with a practical talent
for putting his ideas into practice in a simple manner, the long time spent among the
young, all of these enabled him to bring his initial inspirations to their full
development.
At the root of all of this is a vocation. For Don Bosco, service to the young was a
generous response to a call from the Lord. It is the combination of holiness and
education, in all that regards his commitments, a spiritual life of sacrifice, an
expression of love, that constitute his singular personality. He is a saintly educator
and an educator saint.
From this combination he forged the origin of a “system”, that is a set of ideas and
practical applications that can be presented in a book, narrated in a film, described in
2 P. RUFFINATO, Educhiamo con il cuore di don Bosco, in “Note di Pastorale Giovanile”, n. 6/2007, p. 9.
3 Cf. G. BOSCO, Dei castighi da infliggersi nelle case salesiane, in P. BRAIDO, Don Bosco educatore.
Scritti e testimonianze, LAS, Roma 1992, p. 340.
4 Cf. P. BRAIDO, Prevenire non reprimere. Il sistema educativo di Don Bosco, LAS, Roma 1999, p. 181.

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a poem or represented in a musical. It is something that has attracted collaborators
full of enthusiasm and made young people dream.
Taken up by his disciples for whom education is also a vocation, this system was
carried to a great variety of cultures and translated into different educational projects,
according to the circumstances of the young people to whom it was directed.
When once again we examine the life of Don Bosco or the history of one of his works,
some questions arise spontaneously: And nowadays? To what extent do his ideas still
apply? Which of the practical solutions he actually made use of can solve the problems
that we are facing, seemingly insurmountable: dialogue between the generations, the
possibility of communicating values, the transmission of a view of realty, etc.?
I won’t delay in listing all the differences between Don Bosco’s time and ours. They
are certainly not slight, and they are to be found in all areas: in the condition of
youth, in the family, in behaviour, in the way education is considered, in social life, in
religious practice. If, in an attempt to make a faithful historical reconstruction, it is
difficult to understand a past experience, it is even harder to relive it and translate it
into practice in a context that is radically different
And yet we are convinced that what happened in Don Bosco’s case was a moment of
grace full of potential; one that can contain inspirations for parents and educators to
translate into present day terms; that there are ideas ripe for expansion, almost like
seeds waiting to burst into life.5
1.2. Preventive love
One of the lessons to learn is certainly that about prevention, the need for it, its
advantages, its impact and therefore the responsibilities involved. Nowadays, faced
with clear and alarming statistics, this need is becoming quite obvious, but to accept it
in principle and put it into practice effectively is no easy matter in the present state of
society. Unfortunately this is not the prevailing culture. Far from it!
And yet prevention costs less and is more productive than mere containment of
delinquency and any later rehabilitation. In fact, it allows the majority of young people
to be freed from the burden of negative experiences, which put at risk their physical
health, their psychological development, the fulfilment of their potential, their eternal
happiness. It also allows them to give full rein to their talents, to profit to the utmost
from all the educational opportunities afforded them, to recover in the early stages
from any possible failings. This was the conclusion Don Bosco came to after his
experience with the youngsters in jail, and contact with the young manual labourers of
Turin.
Prevention, from being almost a form of policing aimed at maintaining order in
society, became for him the essential and fundamental characteristic of education. It
was preventive because of its timeliness but also because of the form it took and the
way he made use of it. He had to anticipate negative situations, whether physical or
spiritual, and behaviour arising; and at the same time he had to provide more ways of
harnessing the good qualities of individuals and guiding them into attractive and
useful projects. He was convinced of the goodness in the hearts of young people, of
each young person, that even in the most wretched youngsters there are seeds of
goodness and that the task of the wise educator is to discover them and nurture
them. It was necessary to create a generally positive climate through a family
atmosphere, friends, things to do, things to learn, that would encourage their self-
5 Cf. P. BRAIDO, Prevenire non reprimere. Il sistema educativo di don Bosco, LAS, Roma 1999, p. 391.

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awareness, broaden their knowledge of the real world, give them a feeling for life and
a taste for goodness.
Just think of the story of Michael Magone, the “little general” at the Carmagnola
station, to whom Don Bosco offered first of all his friendship, then a education at the
Valdocco Oratory, then his skilful guidance (“Dear Magone, I’d like you to do me a
favour, … just let me look into your heart for a moment”), finally helping him to find in
God the meaning of his life and the source of real happiness (“Oh how happy I am!”)
and making him into a model for young people of yesterday and of today.
One of the problems in our society today is the inadequacy of the educational service
provided. It doesn’t reach everyone, loses many by the wayside and doesn’t provide
what, given their particular situation, many require. It cannot cope with those who
start with a handicap or cannot keep up the pace. What is needed in order to deal
with this situation through various preventative measures and provide an appropriate
education, is the combined efforts of families, politicians, social services, educational
agencies, church communities and individuals. Education, especially for disadvantaged
youngsters, rather than being a question of employment or of a professional
qualification, is mainly one of a vocation. Don Bosco was a charismatic figure and a
pioneer. He went beyond legislation and custom. Urged on by a strong social
conscience, but with a very personal approach which was the fruit of a vocation, he
created everything that is associated with his name. And perhaps what is required
nowadays is no different: putting to work all the forces available, encouraging
vocations to education and supporting projects of service.
The preventive effectiveness of education lies in its quality. Society’s complexity, the
multiplicity of views and messages on offer, the separation of the various areas of life
into different compartments, have brought dangers also for education. One of these is
the fragmentation of what is offered and the different ways in which it is received. We
are living on a diet of pills including those for the mind. The slogan is the model of the
messages.
Another danger is the selection of what is provided according to one’s own individual
preferences: this is subjectivism. The optional has passed from the market place to
life. Everyone is aware of the difficult alternatives to be reconciled: personal profit and
solidarity, love and sexuality, a material view and a sense of God, a superabundance
of information and the difficulty in assessing its value, rights and duties, freedom and
conscience.
Don Bosco’s way was to encourage in the young person anything that was positive or
showed ambition, putting him in contact with a cultural heritage consisting of ideas,
customs and beliefs, and offering him the opportunity of a deep faith-experience,
helping him take his place in a society of which he could feel a part through his work,
through co-responsibility for the common good and a commitment to creating
harmony in society. He expressed this in simple formulae that the young could
understand and follow: “good Christians and honest citizens,” “health, wisdom,
holiness,” “reason and faith.”
The personal benefits gained from education were to be directed towards making a
contribution to society in a spirit of solidarity; living honestly with material success in
this world had a spiritual, transcendent, Christian dimension; education and training
for a profession were linked to a Christian view of the world, to the formation of
conscience and to the building of human relationships.
So as not to fall into an exaggerated idealism, Don Bosco began from where it was
possible, adapted to the condition of the young person and the situation of the
educator. In his oratory it was possible to play, they were made welcome,

