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THE SALESIANS IN THE PHILIPPINES (1951-1963):
“DOVE LA NOSTRA OPERA VI ERA NATA … GIÀ ADULTA”
Nestor Impelido*
ASC = Archivio Salesiano Centrale - Roma
SAS = Scheda Anagrafica - Segreteria Generale (ASC)
SAFIN = Salesian Archives Filippine Nord
SAFIN = Salesian Archives Filippine - Cebu
SAFIN = Salesian Archives Filippine - Mandaluyong
SAFIN = Salesian Archives Filippine -Victorias
SAHK = Salesian Archives Hong Kong
Introduction
The actual beginnings of the Salesians in the Philippines have never
been studied. This study is an effort to write the history of the beginnings of
the Salesian works in the Philippines. An effort was made to write a pre-his-
tory of the Salesians in the Philippines, on the first requests to the Salesians to
come to the Philippines1. But this has been to present documents related with
the requests and to let these document speak for themselves.
On the other hand, this study has been provoked by the remark of Fr. Al-
bino Fedrigotti (1902-1975), former Prefect General of the Salesian Society2.
Some time in March 1975, he wrote a trite comment in his memoirs regarding
the Salesian Philippines Province: that it was a Province “where our work
was born already adult”3.
* Salesian, member of ISS, professor of Church History in Manila at “Don Bosco Center
of Studies”.
1 Gregorio BICOMONG Jr., The Arrival of Don Bosco in the Philippines. Requests Made to
the Salesians (1891-1951). Makati City 2001.
2 Fr. Albino Fedrigotti (1902-1975) was born in Trent, Italy (21 October 1902) and died
in Turin (25 August 1986) at 84 years of age, 67 years a Salesian and 58 years a priest. He was
member of the General Council as Councillor (1948-1952) and as Vicar General (1952-1971).
Cf SAS 19B013.
3 ASC B620 Fedrigotti: Ricordi personali (Colle Don Bosco, Marzo 1975) 42. “Dove la
nostra opera vi era nata già adulta” has been translated as “where our work was born already
adult”.

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430 Nestor Impelido
It is not easy to surmise why Fr. Fedrigotti came up with such comment.
However, he surely knew what he was writing, in as much as he had been
closely connected with the beginnings and the development of the Salesian
work in the Philippines. As Prefect General, he was in close coordination and
correspondence with those who were called to work and to lead the work in
the Philippines in its first years of its existence.
When Fr. Fedrigotti referred in his memoirs to the Salesian Province in the
Philippines as already born adult, the Salesians there were about to celebrate the
twenty-fifth year of their presence. At the same time, Fr. Luigi Ferrari (1908-
1990)4, first provincial delegate and later provincial in the Philippines (1969-
1975), was ending his term in April of the same year 1975. The in-coming
provincial, Fr. Jose Carbonell (1927-)5, did not belong to the Philippines and
had never been in his new place of assignment. The first Filipino Salesians
who were never sent outside of the Philippines for their initial formation were
ordained the previous year6. The sixteenth batch of twenty-two novices, who
began their novitiate in April 1975, was the second most numerous in the his-
tory of the novitiate at that moment7. Besides, the Province had just con-
structed its residence for the Salesian students of Theology in Parañaque lo-
cated at the periphery of Manila, in view of starting its own center of studies.
To think that there had been plans since 1960, to put in Manila a center which
would cater to the theological formation of the young Salesians of East Asia8.
4 Fr. Luigi Ferrari (1908-1990) was born in Verona, Italy (27 August 1908) and died in
Rome (23 November 1990) at 82 years of age, 64 years a Salesian and 56 years a priest. Fr.
Ferrari was expelled from China in 1952. He became delegate of the provincial of the China
Province for the Philippines (1952-1955), and later provincial of the Philippines (1969-1975).
Cf 26B069.
5 Fr. José Carbonell Llopis was born in Alcoy, Spain (27 March 1927). He was provin-
cial of Valencia (1964-1971) and the Philippines (1975-1981). He is currently provincial
economer of the Indonesia-Timor Province. Cf SAS 46B083.
6 Fr. Celestino Lingad Jr. and Fr. Aguedo Paolomo were ordained in 31 January 1974 in
the school chapel of Don Bosco Mandaluyong, which was then the residence of the Salesian
students of Theology. Instead, Fr. Genaro Gegantoni was ordained in Cebu, in the Salesian
Parish of Our Lady of Lourdes in 8 December 1973. Fathers Lingad and Gegantoni belonged
to the 6th batch of novices (1962-1963). The former is presently rector of Don Bosco Center of
Studies in Manila; the latter is assigned in Dekemhare, Eritrea. Fr. Palomo belonged to the 7th
batch of novices (1963-1964) which did its novitiate in the newly established house in Can-
lubang; he is currently rector of the Salesian aspirantate of Don Bosco Venilale, in East Timor.
7 The novitiate batch no. 16 (1975-1976) consisted of 22 novices; that of batch no. 9
(1966-1967) consisted of 31. Cf. Salesian Novices in the Philippines: 1956-1997, Sacred Heart
Novitiate, Lawa-an, Talisay, Cebu, 4, 8.
8 Fr. Braga insisted with Fr. Ziggiotti that Manila was the place to put a center of The-
ology for the Salesian clerics in East Asia. Cf ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a
Ziggiotti, Makati, 7 maggio 1962) 3. He further boasted to Fr. Pianazzi that Manila was the
“Rome of the Far East”; for this, the studentate ought to be put in the Philippine capital: ASC
F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Pianazzi, Makati, 9 settembre 1962) 1.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 431
1. Fedrigotti’s Visit
The Salesians in the Philippines, within the early years since its founda-
tion in 1951, had the visits of two of the Salesian Society’s major superiors.
