depressing scene portrays "the ruin, the antithesis of the true Salesian".2
In Scene III there is a handsome young man of imposing and charming mien, dressed in white garments
delicately worked in gold and silver thread. His message to the Salesians is to "listen, take heed and be
strong and courageous; to bear witness in their words and lives, to be prudent in accepting and training the
new generation, and to see to the healthy growth of the Congregation".
The three scenes of the dream are realistic and challenging. They present a deft, personalized and
dramatic exposition of Salesian spirituality. Don Bosco considered them an important frame of reference
for our Salesian vocation. The careful choice and presentation of the special characteristics must be seen as
an authoritative identikit of a true Salesian, and Don Bosco tells us that as long as we cherish these
characteristics the future of our vocation in the Church is assured; however, if we neglect them the
Congregation will face total extinction.
In his description of the dream Don Bosco remarked on two events: first, that 10 September was the
Feast of the Holy Name of Mary,3 and secondly, that the Salesians at San Benigno were making their
Retreat and he seemed to be walking up and down with the Rectors. These are two matters worth reflecting
on: they link the dream with Marian devotion, and suggest that the dream is particularly suitable for days
of reflection and meditation (such as Retreats), and of special importance for those responsible for
animation (such as Superiors).
It is a dream offered to every Salesian because he is a Salesian. There is no direct reference to the young
(though obviously it is totally oriented to their good). Don Bosco is speaking to us in our own Salesian
house; or whilst we are making our Retreat; or in our character as animators and educators.
It is a topic that affects us intimately; it calls for a "revision of life".
Importance given to the dream by Don Bosco
The dream made such an impression on the Saint that he not only expounded it by word of
mouth but also set it down in writing.4 In the archives we have his own hand-written text that Don Ceria
had been unable to find for inclusion in Volume XV of the Memorie Biografiche. Now, thanks to the patient
and painstaking labors of a Salesian Sister, we have at our disposal even a critical edition of the dream.5
The text was written some weeks after the 11 September and reflects Don Bosco's concern that the
dream be understood and applied to our living traditions. The rough copy of the manuscript has many
corrections and shows Don Bosco's painstaking care in editing for publication;6 also his concern to recall
accurately the details of the dream - a profound effort to record faithfully what he humbly believed to be an
admonition from on high. Don Bosco prefaces his dream with words that imbue it with mystery, solemnity
2 ASC 55, p. 923.
3 The Feast of the 'Holy Name of Mary was instituted by Innocent XI to commemorate the Christian victory over the Turks at
Vienna on 13 September 1683. It was kept on the first Sunday after the Nativity of Mary. In 1881, the year of Don Bosco's
dream. this was 10 September. At the be. ginning of the 20th century Pope St Pius X changed the date of the feast to 12
September to free the Sunday for liturgical reasons.
4 MB xv 182.
5 Sister Cecilia Romero: I sogni di Don Bosco - edizione critica; LDC 1978. The authress groups this dream with a number of
others Don Bosco had towards the close of his life (187087). Sister Romero remarks on p. 10 that the current events of his history
"had a considerable bearing on the content of the dreams; for this was the period following the abolition of the temporal power of
the Popes and characterized by profound social, political and religious changes. One of the serious problems that resulted was
that of religious and priestly vocations. "Also, this was a time of soul-searching for Don Bosco In regard to his educational work
and his Congregation. It was In need of consolidation to meet the present and future needs of the Church and society, and so It
required a solid Increase all the more so because of the great missionary expansion taking place at. that time. "This soul-
searching is very obvious in a lumber of his writings In this second half of' the 19th century - for instance, the Memoirs of the
Oratory (1873.75) and the pamphlet on the Preventive System (1877). "Seen In this light the dreams assume a marked
importance both in view of their content and their common characteristics; they can be analyzed under various aspects:
psychological, pedagogical, theological, historical, and so forth."
6 P. Stella: Don Bosco nella storia della religiosità cattolica: Vol. II, p. 527.