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relationships were forged, religious instruction was given, they could learn to read and
write, how to work, norms for proper civilised behaviour were given, thought was also
given to the law which regulated labourers’ work and attempts were made to improve
it.
Today there can be instruction that doesn’t take life’s problems into consideration. It
is a recurring complaint of the young. There can be professional preparation that does
not have a moral or cultural dimension. There can be an education that is limited to
the present moment and does not deal with life’s questions.
If life and society have become complicated, someone without map or compass is
bound to get lost or become dependent on others. Formation of the mind, of the
conscience and of the heart is more necessary than ever.
A “problem area” of education today is communication: between the generations
because of the rapidity of change, between individuals because of a loosening in
relationships, between institutions and their clients because of different perceptions
regarding their purpose. Communication, it is said, is confused, disturbed, open to
ambiguity because of excessive noise, the sheer volume of messages, and because
transmitter and receiver are not on the same wavelength. As a result there are
misunderstandings, silences, limited and selective hearing as though through
“zapping”, non-aggression pacts for more peace and quiet. In this way it is difficult to
offer advice about attitudes, recommend ways of behaving, transmit values.
1.3. Language of the heart
The language of the heart too has changed not a little since Don Bosco’s day. Yet he
does offer suggestions that in their simplicity are winners, if one can find the way to
put them into practice. One such suggestion is: "love the boys." “We obtain more with
a friendly glance,” - we read in the so-called “Letter on punishments” – “with a word
of encouragement, than with a flood of reprimands” (BM XVI, 373).6
Loving them means accepting them as they are, spending time with them, showing
that you want to share their tastes and interests and enjoy doing so, demonstrating
trust in what they can do, and also tolerating what is short-lived or casual, silently
forgiving their involuntary mistakes due to their impetuosity or immaturity. This is
what Don Bosco thought: "All youngsters have their crises, as you too have had your
own. Heaven help us if we do not make an effort to aid them over these moments
swiftly and blamelessly " (BM XVI, 373).7
There’s an expression not much used nowadays that Salesians are proud to preserve
because it sums up what Don Bosco learned about the educational relationship and
gave as his advice: loving kindness. Its source is charity as the Gospel presents it,
by which the educator perceives God’s plan in the life of each young person and helps
him to become aware of it and to put it into practice with the same liberating and
magnanimous love with which God thought of it in the first place. Loving kindness is
love recognised and expressed.
Loving kindness generates an affection that is demonstrated in the way a youngster
reacts, especially the poor; it is an approach that shows trust, takes the first step,
says the first word, shows respect in ways that can be understood, that encourages
6 Cf. G. BOSCO, Dei castighi da infliggersi nelle case salesiane, in P. BRAIDO, Don Bosco educatore.
Scritti e testimonianze, LAS, Roma 1992, p. 335.
7 Cf. G. BOSCO, Dei castighi da infliggersi nelle case salesiane, in P. BRAIDO, Don Bosco educatore.
Scritti e testimonianze, LAS, Roma 1992, p. 336.

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confidence, fosters a sense of self-confidence, it suggests and then gives support to
the desire to become involved and the strength to overcome difficulties.
In this way, but not without difficulty, a relationship develops to which it is necessary
to pay attention as one tries to translate Don Bosco’s intuitions into our own context.
It is a relationship marked by a friendship that develops into one of fatherliness.
Friendship grows with expressions of familiarity and is nourished by them. So in its
turn comes trust. And trust is everything in education, since it is only when the young
person opens the doors of his heart to us and entrusts his secrets to us that it is
possible to interact. For us friendship has a very practical expression: assistance.
It is not possible to understand the significance of Salesian assistance from the
meaning given to the word by the dictionary or from its current use. It is a term
coined within a particular experience and it has a significance and application that are
quite unique. It implies a desire to be with the young people: "I like being here with
you." It is being physically present where the youngsters gather together, exchange
ideas or make their plans; and at the same time it has a moral dimension with the
ability to understand, and encourage, and to offer guidance and advice according to
individual need.
Assistance eventually becomes an educative fatherliness, that is more than friendship.
It is an affectionate and authoritative expression of responsibility that offers
important guidance and teaching and makes demands about discipline and
commitment. This fatherliness is love and authority.
It can be seen best of all in "knowing how to speak to the heart " in a personal way,
since that is the way it deals with what is on the youngsters’ minds, it explains what is
happening in their lives, it helps them understand the value of the way they behave
and feel, touching the depths of their consciences.
Not saying too much, but to the point; not harshly but clearly. In Don Bosco’s
pedagogy there are two examples of this way of speaking: “the good night,” the few
words addressed to everyone at the end of the day commenting on what has
happened, and “the little word in the ear,” that personal word that was spoken at
informal moments in recreation. They are both very sensitive moments when real and
immediate events are spoken about and wise everyday advice is given on how to deal
with them; in fact they are an aid to living and teach the art of living.
Friendship, assistance and fatherliness create the family atmosphere, where values
become intelligible and the demands acceptable. In this way the right balance is
struck between an authoritarian attitude which runs the risk of not really exerting an
influence even though it may apparently get results, and one that lacks a clear
purpose; between intrusiveness that leaves no room for free expression and an
educational abdication of responsibility with no effort to transmit values; between an
overly friendly approach and responsible adult behaviour.
The fatherliness of Don Bosco was expressed in a context in which the style of the
patriarchal family was the norm. Its characteristics served as models for all kinds of
authority: in civil society, the world of business, education. Everything then had its
“family style": education, business, the economy. It was taken for granted that the
educator ought to assume a "paternal role.”
For us too fatherliness is still irreplaceable: it is a love that gives life and takes
responsibility for its development, it loves from the heart as it should, it assists the
maturing process, accepts independence, joyfully welcomes the one who returns.
Prevention, proposals, relationships all come together wherever young people are to
be found. Youngsters need to be able to express their liveliness, what they are feeling