The fifth successor of St. John Bosco, Fr. Renato Ziggiotti (1892-1983)9,
came to Manila in 5 April 1955 for a nine-day visit of the Philippine Delega-
tion. While his Vicar, Fr. Albino Fedrigotti, made an extraordinary visitation
of the Philippine Vice-Province (Visitatoria) from 11 January to 12 February
195910. The latter surely had the opportunity to see and observe more closely
the Salesians and their work in the Archipelago. Fr. Fedrigotti’s visit drew the
first official observations regarding the Salesians and their work in the Philip-
pines11. It was the first extraordinary visitation of a Vice-Province erected
only the previous year in 1958.
In the first half and in the beginning of the second half of the twentieth
century, the Salesian Society had undergone a prodigious growth in East
Asia12. In the Philippines, it was perhaps even more prodigious. For in his
month long visit, Fr. Fedrigotti saw the Salesians and their work which had
become immense and disproportionate to their numbers in the mere span of
eight years.
After the negotiations conducted by Fr. Carlo Braga (1889-1971)13 who
9 Fr. Renato Ziggiotti was General Councillor (1937-1950), Prefect General (1950-1952)
and Rector Major (1952-1965). He arrived in the Philippines from Tokyo, Japan in 5 April
1955 and left Manila for Sydney, Australia in 13 April 1955. In this visit, he saw the Salesian
presences of Mandaluyong and Makati in Manila, those of Cebu and Victorias in the Visayas
Islands, and that of Tarlac north of Luzon Island. He also conferred with both ecclesiastical
(Archbishops Rufino Santos of Manila, Julio Rosales of Cebu and Egidio Vagnozzi) and social
(the McMickings of Manila, the Ossorios of Victorias, and the Aboitiz of Cebu) personalities
connected with the Salesian work. This visit was part of his “tour” of the Salesian presences in
East Asia. Cf ASC B116 Chronicle of the visit of the Rector Major to the Philippines (5-13
April 1955); SAS 09B144.
10 ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959), 11 pp., see also ASC
B619 Fondo Fedrigotti: Agenda 1959 (11 gennaio a 12 febbraio 1959). Fr. Fedrigotti had al-
ready visited Thailand and Vietnam when he came to the Philippines. After Manila, he pro-
ceeded to Japan for the same purpose.
11 ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 1.
12 The establishment of the Salesians in Macao (1906) was followed by their coming
to China (1910), Japan (1926), Thailand, Hong Kong and Timor (1927), Myanmar (1938),
Laos and Vietnam (1941). After they went to the Philippines (1951), they soon established
themselves in Taiwan (1952) and South Korea (1955). With such a rapid expansion in Asia
and earnest hope for growth, there was every reason for a more accurate visit by Turin of
these new Salesian presences. Cf Morand WIRTH, Da Don Bosco ai nostri giorni. Roma,
LAS 2000, 374-378.
13 Fr. Carlo Braga was born in Sondrio, Italy (23 May 1889) and died in San Fernando,
Pampanga (3 January 1971) at 82 years of age, 65 years a Salesian, and 57 years a priest. Fr.

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432 Nestor Impelido
was still provincial of China, two Salesians took over a school of Tarlac in
July 1951 through the insistence of the Apostolic Nuncio. In the same year,
two other Salesians arrived in Victorias to supervise the construction of the
school promised to them by committed Catholics. In 1953, the new provincial
of the Sino-Filipino Province, Fr. Mario Acquistapace (1906-2002)14, had ac-
cepted the offer of the Manila Archbishop of the Seminario Conciliar de
Manila, in order to establish a school projected to be technical and voca-
tional15. The year after, he had approved the takeover of Cebu Boys’ Town, a
center meant to house and to care for street children. He had also initiated the
acceptance of the land donation in Makati for a vocational school and a parish
close to the site of the proposed donation. In 1956, the novitiate was erected
in a villa in Muntinlupa, south of Manila, since there were now vocations to
the Salesian life. The post–novitiate was put at the same place the year after.
Lastly, through the initiative of Fr. Godfrey Roozen, the school in San Fer-
nando in the province of Pampanga north of Manila began. So that when Fr.
Fedrigotti came, he found himself visiting eight presences, in six provinces,
situated in three different islands16.
In his visit, the Prefect General saw certain realities in the Salesian work
in the Islands. In the schools which he visited, he realized that the tendency
was to have more lay teachers rather than Salesians. As a consequence of this,
there was a constant deficit in the finances of the houses. At the same time, it
also revealed to him the obvious deficiency in number of Salesians who were
at work. In the school of Victorias alone, there were already 17 Salesians at
work17. But these did not even suffice to man the shops existing in the com-
Braga was provincial of China from 1930 to 1952. From 1956 to 1958, he was delegate of Fr.
Acquistapace to the Philippines, and from 1958 to 1963, he was Visitatore. Thus, he was 22
years superior in China and 7 years superior in the Philippines, for a total of 30 years: SAS
06B023, see also Vasco TASSINARI, Don Braga, l’uomo che ebbe tre patrie, Bologna, GESO
1990; id., Il romanzo di un missionario valtellinese. Bologna, GESP 1994.
14 Fr. Mario Acquistapace was born Milan, Italy (16 July 1906) and died in Hong Kong
(25 September 2002) at 96 years of age, 80 years a Salesians and 71 years a priest. He was
provincial of China (1952-1958), which had extended its jurisdiction not only to the Philip-
pines but also to Vietnam (1953). Cf SAS 22B030.
15 The school of Mandaluyong was located in the former archdiocesan seminary of
Manila. Cf Hernandez POLICARPIO F. O.S.A, The Augustinians in the Philippines, Makati City,
1998, 11-17.
16 The Philippines is an archipelago of about 7,100 islands. The main groups of islands
were three: Luzon (north), Visayas (central) and Mindanao (south). The Salesians were in the
first two groups of islands.
