SOCJETA DI SAN FRANCESCO DI SALES
SEDE CENTRALE SALESIANA
Via Marsala, 42 - 00185 Roma
JI Rettor Maggiore
The total nature of his dedication to the Salesian cause, through a special appreciation of the
virtues of poverty, humility and unswerving obedience, remind us how the "da mihi animas" is
inextricably linked to the "caetera to/le" : today this becomes, for the sons of Don Bosco, an
encouragement to rediscover the most authentic roots of this vocation, going back to meditating
on the attitudes and basic virtuous habits which sustain it, and anchoring them to the primary goal
of sanctifying ourselves in order to sanctify ("saints/or the young", but above all "saints with the
young").
A young layman, passionate about beautiful things and influential among his peers, then a
man on a pilgrimage in search of his vocation, then destined for the missions and finally a
"missionary to the North", responsible "in rebus materialibus"; a Salesian who worked in close
contact with the laity, knowing how to involve them, and with those who worked closely with
him, committing himself together with them to the most humble manual tasks; finally, a man of
government who remained simple at heart; then an elderly man who died in exile as a result of
being forcibly distanced from his confreres, spied on and persecuted by the communist regime, Fr
Stuchly embodied in his own person the many aspects of the life of a son of Don Bosco, with
such completeness of role and integrity of dedication that today he is a valid point of reference for
all those - lay or consecrated, within the Salesian Family and in the Church - who wish to look to
him.
The 'joy of the Gospel' clearly imprinted in the smile he brought to the least and the poor,
even to the point of dying, the least among the least, and his life spent in a difficult period entirely
for the faith, make him a sure reference point for society and the Church today. And not least but
importantly, his accompaniment of the elderly when - himself elderly and sick, shut away in a
rest home under the closer surveillance of the regime - he accompanied many of them on the final
part of their journey, showing them that life is always worthy of being lived, and can be
understood as joyful witness even when strengths have declined.
A man who lived in many geographical, linguistic and cultural circumstances (such as
today's Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Slovenia, Italy, etc.), even in border lands (between the
present Czech Republic and Poland, in 19th-century Moravia strongly influenced by German-
speaking culture, or in Austro-Hungarian Gorizia at the beginning of the 20th century and then in
Ljubljana), the Venerable Ignatius Stuchly ultimately offered himself as a man of peace, unity and
reconciliation between peoples. The sufferings he endured under Nazism and Communism, while
engaging him in a wise exercise of prudence, also highlighted in him qualities such as truthfulness
against hypocrisy or expediency; the ability to take on responsibilities and roles of government as
a form of service and not self-promotion; full and liberating adherence to the truth of the Gospel
as an antidote to totalitarian ideologies and a response to the deepest needs of the human heart;
the art of empowering young people by guiding them to give their best through trust, against the
rampant mentality of control and manipulation.
Even today , the figure of Fr Stuchly therefore proves invaluable in helping to heal historical
and psychological wounds, and in promoting a culture of reconciliation and peace.
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