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inside, thinking about and planning. Youngsters need to have the opportunity to
experience exercising responsibility, putting into practice the values they have
learned, practising solidarity, managing their own lives.
For a Salesian educator the “best educational key” for getting to know the young
person is not the psychological test but the playground, where he behaves
spontaneously. Educational contact is not mainly that in formal circumstances but the
spontaneous. The process of a young person’s growth certainly needs to include
respect for the rules and docility towards the educator, but it is reflected much more
in the capacity to take part joyfully in the various activities and in the life that is
created in the group, in the club, in the youth community, where the educators have
the not easy task of motivating, moving, encouraging, widening horizons, encouraging
creativity.
The works that still today draw their inspiration from Don Bosco preserve the
characteristics that he gave to his foundations. They try to respond to the needs of
the young with a practical and ideally all-inclusive programme: teaching,
accommodation, preparation for work, and recreation. They also bring adults together,
especially those belonging to the working class, or are interested in helping the young
people. They are "open" and not exclusive. They network, collaborating with
institutions, the local area, the people and the authorities.
Today the need is felt to have "spaces” for the young: small, medium sized and large.
Discotheques and various groups would be examples. There is the problem of the
harm done by solitude, which is at the origin of much deviant behaviour. Educational
analysis has hit the mark when, without being too categorical, it makes a distinction
between official places organised for specific purposes and “vital places” open to
spontaneity, to a search for meaning, to projects, to creativity: obligatory places and
freely chosen places; imposed places and vital places. The space Don Bosco created is
a combination of both kinds: so that in daily life the distinctions education analysis
talks about are overcome.
2. Fostering the development of the young to their full potential
Faced with the situation of the young, Don Bosco made his choice of education. It is
the kind of education that forestalls evil by trusting in the good that exists in the heart
of every young person, that with patience and perseverance develops his full
potential, that builds up the individuality of each one. It produces sound individuals,
active and responsible citizens, people open to the values of life and of faith, men and
women capable of giving meaning to their lives, with joy, a sense of responsibility and
competence. It is an education that becomes a real spiritual experience, that touches
the “love of a God who provides in advance for all his creatures, is ever present at
their side, and freely gives his life to save them.” (C. SDB 20). Reproducing this
choice of Don Bosco nowadays requires deciding on some fundamental options.
2.1. Shared trust in education
Our age appears to have confidence in education; for this reason there is an attempt
to extend it to everyone. Efforts are constantly being made to adapt it to the
challenges that emerge from the work place, from developments in knowledge and
the way society is organised. It is being entrusted more and more to specialist
institutions. It focuses on the communication of culture, on scientific information and
professional preparation. Responsibility for it is being extended more and more to
families, social institutions and the state.

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In this way education has become a social phenomenon, a recognised right and the
aspiration of everyone. Questions connected with it have become everyone’s concern.
Management and business people are interested in it as is the ordinary citizen and
public opinion too. Basically it is a question of recognising the unique value of the
individual and his central place in the evolution of culture, of social life and even of
production processes.
The Church has been no less concerned, and there has been no shortage of
guidelines in this area too. Its involvement in education has been decisive in many
places as regards both its expansion and its quality. The intrinsic connection that
exists between evangelisation and education has led the Church to see education not
as an optional commitment but as being at the heart of its mission; it sees itself and
wants to be the educator of man.
The most obvious signs of this commitment are the holy educators, who have made
the task of education the expression of their preferential option for God, the daily
exercise of their love for mankind and the path of their own sanctification. And
following behind them have been the institutes and the movements of the Church for
whom education has become a mission and a style of life.
Don Bosco and the Salesian Family are to be found among these church movements
inspired by a saintly educator. They want to respond to the deepest aspirations of
people, especially the poorest of them, taking their place at the present time and
taking up the invitation for a new evangelisation.
2.2. Starting with those at the bottom
In spite of this generalised confidence in education, nonetheless we still have the
impression that, in its regard, there is a gap between aspirations and possibilities,
between declarations and their implementation, between intentions and fulfilment,
between rights recognised and rights guaranteed. This is best seen in certain
contexts.
Therefore the first appeal to respond to is that concerning the lack of the minimum
services and the essential conditions for education. At the beginning of the third
millennium the educational desert, like the geographical one, is not getting any
smaller but is expanding.
In vast areas of the world the chances of an education are being dramatically reduced
both in absolute terms and in relation to the increase in the population. Internal
conflicts, a breakdown in services, administrations that are bankrupt and greedy,
social and political decay are leading to an increase in under-development, in which
the first victims are the young.
There is also a reduction in the chances of an education in advanced societies. The
deficiencies are seen in wasted scholastic opportunities, in the lack of family support,
in the many forms of delinquency, in youth unemployment and in unskilled child
labour often linked to criminal activities.
From these situations a strong appeal is raised. There is a need for the sharing of the
basic benefits of education, for a redistribution of attention, time and resources so
that they are devoted to those who are without them in particular places and in the
world at large.
A family like ours that has accepted the poor as its inheritance and has made huge
efforts for a poor continent like Africa, cannot ignore this phenomenon, without at
least making some prophetic gestures.

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2.3. A new education
The modern enthusiasm for education, while representing worldwide something
positive, is not without its ambiguities as regards the way it is generally organised
and the practical direction it takes.
It has been said that to educate is to help each one to develop to the full his potential
as a person by forming his conscience, developing his intelligence, helping him
understand his own destiny. Around this central core problems arise and different
concepts come into conflict with regard to education.
Nowadays one can see a kind of imbalance between freedom and a moral sense,
between power and conscience, between technological progress and social progress.
This imbalance often takes other forms: the emphasis on having with little attention
given to being, the desire to possess and the inability to share, consumption without
managing to appreciate.
It is a matter of contrasting alternatives which, if a person is able to harmonise them,
can become a great source of strength. But they are destructive if they succeed in
changing one’s values, and especially if the fundamental ones are denied or
diminished. Structural factors, cultural currents, forms of social life can have a
powerful influence in one direction. Education will always require a positive attitude of
discernment, to proposals and prophecy. I shall now consider some of these contrasts
to which we need to pay attention in order to renew what we offer through education.
2.3.1. Complexity and freedom
Many have the impression that we are living in a world that is extremely confused
when it comes to what is good and what is evil. Sociologists talk about complexity, a
social and cultural situation in which there are many messages, and many languages
with which the messages are communicated, many basic conceptions of life, with
different, autonomous agencies promoting them, innumerable and incompatible
interests behind them. And there is no authoritative body capable of proposing with
authority a common view of the world and of human life, a system of moral norms, a
view about existence, a "list" of common values and having them accepted.
In this situation the process of education becomes difficult. Adults don’t feel that they
have a firm grasp on a secure cultural heritage. In addition, there is little time to pass
it on and there are so many distractions. Therefore what they do succeed in
communicating seems to be subjected to rapid wear and tear. The educational
package on offer is not always seen as attractive nor understood as a whole. It
struggles to gain acceptance.
The most obvious consequence for everyone but especially for the younger
generations is the strain of finding one’s way among the masses of stimuli, problems,
points of view, special offers. Life’s various features appear confused and it is not easy
to evaluate them.
The problem experienced in trying to communicate cultural values by families,
schools, society and religious institutions makes it difficult to plan an ordered life. This
is seen in the way people give up in the face of conflicts and frustrations, in the effort
it takes to make and maintain long-term commitments, in the putting off of life
choices, in the inability to recognise oneself in the role models society offers.