17 The Salesian school of Victorias was the initiative of catholic laymen who wanted to
put the social teachings of the sovereign pontiff into practice. Cf SAFIN-Victorias Correspon-
dence (Frederic Ossorio to Braga, Victorias, 5 December 1950). Don Miguel Ossorio and his
son Frederic have asked the Salesians to start a school which would take care of the children of

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 433
plex school which hosted more than a thousand students. To add, there were
also boarders who required constant assistance and attention. Furthermore,
confreres of this house were transferred to other houses when they were sup-
posed to be assigned permanently at Victorias. They were being made to aug-
ment the personnel in the growing schools of Mandaluyong and Makati, at
the expense of Victorias Milling Company.18 For this, a rift was growing little
by little between the Salesians and the benefactors of the school.
The Salesian work in Cebu City19 started as a “Boys’ Town” for Cebu’s
“poor and abandoned boys”, who were mostly street children20. There were
supposed to be six confreres at work in Cebu. Of these, three including the
superior, however, were occupied by a parish which practically made “Boys’
Town” a mere appendix of the real work. Of the remaining three confreres,
one of the two priests was more of a driver; another was “a cook by neces-
sity” and had put up a poultry and rabbit farm, which made him practically
“an animal breeder”21. Thus, the remaining confrere, a coadjutor, was left
with the boys, who, because of their being from the streets and because the
brother did not know their language, did not give an easy time to each other22.
The Salesian work Cebu did not have a house council; meditation and the
monthly exercise for a happy death were not regular. Moreover, Fr. Fedrigotti
observed a clear and serious difficulty of the Salesians: it was not easy for
the employees and workers of their vast sugar hacienda and refinery. Because of its distinct
technical-academic program of education, the school, which officially began in July 1952, at a
certain point became even more famous than its benefactors’ business company.
18 In reality too, the Superior of the Vice Province took advantage of the travel privilege
given to the Salesians by VICMICO (= Victorias Milling Company) who owned the school.
Salesians coming from abroad assigned to the school were financed by VICMICO in their
travel; but these were easily transferred to the other Salesian houses as the Superior decided,
without observing the agreement that those assigned in Victorias should work there for at least
six years. However, everyone knew how close the Superior Fr. Braga and Miguel Ossorio were.
19 The work in Cebu officially began in 15 March 1954. Because it catered to street
children, it was called by various names: “Boys’ Town”, “Boys’ Center”, “The Town”. Its resi-
dents were initially termed as “inmates”. This work was known in the beginning as the con-
crete expression of the “charity of the Cebuanos”. Cf SAFIN-Cebu Chronicle of the House
(6 March 1954).
20 The work in Cebu City was endorsed and encouraged by Archbishop Julio Rosales and
was realized through the generosity of the Cebuano Aboitiz family, especially Doña Maria
Aboitiz, who had insisted that the Salesians take charge of this initiative.
21 One of these priests was sickly and was really in need of a change of air and life. The
other never learned English or the language of the place, even if he had been already provided
with a teacher: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Ziggiotti, Tarlac, 9 febbraio
1960) 3.
22 On this situation of the boys, Fr. Fedrigotti commented: “La loro permanenza è pre-
caria e sono praticamente in mano di un coadiutore, che fa tutto quello che può anche se non è
abbastanza per creare un ambiente piacevole”: ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria
(Fedrigotti 1959) 10.

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434 Nestor Impelido
them to learn another language23. He was optimistic however the work in Cebu
was for the poor. The future school would help in alleviating the misery of the
young; even the parish attached, a fait’accompli of the Salesians, was in the
midst of poor people. Still, much was being done by the confreres for the
emarginated young. This obviously did not deviate the mind of their founder.
After almost seven years of existence, the school of Mandaluyong has
become well respected and esteemed24. It had even been visited by the Philip-
pine President. Its number one promoter was the Archbishop of Manila, its
patron no less than the Apostolic Nuncio to the Philippines. Its technical-aca-
demic program was unique in the Philippine capital. In five years time, its
enrolment had grown to 1,100 students ca., with 420 elementary and 680
high school students, not counting those of the vocational sector of the com-
plex school.
But the school was in debt: Pesos 150,000 to the tune of 6% interest, in-
curred by the local superior, who had hoped that the Archbishop of Manila
would bail him out of this predicament25. Furthermore, the rendiconti to the
superior by his conferences were neglected. Nonetheless, Fr. Fedrigotti ad-
mired the family spirit of the Mandaluyong community26. This would be a
characteristic of this Salesian work which Fr. Acquistapace wanted to be the
“casa madre” of the Salesians of the Philippines27.
The work in San Fernando, instead, had hardly began28. There were only
two confreres who were administering a growing school; and as if they
lacked work, they were also chaplains of the nearby girls’ school. According
to Fr. Fedrigotti, the reason why this school in Pampanga was accepted was
on account of the possibility of obtaining many vocations. Later, the aspiran-
tate would be transferred there, to the joy of the actual bishop29. The school
23 Cf ibid: “I confratelli sono venuti in gran parte dalla Cina, già stanchi di imparare
lingue; ma stanno tentando di imparare ancor una.” Note that there are about a dozen of lan-
guages and another fifty or so dialects in the Philippines.
24 The Salesian work of Mandaluyong began as a youth center: ASC F482 Man-
daluyong: Corrispondenza (Ferrari a Ziggiotti, Manila 30 novembre 1953). It later became a
complex school with an elementary, a high school, a center for out-of-school youth and a daily
oratory; it even had the aspirantate and a boarding house at one point of its history.
25 ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 3.
26 Ibid.
27 SAFIN-Mandaluyong Quaderno delle Osservazioni (Acquistapace, 1 gennaio 1954) 3.
28 Bishop Cesar Guerriero of the diocese of San Fernando, Pampanga had offered the
Salesians an already existing school near the Cathedral in San Fernando, Pampanga. But Fr.