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The educational problem of one’s identity is not a new one. In all ages young people
have had to deal with it in order to come to terms with their own identity and find and
take their proper place in society.
What is new are the circumstances in which nowadays this is taking place. In fact
there is a combination of factors that are at one and the same time advantages and
disadvantages. On the one hand there are far more things on offer and greater
freedom. It is as though youngsters were being told: “choose and help yourself.”
There is the promise of autonomy and an offer of self-fulfilment, but in isolation. What
is missing nowadays is not freedom but knowledge and responsibility, support and
guidance.
Soon therefore the individual comes up against his own limitations and against the
obstacles presented by a post-industrial society: competition and selection in every
field, the job market, the lengthening of the period of dependence, the narrow
opportunities for becoming involved in public life, the lack of available alternatives.
This gives rise to feelings of insecurity that make the young in our society vulnerable
to exploitation in a variety of ways. Persuasive arguments aimed at their acquiring
products determine not a few of their choices, not only of products but also of models:
the type of man or woman, the ideal of beauty, of happiness, the scale of values,
ways of behaving and of taking one‘s place in society.
2.3.2. Subjectivism and truth
The emergence of subjectivism is one of the keys to the interpretation of current
culture. It is linked to the recognition of the individuality of each person and of the
value of his experience and inner life. It is seized upon by those groups who for a long
time have felt “victimised” by the laws, by impositions on their identity or by society’s
conventions that prevent them expressing themselves. However, left to its own
devices, without any reference to truth, to society or to history subjectivism cannot
find fulfilment.
This privatisation or subjective approach can best be seen in matters of morality and
the formation of conscience. The most obvious example, although not the only one, is
that of sexuality. In this area restraint imposed by society has collapsed and at times
also that by the family. There is public tolerance for the right to make different
choices. Indeed, the press, books, the theatre often play up transgressions and
present what is deviant behaviour as the consequence of various conditions. Any kind
of moral dimension even in purely human terms is given little consideration when it is
not completely ignored, even in official programmes widely publicised. The only
concern seems to be to have a satisfying sex life without any risks to physical or
mental health. It is thus detached from those elements that give it meaning and
dignity.
The lack of any reference to the truth is also seen in the rules regarding economic
and social activity. Often they are based on personally chosen criteria and on
agreements between the most powerful parties involved. They do not always
correspond to the common good nor to the benefit of the economy or of society.
The quality of education will depend on bridging the gap between freedom of choice
and the formation of conscience, between objective truth and the individual. Guidance
needs to be given in helping to understand the practical consequences of the choices
made and keeping in check unbridled subjectivism, and in recognising the objective
reality of situations and values.

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2.3.3. Individual profit and solidarity
Complexity and subjectivism have an influence on achieving the right balance
between seeking one’s own advantage and being ready to be open to other peoples’
needs.
There was a time when it was thought possible to organise a free and just society,
which through laws and structures could provide the right conditions for the well being
of all. Many young people passionately took up the cause of the transformation of
society and the liberation of the peoples. Preparation for a political role was part of
human formation and of the practice of the faith; it was a sign of a mature sense of
responsibility and of generous idealism.
Then came the winter of utopias, the collapse of ideologies and with them of collective
projects, the moral problem, the setting of institutions one against the other. Political
differences led to squabbling. Politics became a spectacle, and not always a very
edifying one. This was followed by its loss of respect and people becoming disaffected
as was evident in their lack of participation. An appreciation of the concept of the
common good suffered and nothing equivalent took its place; on the contrary, only
the “crumbs” of a reciprocal social good-will are offered.
Nowadays we are living in the era of the “market,” as a mentality and as an organised
view of society. At present an individualistic concept of social action is gaining ground.
Society is coming to be considered a the sum of individuals, each of whom is intent on
seeking his own personal interests, the satisfaction of his needs, potentially without
limit. It is the primacy of individual desires and rights.
In this never-ending tendency towards the satisfaction of artificial needs one becomes
deaf to fundamental and genuine needs. The ideals of social justice and of solidarity
finish by becoming empty formulae, considered impracticable.
Not without foundation therefore is the conclusion of many people who see in the
market the principal moral, cultural and legal obstacle to the growth among adults
and young people alike at national and international level of a mentality of mutual
cooperation.
2.4. The maturing of the faith of the young in this context
Complexity, subjectivism and the individualistic idea of the person have an influence
in young people on the process of the maturing of their faith, which is basically
openness to, communion with and acceptance of life and history in all its reality.
One is struck nowadays by two phenomena. There is a widespread religious sense
that takes the most varied forms. It responds to the search for meaning in a society
that does not provide it, to a vague perception of another dimension to life that
remains unexpressed. However, together with this one notices the lack of an
objective foundation and motivation, and therefore a gap between religious
experience, the understanding of life and moral choices. Religious truths too are
reduced to opinions. The nature of the Church’s contribution becomes problematic,
and even more so that of its individual ministers or representatives; it is made use of
selectively.
There is a minority who study, enjoy, and develop a mature Christian life and express
it in faith, in a sense of Church, and in social commitment. However, there is also a
large number of young people who, after having heard the proclamation, drift away

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from the faith without any regrets. The period of religious formation has become
longer and one cannot always count on there being suitable material that covers it
completely.
All this gives the faith a very subjective flavour. Disconnected from the solid
foundation of the historical events of salvation, it becomes extremely fragile, a kind of
commodity for consumption that each one makes use of as he pleases. In this way it
becomes just one of the various aspects of life and thought that have their own
separate existence. The danger of the gap between life and faith, between this and
culture is the situation in which we all find ourselves, in which young people today are
growing up. And this too at a time when the Church is showing marked signs of a
strong sense of community, of social commitment and missionary endeavour.
2.5. Response of the Salesian Family
What responses to these appeals can young people expect from the Salesian Family?
What forces can we deploy?
Nowadays there are more and more educators, especially professional ones. There are
also informal educators, who don’t have a specific role and aren’t professionals. Just
as there are published agenda and hidden ones. More and more at the centre of the
educational process and passing judgement on it is the individual who chooses and
processes the things presented to him or that he discovers for himself. Less than ever
nowadays can education be delegated to someone with the hope that he will be able
to control the way it goes. Young people quietly appoint their own educators when
they open their minds and hearts to us, when they want to hear a word from us or
see us do something that they consider makes sense for their own lives. This
responsibility can come to someone at any moment.
The influence of educators delegated for the task of education and of those chosen by
the individual depends on three factors: the credibility of what is taught in relation to
the situation in which the young person is living, the authority of the witnessing
teacher, the capacity for communication.
This therefore is the challenge for the adult: offering guidance and suggestions
without hiding from the complexity and the demands of subjectivism and without
allowing oneself to offer vague generalisations. This means being open to the positive,
firmly grounded in what gives human life its real significance, having a capacity for
discernment. Here are three things to which the Salesian Family needs to pay special
attention.
2.5.1. Returning among the young with greater effectiveness
It was while he was among the boys that Don Bosco fashioned his way of life, his
pastoral and pedagogical heritage, his system, his spirituality. For Don Bosco, his
exclusive commitment to the mission for youth was always and everywhere a reality,
even when for some particular reason he was not physically in contact with the boys,
and when the work he was engaged in was not directly at the service of the young,
and when he tenaciously defended his charism as founder for all the young people of
the world in the face of pressure from ecclesiastics not always well informed. The
Salesian mission is consecration, it is a “special love” for the young; and this special
love, in its original form, is a gift from God which our intelligence and our heart need
to develop and bring to perfection.

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The true Salesian does not desert the field of youth. A Salesian is someone who
knows young people from personal experience: his heart beats in time with theirs.
The Salesian lives for them, devotes himself to their problems; they give meaning to
his life: work, school, affective life, free time/recreation. A Salesian is also someone
who has both a theoretical knowledge of young people and a lived experience which
enables him to discover their real needs and to create a youth ministry adapted to
the needs of the times.
Fidelity to our mission, for it to be really effective, needs to be in touch with the “key
issues” of today’s culture, with the patterns of current thinking and attitudes. We are
being faced with colossal challenges that require serious analysis, a competence in
making critical observations, an in-depth examination of the culture and an ability to
appreciate the situation psychologically. In a context like this, educative
communication gives preference to certain channels.
The first is that of pooling interests and research instead of presenting prefabricated
solutions; of dialogue at all levels instead of providing limited information; of
transparency and real explanations instead of half-truths.
In their efforts to arrive at/form their own vision of the world, young people listen,
react, reflect and experiment. They feel as though they were in a market where they
can see the price and the quality of what is on offer and can take those that they like.
Personal witness and the word which are capable of providing light and hope will find
an audience.
The educator of the future will be the one who knows how to navigate between the
multiplicity of messages and views, towards a choice of values and criteria able to
sustain a continuous growth. And it will be precisely in the education to values that he
will need to focus on the active involvement of the subject, rather than on his simply
docile acceptance.
The demands need to be presented with courage. Being satisfied with responses to
immediate demands, which deprive the young person of distant horizons and leave
him permanently in a narcissistic position is to be avoided.
On the other hand having responsibility contributes greatly to a person’s
development. Through experience and reflection he has to make his own what
education offers and from this draw his own conclusions. Only when a young person
becomes an active agent and not merely a recipient of what education has to offer
does he become fully aware of what he is being taught and it becomes something to
treasure for the whole of his life.
Then there is another key element in the models of communication: the
circumstances. Nowadays attention is being given to the so-called " vital spaces,"
along side the traditional educational institutions. These latter exert their influence
through structures, programmes, roles, rules and regulations; but they appear to be
incapable of satisfying the demands for meaning and for relationships that young
people express. Vital spaces on the other hand allow room for spontaneity,
concentrate on the positive, on freely sharing, on friendship, on mutual acceptance,
on ideals, on symbolic language, on projects. It is to be hoped that families, Christian
communities, committed groups, places where young people gather, and schools will
become like this.
Addressing members of the Salesian Family it is not out of place for me to recall that
Don Bosco, by intuition rather than by any theoretical knowledge, created a whole
communication system: the oratory, a place full of spontaneity and free expression, in
which there were clear roles and informal relationships, and programmes provided for

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everyone on a regular basis alternated with opportunities for personal and group
creativity.
In the first oratory in the Pinardi house, as Don Bosco envisaged it, some important
basic ideas can be found that afterwards will be taken up with their more profound
human and Christian significance:
a flexible structure, bringing together the Church, urban society and groups of
the sons of the people, a sort of “bridge”;
respect for and appreciation of the working class;
religion as the foundation of education according to the teaching of Catholic
pedagogy as handed on to him from the atmosphere at the Convitto;
the vital inter-connection between religious formation and human development,
between the catechism and education, but also the combination of education
and education to the faith and the integration of faith and life;
the conviction that teaching is an essential instrument to enlighten the mind;
an education, just like catechesis, that is developed in every way possible given
the limited time and resources available: teaching to read and write those who
had never had the opportunity of going to school, finding work for some of
them, keeping an eye on them during the week, developing activities for groups
and mutual assistance, ...
the full use and appreciation of free time;
loving kindness as a style of education and more in general, as a style of
Christian living.
Understood in this way, the oratory for us continues to be the "formula" that we try to
apply in every kind of situation or educational structure.
2.5.2. Relaunch of the “honest citizen”
The reconsideration of the social quality of education, already present in Don Bosco,
even though imperfectly implemented, ought to give us the incentive to create explicit
experiences of social commitment in the broadest sense. This presupposes a deep
reflection both at a theoretical level, given the breadth of the subject of human,
juvenile, popular promotion and the variety of the anthropological, theological,
scientific, historical, methodological considerations involved, and on the level of the
experience and practical reflection of individuals and of the communities. In the
Salesian context the 23rd General Chapter had already spoken about “the social
dimension of charity” and about “education of the young to commitment and
participation in public life,“ “a sector we have somewhat overlooked or disowned.”8
An educational presence in the life of society includes the following: an awareness of
education, educational policies, the educational quality of life in society, culture.
Whoever is really concerned about the educational dimension tries to exert influence
through political means, so that it will be taken into consideration in all areas: from
urbanisation and from tourism to sport and the radio-television system, something in
which market criteria often predominate.
Then there is the specific aspect of educational and youth policies. There is a need to
reawaken interest and fight so that the solutions to some urgent problems are not put
in the last place. These include, for example, the whole area of prevention, the quality
of an integrated educational system, the appropriate diversification of the educational
possibilities corresponding to the needs of individuals, economic parity, the
rehabilitation of those who have fallen by the wayside in the educational process.
8 Cf. GC23 203-210; 212-214

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In addition, the style of social life and of political practices constitutes in itself a
striking daily lesson from which adults and young people silently draw practical
conclusions. One could say that it is useless for educational establishments to teach
their students to be law-abiding if in public life other criteria are being applied with an
easy conscience, since it is by these that our convictions and behaviour are being
shaped. It is difficult to inculcate a sense of justice if public affairs are dominated by
corruption and compromise. It is very hard to teach respect for the individual if in
political debate mutual distrust, deceit and quarrelling prevail. Education, social life
and political practice form a whole, so that whoever wants to improve the quality in
one, of necessity must make the effort to change the others.
Finally, at the basis of education, of living together in society, and of politics there is
culture. This provides motivations and communicates the significance of things that
silently penetrate the mind and give rise to certain patterns of behaviour. To establish
something as of value, initiatives are not sufficient even a multitude of them, nor
generous and well inspired people. It is necessary for a common way of thinking to
take hold and mature. Culture in fact concerns not only personal intentions and
proposals but the systematic and rational harnessing of the energies that the
community has at its disposal. Sometimes there is a marked contrast between the
actions of individuals and the collective mentality, between personal initiatives and
society’s approach, between practice and its foundations, so that the aspirations of
the individual are one thing and the daily experience to which he is forced to submit is
another.
2.5.3. Relaunch of the “good Christian”
The same thing one would have to say about the relaunching of the “good Christian.”
Don Bosco, “burning” with zeal for souls, understood the ambiguity and the dangers of
the social and moral situation of his time, he challenged its presuppositions, he found
new ways of opposing evil with the limited cultural and economic resources at his
disposal.
How does one produce Don Bosco’s “good Christian”? How does one safeguard
nowadays all the human and Christian elements of a project with initiatives that are
formally or prevalently religious and pastoral from the dangers of old and new forms
of fundamentalism? How does one transform traditional-style religious education into
an education for living one’s own identity in a multi-religious, multi-cultural, multi-
ethnic world? Faced with the passing of the traditional pedagogy of obedience, related
to a certain kind of ecclesiology, how does one use a pedagogy of personal freedom
and responsibility, aimed a producing strong characters capable of making free and
mature decisions, open to dialogue, actively taking their place in society not with a
conformist attitude but one that is constructively critical?
It is a question of discovering man’s vocation and helping him to live his true self in a
conscious manner. It is precisely in this area that believers can make their most
valuable contribution.
In fact, they know that man and his personal relationships are defined by his nature
as a created being which does not indicate inferiority or dependence, but gratuitous
and creative love on God’s part. Man owes his existence to a gift. He is in a
relationship with God to which he must respond. Outside this relationship his life has
no meaning. The 'other” he is aware of and unknowingly/vaguely desires is the
Absolute, not an absolute that is alien to him or an abstraction, but the source of his
life who calls him to Himself.