Godfrey Roozen, sent to negotiate with the Bishop, found the offer difficult to handle. For this,
he opted to find another place where he could start a new school. Later in 1962, he offered to
house the aspirants too, when these were in search for a home in the vicinity of Manila.
29 ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 5; cf also ASC F163 Filip-
pine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 12 settembre 1961) 1.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 435
was started by Fr. Godfrey Roozen (1912-1997)30, who, after he left Hong
Kong and declined the invitation to work in Vietnam, found himself in the
Philippines.
The Salesian work in Tarlac was quite different31. Fr. Fedrigotti observed
that the confreres at work there lived in real poverty32. The school enrolment
was only 280 and was even still diminishing, since it did not enjoy enough
prestige so as to have an increased enrolment. The rector was also principal;
but he seemed not to be in the position to better the situation. There was al-
ready a proposal to give back the school to its former owners. This, however,
was opposed by Fr. Fedrigotti, in as much as he believed that the place was
one which was most in need of Don Bosco33.
In Muntinlupa, province of Rizal, the third batch of novices, together
with their master of novices and his socius, welcomed Fr. Fedrigotti. The
novitiate had been there since 1956 when Fr. Acquistapace, through the
encouragement of the Apostolic Nuncio, accepted the offer of a villa34. The
Salesians had put up the post-novitiate in 1957 beside the novitiate; but this
experiment lasted only a year. It was then decided to send the newly pro-
fessed to Hong Kong for their studies. Fr. Fedrigotti saw the need of a
scholastic preparation of the novices; for this, he suggested that after the
novitiate be given an additional year before they began to study Philosophy35.
The school in Makati was still in a crude stage when Fr. Fedrigotti came:
a mere fabrication with two small lateral buildings at its extremes36. It was
30 Fr. Godfrey Roozen. Born in Oud-Castel, Holland (29 May 1912); died in Manila,
Philippines (8 December 1997) at 85 years of age, 66 years a Salesian and 57 years a priest. Cf
SAS 31B090.
31 St. John Bosco Academy in Tarlac was a school which the Salesians adopted upon the
offer of Fr. James Wilson, a U.S. military chaplain. The latter had started a school in July 1947,
with the permission of Archbishop Michael O’Doherty of Manila and the approval of his Ordi-
nary, Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York. Two Salesians, Fr. Anthony di Falco and
Fr. John Rutkowski, both from the U.S.A., took over the school in July 1951. Cf ASC F570
Filippine: Tarlac. A Brief Historty of St. John Bosco Academy, Tarlac, Tarlac.
32 The following were assigned in Don Bosco Tarlac: Fr. Emilio Baggio, Fr. George
Schwarz and the cleric Felix Glowicki. Cf Elenco Generale 1959, 441.
33 Fr. Fedrigotti described the confreres in their living quarters as “appolaiati sotto il tetto
del teatro, in camerette, che dopo qualche rammodernamento, sono meno forni che stanze”:
ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 5.
34 The novitiate was a villa of a benefactor recommended by Fr. Quaranta. It was located
near the maximum security prison of Manila, see also SAHK Corrispondenza (Acquistapace a
Benato, Manila, 8 dicembre 1954); ibid. (Acquistapace a Benato, Victorias, 4 febbraio 1955).
35 ASC F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 5.
36 ASC F477 Filippine: Manila-Makati. Decreto dell’erezione (Fedrigotti, Torino, 7
luglio 1956). This particular work was already accepted by Fr. Acquistapace even before Turin
gave its consent. Cf ASC F157 Cina: Corrispondenza (Acquistapace a Ziggiotti, Hong Kong,
24 dicembre 1953).

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projected to be a trade school to answer the need for workers of the adjacent
industrial area, and to give the possibility of technical education to the poor
young in the same place. The Salesians were committed to construct more
permanent structures as agreed with the benefactors of the land. About five
hundred meters from the school was the Parish of San Ildefonso37, whose
parish priest showed himself hardworking38. Located in a vicious district, the
Salesians of the Parish were working very much to change its environment.
The Salesian community of Makati, though, was the most “criticized”
by Fr. Fedrigotti. He saw it as “sui generis”: members seemingly not blending
in their work; some not well “in their nerves”; the religious observance in the
community was fragmentary. And to think that the rector of the community
was the superior himself of the Vice-Province39!
In his month long stay in the Philippines, Fr. Fedrigotti preached in the
masses he celebrated, gave conferences to the confreres and to lay people,
heard the confessions of the boys, received the rendiconti of the confreres,
preached the exercises of a happy death of the communities, and even bap-
tized two. He met the benefactors and friends of the Salesians. He noticed
how vocations have begun to spring forth. Although he believed that these
still needed some time before they matured well. He criticized the school
system in the Philippines, his paradigm obviously being Italian. But he also
insinuated that the Salesians themselves ought exert effort to upgrade them-
selves to be more effective educators in their own schools40. The fact was that
some of them were occupying offices but who were not prepared nor quali-
fied to teach and administer the schools.
Before he finally left the Philippines for Japan in 13 February 1959, Fr.
Fedrigotti ended his visit with a celebration of the mass at the main altar of
the new Cathedral of Manila. More than 2,000 students of the various Sale-
sian schools participated in the celebration in a sort of pilgrimage for the
closing of the year of the Immaculate Conception41. With such a massive par-
37 The Salesians have committed themselves to the Archbishop of Manila some time in
1954 that they would accept a parish when Makati was offered to them. Cf ASC F477 Makati:
Osservazioni (Torino, 26 ottobre 1955).
38 Fr. Fedrigotti described Fr. Rizzato as one who “aggiusta matrimoni, fa catechismo
alle ragazze (i ragazzi vanno all’oratorio [della scuola salesiana]) e fa del suo meglio”: ASC
F164 Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 6. He never changed house since his
assignment in San Ildefonso Parish:
39 Ibid.
40 Fr. Fedrigotti remarked: “Le scuole nelle Filippine sono generalmente scadenti.” It
was obviously a conclusion of one who did not exactly know the Philippines. Cf ASC F164
Filippine: Visita Straordinaria (Fedrigotti 1959) 6.
41 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Ziggiotti, Makati, 19 febbrario 1959) 2.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 437
ticipation of young people to whom Salesians generously gave their time and
energy, one wondered how the Prefect General could say that the work in the
Philippines was born already adult.
2. Salesian “Founders”
There is a document which contains a list of the so-called “founders” of
the Philippine Vice-Province when it was erected in 195842. These names
were suppose to be the pioneers of the Salesian work in the Philippines; the
document stated that these confreres once belonged to the Province of China.
Looking more closely at the list, one sees not only the names of those
who actually came, but also of those who did not remain in the Philippines
and who eventually went back to their respective countries of origin. The list
showed how “adult” the Salesians were in the beginning of the Salesian work
in the Philippines, if “adult” referred to age, which definitely influenced one’s
way of thinking and of doing.
In this list of founders, we find this sum: thirty-five priests, seventeen
coadjutors (sixteen perpetually professed and one temporarily professed),
seventeen clerics (three perpetually professed and fourteen temporarily pro-
fessed), and nine novices (eight clerics and one coadjutor), for a total of sev-
enty-eight. At the bottom of the document, there are four other names of
clerics who were officially destined to work in the Philippines43.
Of the priests, thirty formerly belonged to the Salesian China Province44,
five did not45. Of the coadjutors, almost all were of “Chinese origin”46; only
42 ASC F164 Confratelli dell’Ispettoria della Cina che passano alla Visitatoria delle
Filippine (coi loro documenti).
43 Three were named: Alberto Duran (Spanish), Raul Hernandez (Mexican) and Angel
Izquierdo (Spanish). The fourth was anonymous; but this must have been a certain Francisco
Castillo (Mexican). If we were to add them to the first count, then we have eighty-two
“founders” Salesians who made up the personnel of the Philippine Vice-Province when it
started in 1958.
44 These were Emilio Baggio, Pablo Bahillo, Antonio Battistello, Pericle Bianchini, At-
tilio Boscariol, Carlo Braga, Johan Buchta, Maurilio Candusso, Johan Clifford, Mario Cuomo,
Guido D’Amore, Saverio Fels, Albino Fernandez, Luigi Ferrari, Pietro Garbero, Anthony Gir-
cour, Mathias Kreutzer, Giovanni Monchiero, Pierangelo Quaranta, Johannes Rauh, Lino
Repetto, Igino Ricaldone, Vincenzo Ricaldone, Giovanni Righetti, Giovanni Rizzato, Godfrey
Roozen, Ferdinando Rossotto, Patrick Ryan, Georg Schwarz and Ercole Solaroli.
45 These were Jose Bosch, Igino Ricaldone, Adolfo Faroni, Luis Iriarte and Agustin
Lopez. The latter three were recently ordained. Bosch, Iriarte and Lopez were Spaniards; Ri-
caldone was Italian; Faroni was Argentinian, but was of Italian origin.
46 The coadjutors of “Chinese origin” were Andrea Bragion, Giovanni De Reggi, the
brothers Edvigi and Valentino Floris, Romildo Gamba, Michele Garombo, Barnaba Marcos,

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438 Nestor Impelido
three did not47. Of the clerics, three were perpetually professed48 and the rest
were temporarily professed49.
The majority of the foreigners were Italians; the rest were of various
other nationalities50. Almost of all of them were “formed in China” and came
directly from there. There were a few who came from other provinces51. The
remaining ones were Filipinos, obviously all young for they were all still in
the first phase of their Salesian formation.
The average age of the confreres of the Vice-Province was about forty,
adult indeed if one looked at the chronological age. A good number of these
were already at the second phase of their lives52. Fr. Braga, superior of the
Vice-Province, was definitely at the latter part of his career; at sixty-nine, he
was still superior. He had behind him years of experience as provincial and
missionary in China. He was very much respected for his warmth and sweet
kindness which had been compared to that of Pope John XXIII53, and above
all for his being simply a Salesian with all, anywhere and at all times.
But Fr. Braga was not spared from the effects of having been in office
for a long time. This was according to a confrere with whom Fr. Braga had
had conflict and with whom he had never managed to correct a relationship
which had turned from bad to worse. In 1963, when the Philippines was about
to be made a Province and Fr. Braga was about to be finally changed, the said
Rafael Mrzel, Tommaso Orsolin, Pawel Prokopowicz, Mario Rossi, Nicolino Tambascia,
Joseph Tchio and Mario Testa.
47 Of the coadjutors, 16 were perpetually professed and one temporarily professed. Mario
Viel and Luciano Gorla made their perpetual profession in the Philippines. The coadjutor
Lorenzo Nardin (still living and actually assigned in Don Bosco Tabor House, Calamba City,
Laguna) came directly to the Philippines from Italy.
48 These were Patrick Corcoran, Antonio Pezzotta and Sileno Pivetta. These clerics were
later ordained priests; however, only Corcoran died as member of the Salesian Society.
49 Felix Glowicki, Jaime Claret, Felicissimo Juan and Silverio Justo were non-Filipinos;
the first was Polish and the remaining three Spaniards. Rodolfo Agana, Remo Bati, Leo Drona,
Cornelio Esplico, Juan Gatmaitan, Alfredo Manalili, Agustin Miranda, Hilario Muyco, Jose
Navarro and Ronaldo Peroy were Filipinos. They belonged to the first and second groups of
novices of the Philippines. Of these, only Bati and Drona (first Filipino Salesian Bishop,
former bishop of San Jose, Nueva Ecija, Philippines and currently bishop of San Pablo, La-
guna), who belonged to the second group of novices, have remained Salesians.