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In Christ the truth about a person, that reason can begin to grasp, finds its full
enlightenment. Through His words, but above all because of His human-divine life in
which He shows His awareness of being the Son of God, He opens a person to a full
understanding of himself and of his destiny.
In Him we are made sons and called to live as such in our place in history. It is a
reality and a gift, the meaning of which a man needs to gradually come to
understand. The vocation to be a child of God is not an added luxury, something
extrinsic tacked on for man’s fulfilment. It is instead his pure and simple indispensable
condition for authenticity and fullness, the satisfying of the most radical needs, those
that constitute his nature as a creature.
The one who educates – parent, friend, youth leader – is very aware that he is a
witness to and companion in this revealing of life’s possibilities, which links this
awareness with its source and its end, which enables life to grow, but above all
provides someone to talk to and a sign of God’s presence.
There is a mysterious dialogue between each young person and whatever or whoever
comes to him from outside, that which arises within and what he discovers as an
imperative, as a grace or as an explanation. Little by little he acquires a fuller
knowledge of himself, he creates an image of life in which he has to invest all his
energies and fully play his part.
Educators, whether professionals or not, are called to offer what they consider
appropriate, living with hope for the future with all its unknown factors. They take a
serious interest in the person growing up with uncertainties. In fact God wants to be
recognised in him, and in the process of growth He will manifest Himself with ever
greater clarity. If things go well they will have contributed to playing their part in the
history of those "descended from God," those who feel themselves to be in a filial
relationship with Him, and will have created living signs of his presence.
3. Promoting human rights, in particular those of juveniles
We are the heirs to and the bearers of an educational charism that is aimed at the
promotion of a culture of life and the changing of structures. For this reason we
have the duty to promote human rights. The history of the Salesian Family and its
extremely rapid expansion, even in cultural and religious contexts far removed from
those in which it was born, witness to the fact that Don Bosco’s preventive system can
be guaranteed to contribute to the education of youth in every kind of setting and be
a platform for dialogue for a new culture of rights and of solidarity. By considering the
dignity of each individual and the equality of his rights, one can better understand the
raft of reasons that support the Church’s preferential option for the poor.
It is in this context that Don Bosco’s advice to the first missionaries should be read
and implemented today: “Take special care of the sick, of the young, of the old and of
the poor, and you will win the blessing of God and the goodwill of men.”9 For us
Salesians, education to human rights, in particular those of juveniles, is the best way
to put into practice in different settings our commitment to prevention, to all-round
human development, to the building of a world that is more equitable, more just,
more healthy. The language of human rights also enables us to discuss our pedagogy
and introduce it into the different cultures of the world.
9 G. BOSCO, Ricordi ai missionari, in P. BRAIDO, Don Bosco educatore. Scritti e testimonianze, LAS,
Roma 1992, p. 206.

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3.1. Human rights and personal dignity
Human rights are rights that apply to every person as a human being; they don’t
depend on race, on religion, on language, on geographical origin, on age or sex. They
are rights that are fundamental, universal, inviolable and indispensable. They are not
carved in stone but are in continuous evolution. The civil and political rights that go
back to the time of the French Revolution (1789), arise from the demand for a series
of fundamental liberties from which large sections of the population had been
excluded: the right to life, to physical respect, to freedom of thought, of expression,
of association, of political participation. Economic, social and cultural rights were
sanctioned by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948: the right to
instruction, to work, to a home, to health, etc. Then there are the rights of people to
self-determination, to peace, to development, to ecological stability, to control of
national resources, to protection of the environment. Finally there are the rights linked
to respect for man, in relation to the fields of genetic manipulation, of bioethics and
the new communication technologies.
We have to realise that full respect for human rights is first of all our responsibility.
Unfortunately violations of human rights are the order of the day and it is clear that
the existing means for prevention are not sufficient to eliminate them. In this situation
too we need to work for respect for human dignity.
The Church’s teaching affirms that a correct interpretation and an effective
safeguarding of rights depends on an anthropology that takes account of all the
constitutive dimensions of the human person. In fact all human rights ought to
correspond to the dignity of the individual person. They need to refer to the
satisfaction of his basic needs, to the exercise of his freedom, to his relationships with
others and with God. They are universal, to be found in all human beings without any
exception of time or place. Fundamental rights in fact, belong to the human being as a
person, to each and every person, men and women, children or the elderly, the rich or
the poor, healthy or sick.
3.2. Salesian mission and childrens’ rights
In an address that I gave in the Campidoglio in Rome on 27 November 2002, on the
subject: “Before it is too late let us save youngsters, the future of the world,” I tried
to present the Preventive System from the point of view of the promotion of each
individual boy and girl, to be educated, to be totally redeemed in every sense of the
word from a Christian perspective, but with a particular reference to the
transformation of society, so that there will no longer be any on the margins. Above
all I presented the Preventive System in terms of a conscious assuming of
responsibility by the one being educated who changes from being someone needing
protection because of his needs (the object) to being a responsible subject because
he has rights and recognises the rights of others, preparing in the youngster of today
the citizen of tomorrow: the honest citizen and the good Christian. I give you some
sentences taken from my address.
«The situation in which many young people find themselves in many parts of the
world is very serious: young people at risk and marginalised. There are so many of
them, too many of them. Their cry goes unheard. They weigh on the conscience of a
society that is seeking to globalise the economy, but not the commitment to the
development of peoples and the promotion of the dignity of each human being.