50 Of the other nationalities, there were ten Spaniards, four Germans, three Dutch, two
Irish, two Polish, one Slovenian, one Chinese and two Mexicans.
51 The idea that those who came to the Philippines were expelled from China could be
re-dimensioned with a more accurate study of these so-called “founders”. Some of these were
already “safely working” in Hong Kong and Macao even before the communist take-over of
the Salesian works in the Mainland.
52 Two were in their 60’s, ten in their 50’s, eighteen in their 40’s, twelve in their 30’s.
The rest who were below 30 were in the period of their formation.
53 ASC F163 Filippine:Corrispondenza (Clifford a Ziggiotti, Cebu, 4 gennaio 1962) 1.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 439
confrere had no second thoughts in contrasting him in front of the confreres
and had accused him to the Prefect General of having taken in the certain de-
fects that some times afflicted the adult and the old54.
Fr. Vincenzo Ricaldone (1897-1975)55 was surely elderly when he came
to the Philippines. He indeed had a rich experience in China and Hong Kong,
especially in the field of formation. However, at age sixty-one, he had found
it very difficult to change some of his ideas, even in the formation of the can-
didates to the Salesian life. And then, he did not know the English and the
main language of the Philippines56. Nonetheless, Fr. Braga had put him in-
charge of the novices; besides, he was roaming confessor for the various
houses of Manila.
When Fr. Alfredo Cogliandro (1911-1992)57 assumed the provincialship
in October 1963, he found himself with the same situation of an adult Sale-
sian personnel. This could readily be seen in the Provincial Directory of
1964-196558. Of those who were in the list of the “founders” during the Vice-
Province, there remained fifty-six; and these were those now who had either
reached their 50’s or even reached their 60’s. To augment the number of Sale-
sians, there were only eleven priests and eleven coadjutors who were new ar-
rivals. However, there were now forty-nine clerics, of which twenty-eight
were Filipinos and twenty-one foreigners59. This increased number of young
54 Fr. Igino Ricaldone, Fr. Braga’s “antagonist”, was frank in his remark to Fr. Fedrigotti
regarding Fr. Braga: “Gli manca ormai l’energia ed il coraggio per intraprendere, intervenire,
troncare, correggere e guidare”; “irritabile, indeciso, impressionabile e quanto mai influenz-
abile”: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Igino Ricaldone a Fedrigotti, Makati, 1 dicembre
1962) 1-2. These comments were obviously by one who perhaps had something against the
good Fr. Braga, and who was known to be a nephew of the late Fr. Pietro Ricaldone.
55 Fr. Vincenzo Ricaldone was born in Mirabello, Alessandria, Italy (27 February 1897)
and died in Turin, Italy (14 November 1975) at 78 years of age, 57 years a Salesian and 52
years a priest. He was the elder brother of Fr. Igino Ricaldone and hence was also nephew of
Fr. Pietro Ricaldone, Rector Major. He was 59 years of age when he was made novice master
in Manila. Cf SAS 18B080.
56 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 9 agosto 1960) 2.
57 Fr. Alfredo Cogliandro was born in Genoa, Italy (16 May 1911) and died in Canlubang,
Calamba, Laguna, Philippines (11 September 1992) at 81 years of age, 59 years a Salesian and
49 years a priest. He was missionary in North East India (1932-1950), where he was master of
novices (Kotagiri, 1948-1950). He was appointed provincial of San Francisco Province in the
U.S.A. (1950-1962). Then he was chosen to be the first provincial for the Philippines (1963-
1969); after his term, he was named master of novices (1973-1982). Cf SAS 33B235.
58 SAFIN Provincial Directory (1964-1965). In this directory, there were 38 priests, 29
coadjutors and 47 clerics listed. Of the clerics, 11 were perpetually professed while 36 were
temporarily professed. The total number of confreres who made up the Philippine Province in
its first year was 113.
59 The young foreign clerics who now belonged to the new Salesian Philippine Province
were: Juan Andreu, Valeriano Barbero, Francisco Castillo, Jaime Claret, Felice Furlan, Jesus

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440 Nestor Impelido
Filipino Salesians and the injection of a group of equally young foreign con-
freres was definitely a step to rejuvenate the Salesians in the Philippines.
Early, in the beginning of the Philippine Delegation, there had been a
first attempt to procure personnel for the Philippines to assure its growth.
When Fr. Ferrari was appointed delegate of the provincial in September 1953,
he wrote Turin and presented a request for personnel for the two works which
were currently operating in the Philippines. He was not yet in the Philippines
then60. At that time, there were only four Salesians in the Archipelago, two in
Don Bosco Tarlac61 and another two in Don Bosco Victorias62. In his request
to Turin, Fr. Ferrari wrote the names of those he thought could come to the
Philippines to run the two schools. But what was surprising was that he also
asked for those who he thought should come to manage three new presences
which he was already planning to accept63!
The confreres whom Fr. Ferrari indicated were all from the China
Province. Some of these were actually in Italy after having been expelled
from China; others were in Hong Kong. They were veterans; but most of
them were past their 40’s or almost in their 50’s. Of the twenty he named, ten
actually came to work in the Philippines. That was not bad, as a first attempt
to get confreres. But that foreboded the preoccupation of those who would
come after him: they would be clamouring for more personnel.
Gomez, Juan Martinez, Jose Reinoso, Ruggero Prioreschi, Jose Bernacer, Antonio Campo,
Eliseo Gallina, Joseph Limmer, Lawrence Mickartz, Benjamin Morando, Lorenzo Pelizzato,
Angel Rota, Pietro Uras, Giuliano Venturini, Ovidio Zaccheddu and Giuseppe Zucchelli. Some
of these were students of Theology in the different studentates (Salamanca, Castellamare, Sher-
field, Bolenggo, Rome) of the Salesian Society; others came as novices and finished their
novitiate in the Philippines.
60 Fr. Ferrari had gone to England to study English, instead of going straight to the
Philippines in order to supervise the coming of the Salesians. For this, Fr. D’Amore, who was
supervising the construction of the school in Victorias, felt himself at a lost on what to do as
there was not yet personnel, with the school to begin in two months time: ASC F622 Filippine
- Bacolod-Victorias: Correspondence (D’Amore a Ziggiotti, Victorias, 7 marzo 1952) 2.
61 Fr. Anthony Di Falco (1914-2003) and Fr. John Rutkowski (1907-1973) came to take
over the school of Tarlac. Both were U.S. citizens. The former, who was from the San Fran-
cisco Province, was recalled back to the his province by his provincial Fr. Cogliandro in 1955.
The latter, who was from the New Rochelle Province, went to join the Salesians in Australia
in 1953 to work among the Polish immigrants there.
62 Fr. Guido D’Amore, who later left the Congregation, was supervising the construction
of the school being built by the Ossorios for the Salesians; Fr. Giovanni Monchiero (1915-
1976) was animating an oratory which he started as soon as he arrived late the previous year
(November 1952).
63 Cf ASC F482 Filippine: Mandaluyong – I Programma masimo. Fr. Ferrari was already
negotiating for the offers of Cebu, Lipa and Mandaluyong.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 441
3. Lack of Personnel
In spite of being seemingly in the best physical age of their lives, if that
meant being “adult”, the “Filipino Salesians” could not just cope up with the
work in the presences they had assumed. From the period of the Delegation to
the Vice-Province to the creation of the Province, one of their persistent and
consistent needs was personnel.
Strange though that in the beginning, Fr. Acquistapace, who had taken
the place of Fr. Carlo Braga as provincial of China in 1952, did not see this
difficulty. It was probably for a simple reason: he was provincial. He could
easily dispose of the men he thought were needed for the Philippines. He was
not really directly calling the shots in the Archipelago, in as much as his dele-
gates, beyond the delegated authority they received, were the ones who ven-
tured in receiving and accepting the various offers. However, he as superior,
decided whom to send to Manila; and he had probably considered that those
whom he had sent to be sufficient for the moment.
But how did this issue on problem of the lack of personnel come about?
One reason was because the Salesians in the Philippines “have extended too
much”. When Fr. Braga first came to the Philippines in 1950 to discuss the
offers to the Salesians, he received seven contemporaneous offers, in six dif-
ferent provinces, in four different islands64. He was warned by Fr. Renato Zig-
giotti who was Prefect General then, not to entertain offers which would de-
mand too many confreres since there were limited numbers available65.
But it was not so. In less than seven years since the arrival of the Sale-
sians in the Philippines, there were too many works accepted and opened too
soon, without considering the personnel available: four schools, three
parishes66, and two houses of formation. And this did not include the youth
centers, both daily and festive, attached to some of the houses.
Except for Cebu, which began as a work for street-children but which
later ended up to become a school, the majority of the Salesian works in the
Philippines commenced as schools. These educational institutions demanded
specific personnel, in as much as they were academic and technical, plus vo-
cational. The technical sector was in want of coadjutors, in fact; the heads of
the shops67 in the schools were understood to be coadjutors68. Besides, the ad-
64 ASC F164 Filippine (Report of Fr. Braga to the General Council).
65 ASC F157 Cina: Corrispondenza (Ziggiotti a Braga, Torino, 11 gennaio 1951).
66 These were Our Lady of Lourdes Parish in Cebu, San Ildefonso Parish in Makati and
the Chaplaincy of St. Joseph the Worker in Victorias.
67 The shops were: carpentry, tailoring, mechanics, electro-mechanics and shoemaking.
These demanded prepared Salesians in order that they may be effective from the beginning.

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442 Nestor Impelido
dition of boarders in Victorias, Mandaluyong and Cebu, further burdened the
work of the Salesians.
Another reason for the personnel problem was perhaps the motive why
the work in the Philippines began. Fr. Braga would frankly put it: the Philip-
pines was a timely “outlet” for the Salesians who had to get out of China69.
Because of the worsening condition in China and because the future of the
work there being not sure, it was necessary that the Salesians prepare an alter-
native venue where they could release and continue their apostolic energy. Or
in the words of Fr. Ferrari, the Philippines was a “providential refuge” for
those Salesians expelled from China and for those who might still be expelled
from Hong Kong just in case the Communists decided to invade the Crown
Colony70.
Indeed, the majority of those who came to the Philippines were from the
China Province. Although, it is also true that not necessarily all of them were
“victims” of the communist takeover of the Mainland71. Several of those who
came to the Philippines repatriated for various reasons72: the health, the real-
ization that the missions were not for them, the desire to go home, the need to
look for another mission place. Others, though, generously remained and
faithfully continued to perform their ministry in the Philippines.
Another reason was that the Superior in the Philippines seemed to have
pretended to have the personnel he needed. Fr. Braga thought that Turin
would be easily persuaded to send Salesians, if only to meet the early enthu-
siasm began in the Philippines, specially if there was the seeming possibility
to have vocations in a country that was Catholic and which had produced
local vocations. He had witnessed this personally in the Religious Orders al-
These were also directed to help those young who could not go to college anymore.
68 When Fr. Ferrari gave his proposal to the Superior of Turin on whom to send to the
Philippines, he made sure that there was enough coadjutors. Just for the school of Victorias, he
asked for at least five brothers, in order to head the five shops that the school had (mechanics,
electrical, carpentry, tailoring and shoe-making): ASC F482 Filippine: Mandaluyong – I Pro-
gramma Massimo, 2.
69 ASC F158 Cina: Corrispondenza (Braga a Ricaldone, Hong Kong, 29 marzo 1951):
“È necessario avere subito uno sfogo”.