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Today’s challenges. Here is a rapid overview of the marginalisation and the
exploitation of the young around the world:
Youngsters who are on the streets and in gangs.
Youngsters who are soldiers.
Youngsters who are abused.
Youngsters who are slave labourers.
Youngsters who are “nobodies”.
Youngsters who are in prison.
Youngsters who are forced to donate organs and are crippled.
Youngsters who are poor and marginalised.
Youngsters who are living in the sewers and the waifs and strays.
Youngsters who are sick.
Youngsters who are refugees and orphans.
Youngsters who are...
Such misfortune weighs on everyone’s conscience. At the end of the 25th General
Chapter the Salesians made an appeal addressed to all those with responsibilities
regarding the young: “Before it is too late let us save the youngsters, the future of
the world”. This is also my appeal as the successor of Don Bosco.
Faced with such a sad picture of the way young people are suffering, we Salesians
“are on the side of the young, because, like Don Bosco we have confidence in them, in
their willingness, to study, to escape from poverty, to take their future into their own
hands … We are on the side of the young because we believe in the worth of the
individual, in the possibility of a different kind of world, and above all in the great
value of working for education.”10 Le us invest in the young!
Let us put commitment to education on a global footing and in this way we shall
prepare a positive future for the whole world. To this effort the Salesian Family will
bring the riches of the method of education inherited from Don Bosco, the well-known
Preventive System.
According to this System the first concern is that of preventing evil through education,
but at the same time it is concerned with helping young people to build up their own
personalities, to give new life to values that previously they had not been able to
acquire and develop precisely because they had been marginalised, and to discover
motives for living a life that has meaning with joy, responsibility and competence.
In addition, this System firmly believes that a persons’ religious dimension is his most
precious and significant quality; therefore as the final aim of everything that it does it
sets out to guide each youngster to realise his vocation as a child of God. I think that
this is one of the most important contributions that Don Bosco’s Preventive System
can make in the field of the education of young people of all ages from children to
young adults who are poor and in psycho-social danger.
It is a question of a clear and significant experience of solidarity aimed at forming –
these are Don Bosco’s words – “honest citizens and good Christians”, that is, builders
of the city, active and responsible people, aware of their dignity with a plan of life,
open to the transcendent, to others and to God. »
3.3. Let us try to present the same ideas in the language of human rights
10 GC25, 140

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Referring to the list of the violations of human rights set out above, it becomes clear
that nowadays an all-round Salesian education cannot prescind from a commitment to
the fundamental rights and the dignity of human beings.
First of all one can note that the theme of education to fundamental rights and
freedoms is intimately connected to the two previous Strennas, in which I underlined
the important role of the family in educating and promoting human rights, and first of
all the defence and promotion of life.
In this area, education sets itself the aim of contributing to the building of a culture
of human rights capable of discussing, persuading and in the last analysis
preventing violations of human rights, rather than punishing them or repressing them.
It is the passage from the mere denunciation of violations already perpetrated to
preventive education.
From this point of view education to human rights has to be necessarily multi-
dimensional and characterised as an education to honest, active and responsible
citizenship, capable of combining the descriptive and the prescriptive, knowing and
being, and to integrate the handing on of knowledge and the formation of the
personality.
Education to human rights is education to action, to doing something, to taking up a
position, to accepting responsibility, to critical analysis, to being informed, to weighing
up information from the media; it is an education that has to become permanent and
daily.
On these foundations, the methodology to be used ought to include at least three
dimensions:
a cognitive dimension: knowing, thinking critically, conceptualising, judging;
Don Bosco would say “reason”;
an affective dimension: making an effort, having an experience, making friends,
empathy; Don Bosco would say “loving kindness”;
a dimension involving the will: which leads to behaviour that is morally
motivated: making choices and acting, behaving in an orderly manner; Don
Bosco would a say “religion”.
3.4. Educating ourselves to educate for the transformation of every individual
and of the whole of society: for human development
Therefore the Preventive System and the spirit of Don Bosco are today calling us to a
great effort, individually and collectively, aimed at changing the situations of poverty
and under-development, to make ourselves promoters of human development and to
educate to a culture of human rights, and the dignity of human life.
Human rights are a means for human development; education to human rights is
instrumental in bringing about human development both personal and collective and
therefore to achieving a world that is more equitable, more just and more healthy.
Each one of us, whoever we may be, precisely because we are educators and are
following the Christian anthropological view of life that inspired Don Bosco, can
become a defender, a promoter and activist in the cause of human rights.
For this reason we need to arrive at a Salesian understanding of the principles that
are at the foundation of human rights, so as to be able to identify the challenges that
human rights present to our Salesian Family.
Here are some elements for such an examination:

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the wholeness of the person and the application of the principle of the
indivisibility and the interdependence of all a person’s fundamental rights: civil,
cultural, religious, economic, political and social;
education to honest citizenship and the application of the principle of the
common differentiated responsibility for the promotion and the protection of
human rights;
the one to one approach and the application of the principle of the superior
interest of the juvenile;
the juvenile at the centre as the active and participating subject and the
application of the principle of the participation of the juvenile;
the “it is enough that you are young for me to love you a great deal ” and the
application of the principle of non-discrimination;
the “I want you to be happy now and always” that concerns the whole person
and the application of the principle of total human development: spiritual, civil,
cultural, economic, political and social of the juvenile.
3.5. A text to which Don Bosco would be ready to subscribe:
the education of the child shall be directed to:
(a) The development of the child's personality, talents and mental and physical
abilities to their fullest potential;
(b) The development of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, and for
the principles enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations;
(c) The development of respect for the child's parents, his or her own cultural identity,
language and values, for the national values of the country in which the child is living;
the country from which he or she may originate, and for civilizations different from his
or her own;
(d) The preparation of the child for responsible life in a free society, in the spirit of
understanding, peace, tolerance, equality of sexes, and friendship among all peoples,
ethnic, national and religious groups and persons of indigenous origin;
(e) The development of respect for the natural environment.
This in fact is art. 29 of the “Convention of the UNO on the rights of the child and
adolescents,” adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 20 November
1989 and at present ratified by 192 States.
The practice of many educators needs to be corrected therefore when they reduce
human rights to a list of ideas or see education to human rights in terms of norms as
though explaining legal texts.
We are in favour of a much broader approach, an approach to socio-civic learning, one
that encourages practical experience, the acceptance of responsibility and active and
responsible involvement.
Education to human rights, or better to a “preventive culture of human rights,” one
that is capable of preventing their violation, needs to emerge from the narrow field of
lawyers and jurists, in order to belong to everyone, to anyone who feels ready to open
and maintain an intercultural dialogue based on human rights.
Human rights, in fact, are not mainly a legal or philosophical subject; they are an
interdisciplinary subject and can be explained and discussed with an intercultural
approach in the context of a number of subjects: history, geography, foreign
languages, literature, biology, physics, music, economics.

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They are not a subject apart but a transversal theme. Human rights ought to be an
integral part of the training and updating of educators, whether formal or informal, so
that they themselves may be able to develop and re-present them as the leit-motiv
and transversal dimension within the different subjects.
If by teaching we were to understand an activity in which only one person, the
teacher, has something to say, and all the others have only to listen, then as far as
human rights are concerned it would not be possible to proceed in this way. Human
rights are not taught, just as they are not imposed, but people are educated to them
through dialogue, discussion, and personal reflection.
As teaching methods one can use art, drama, music, dance, design, poetry; in this
regard we can recall the initiatives “invented” by Don Bosco.
If the accent in the educative process is placed on the interior motivations needed by
the educator, then the Preventive System becomes a “spirituality”. If the accent is
placed on the three columns of reason, religion and loving kindness, then the
Preventive System becomes the exercise of a form of asceticism, a framework of
values and a plan of life. If the accent is on the relationship between the educator
and the one being educated, the Preventive System postulates a mystical dimension.
If the accent is placed on a plan of life that the person being educated needs to
nurture in his heart, then the Preventive System is complete evangelisation, since it
aims to form the honest citizen and the good Christian, as “Christifideles Laici” puts it,
capable of living the gospel while being of service to man and society.
In conclusion the Preventive System transforms both the educator and the one being
educated into someone who is aware of the responsibility to defend and promote
human rights for the human development of the person and of the whole world.
Paraphrasing a felicitous expression of Paul VI, in “Populorum Progressio”, I would
dare to say that the new name of peace is education to the defence and the promotion
of human rights.
Certainly, educating with Don Bosco’s heart, for the development to their full potential
the lives of the young, especially the poorest and most disadvantaged, promoting
their rights implies:
a renewed decision to become involved as communities in specific fields of
action. The communitarian character of Salesian pedagogy demands that we
create a spirit of communion with regard to the educational ideals of Don
Bosco, knowing how to involve all those with responsibilities in the various
educational institutions and programmes, forming in them a critical awareness
of the causes of youth marginalisation and exploitation, a strong motivation
that sustains their daily efforts and an active and alternative attitude. All of this
involves a commitment to the formation of educators.
a renewed explicitly pastoral approach.
Salesian activity, in whatever circumstances it is carried out, always includes a
concern for the salvation of the individual: a knowledge of God and filial
communion with him by accepting Christ through the sacramental life of the
Church. Having made an option for youth and poor young people, Salesians
take as their starting points where the young people find themselves, and the
possibilities they have of making a journey of faith. In every work of
rehabilitation, of education and of personal development, there is the beginning
and the implementation of that salvation that will become more explicit as
those involved become more capable of it. All have a right to Christ. He needs

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to be proclaimed without forcing things too much, but also without letting
things slip by too easily.
By way of conclusion
And this time, I conclude not with a fable but with a family story, rather with the
“dream” that is at the origin of what we are and what we do. A “dream” that is both
memorial and prophecy, a recalling of the past and a plan for the future.
«I had reached my ninth year. My mother wanted to send me to school, but this was
not easy. The distance to Castelnuovo from where we lived was more than three
miles; my brother Anthony was opposed to my boarding there. A compromise was
eventually agreed upon. During the winter season I would attend school at the nearby
village of Capriglio. In this way I was able to learn the basic elements of reading and
writing. My teacher was a devout priest called Joseph Delacqua. He was very attentive
to my needs, seeing to my instruction and even more to my Christian education.
During the summer months I went along with what my brother wanted by working in
the fields.
A Dream
It was at that age that I had a dream. All my life this remained deeply impressed on
my mind. In this dream I seemed to be near my home in a fairly large yard. A crowd
of children were playing there. Some were laughing, some were playing games, and
quite a few were swearing. When I heard these evil words, I jumped immediately
amongst them and tried to stop them by using my words and my fists.
At that moment a dignified man appeared, a nobly dressed adult. He wore a white
cloak, and his face shone so that I could not look directly at him. He called me by
name, told me to take charge of these children, and added these words: "You will
have to win these friends of yours not by blows but by gentleness and love. Start right
away to teach them the ugliness of sin and the value of virtue." Confused and
frightened, I replied that I was a poor, ignorant child. I was unable to talk to those
youngsters about religion. At that moment the kids stopped their laughing, shouting,
and swearing; they gathered round the man who was speaking.
Hardly knowing what I was saying, I asked, "Who are you, ordering me to do the
impossible?"
"Precisely because it seems impossible to you, you must make it possible through
obedience and the acquisition of knowledge."
"Where, by what means, can I acquire knowledge?"
"I will give you a teacher. Under her guidance you can become wise. Without her, all
wisdom is foolishness."
"But who are you that speak so?"
"I am the son of the woman whom your mother has taught you to greet three times a
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"My mother tells me not to mix with people I don't know unless I have her permission.
So tell me your name."
"Ask my mother what my name is."
At that moment, I saw a lady of stately appearance standing beside him. She was
wearing a mantle that sparkled all over as though covered with bright stars. Seeing
from my questions and answers that I was more confused than ever, she beckoned
me to approach her. She took me kindly by the hand and said, "Look." Glancing
round, I realised that the youngsters had all apparently run away. A large number of
goats, dogs, cats, bears, and other animals had taken their place.
"This is the field of your work. Make yourself humble, strong, and energetic. And what
you will see happening to these animals in a moment is what you must do for my
children."
I looked round again, and where before I had seen wild animals, I now saw gentle
lambs. They were all jumping and bleating as if to welcome that man and lady.
At that point, still dreaming, I began crying. I begged the lady to speak so that I could
understand her, because I did not know what all this could mean. She then placed her
hand on my head and said, "In good time you will understand everything."
With that, a noise woke me up and everything disappeared. I was totally bewildered.
My hands seemed to be sore from the blows I had given, and my face hurt from those
I had received. The memory of the man and the lady, and the things said and heard,
so occupied my mind that I could not get any more sleep that night.
I wasted no time in telling all about my dream. I spoke first to my brothers, who
laughed at the whole thing, and then to my mother and grandmother. Each one gave
his own interpretation. My brother Joseph said, “You’re going to become a keeper of
goats, sheep and other animals.” My mother commented, “Who knows, but you may
become a priest.” Anthony merely grunted, “Perhaps you’ll become a robber chief.”
But my grandmother, though she could not read or write, knew enough theology and
made the final judgement, saying, “Pay no attention to dreams.”
I agreed with my grandmother. However, I was unable to cast that dream out
of my mind. The things I shall have to say later will give some meaning to all this. I
kept quiet about these things, and my relatives paid little attention to them. But when
I went to Rome in 1858 to speak to the Pope about the Salesian Congregation, he
asked me to tell him everything that had even the suggestion of the supernatural
about it. It was only then, for the first time, that I said anything about this dream
which I had when I was nine or ten years old. The Pope ordered me to write out the
dream in all its details and to leave it as an encouragement to the sons of that
Congregation whose formation was the reason for that visit to Rome.»11
My wish for all of you is that you make your own the dream of the beloved father and
founder of our Salesian Family, Don Bosco. Let us work together to make it a reality
for young people, especailly for the poor, the abandoned and those in danger and for
their sake let us dream new dreams.
11 J. BOSCO, Memoirs of the Oratory of Saint Francis of Sales from 1815 to 1855, Translation by Daniel
Lyons SDB, Don Bosco Publications, New Rochelle, 1989, pp. 9-10;18-21.

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May the Mother of God in whose name we begin this year of grace 2008, be for you
mother and teacher, as she was for Don Bosco, so that at her school we may learn to
have the heart of educators.
Rome, 31 December 2007.
Fr Pascual Chávez Villanueva
Rector Major