70 ASC F482 Filippine: Mandaluyong – I Programma massimo, 1.
71 Roozen and Clifford, for example were already long assigned in Hong Kong before the
Communist took over the Salesian works in the Mainland. The former was superior of Aberdeen
School; the latter was superior of St. Louis School. It was the same with Quaranta too. Instead,
Kreutzer, Ferrari, Schwarz, Garbero, Rizzato, Candusso and others were assigned at the Main-
land when the Communists began to confiscate the schools administered by the Salesians.
72 Here were some of those who repatriated: the Salesians Luigi Ferrari, Giovanni
Righetti, Attilio Boscariol, Mattias Kreutzer, Johannes Rauh, Lino Repetto, Carlo Nardin, Sal-
vatore Massi, Barnaba Marcos.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 443
ready at work there. Indeed, another reason why he believed the Salesians
should come to the Philippines was because there was the possibility of re-
cruiting vocations from the Filipinos73. But these vocations needed some time
before they came about and before they matured.
The fact was that in the beginning, there were not enough Salesians to
do the work. And there were not enough young people to take or reinforce the
work, to give new energy to the actual work being done, to assure those who
were at work that what they were actually doing would not be futile. The cur-
rent recruitment of local vocations was not yet stable so as to ensure the log-
ical reinforcement and substitution of those who were already “tiring” and
“ageing”. The pastoral work for vocations did not yet meet the demand for
“substitutes”. This was something accepted. Indeed, there were already aspi-
rants as early as 1953. In 1956, there were already novices to the Salesian
life74. But only in the last part of the second half of the 1960’s were the first
Filipino Salesian vocations ordained or perpetually professed75.
4. Overworked Salesians
Since the Philippines as a newly constituted Vice-Province had become
independent from China, Fr. Braga logically occupied himself with the needs
of the confreres and the need for confreres. He sounded indeed very alarmed
with the situation which he described to the Prefect General who had recently
visited the Philippines. He was sincere in his report.
The situation was very clear for the moment in the school of Man-
daluyong. With 1,600 students, there were eleven Salesians at work. But they
were insufficient, in as much as two of the personnel were sick and were not
able to meet the demands of the work in full force. Unfortunately, they began
to think seriously that the Superiors were neglecting them since that there was
no help coming in order to comfort their situation76.
73 ASC F158 Cina: Corrispondenza (Braga a Ricaldone, Hong Kong, 29 marzo 1951).
74 Of the first batch of novices, no one of the Filipinos persevered. There were seven
novitiate groups from 1956 to 1964, with a total of 61 novices. Of these, sixteen are still regis-
tered as members of the Salesian Society. Cf Salesian Novices in the Philippines: 1956-1997,
Sacred Heart Novitiate, Don Bosco Missionary Seminary, Lawa-an, Talisay, Cebu, 1997, 1-3.
75 The first Filipino Salesian priests were Rodolfo Agana, Remo Bati and Leo Drona;
they studied their Philosophy in Hong Kong and their Theology in Italy. The first two were
ordained in 6 April 1968 (Turin). The latter was instead ordained in 22 July 1967 (Rome).
76 On these overworked Salesians, Fr. Braga remarked: “… non sono angeli, e strapazzati
… sono vicini al collasso”: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati,
29 ottobre 1959) 1.

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The Salesians in the Philippines tried to be faithful to the Rule. They did
not spare themselves of the work; instead, they generously did all that was
possible for the work. But they were too few. And as a result of this, they
were easily losing their calm. Overburdened with work, they easily lost their
nerves and their tempers. And this was seen in the classrooms, as they did not
have the chance to have a breather77.
For Fr. Braga, the logical place to ask for help was the Philippines’s
mother province. He had thought that the new provincial of Hong Kong, who
had been appointed to substitute Fr. Acquistapace in Hong Kong in 1958,
would have been generous and would have immediately agreed to his request
for help. But the contrary, the China Superior was reluctant and seemed indif-
ferent to Fr. Braga’s plea. The provincial in Hong Kong was occupied in
building up the Salesian personnel for Vietnam of which the China Province
was for the moment in-charge. And he probably needed every Salesian he had
to reinforce the work which was also beginning there; besides, he was short
of vocations too. Fr. Braga had to ask Fr. Fedrigotti to intercede of his behalf
with the China Superior, hoping that the latter would also “put his hand on his
bag”; but this would be in vain78.
Fr. Braga, however, insisted that China should help the Philippines at
this point in time. He became very personal in his appeal to the Provincial in
China: for what he endured and suffered when he was still in China; for the
prosperity which China was actually enjoying, fruit of the sweat and blood
and tribulations of others, including those who were now actually sweating it
out in the Philippines; for the economic prosperity it now enjoyed but which
was founded in extreme poverty of several years earlier; for the fact that with
the overabundance of personnel, there sometimes followed a fall in the spirit
of sacrifice of the confreres79.
Fr. Braga showed himself a practical man, if only to obtain reinforce-
ments. He was ready to take in Chinese confreres as long as they could obtain
English or Portuguese passports, as well as American or European confreres
who wanted “to change environment and to adapt to a new climate and to a
different ambient”80. Even those confreres from India who might have been
77 Fr. Braga reflected on this situation of being undermanned. “Non posso magnarmi del-
l’osservanza e dello spirito, ma il troppo lavoro guasta parecchie cose e ci toglie, alle volte, la
serenità necessaria al nostro quotidiano dovere. In tutta la giornata non si ha un momento per respi-
rare, per sollevarsi, per ritemprarsi, per calmare i nervi assai tesi, per la particolare natura di certi
allievi piovuti a chissà quale asteroide… con tanto di atomismo ed irrequietezza da non lasciar
respiro”: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 29 ottobre 1959) 1.
78 Ibid., 2.
79 Ibid., 1.
80 Ibid.: “mutare loco ed adattarsi al nuovo clima ed al differente ambiente”.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 445
affected by the threat of a communist takeover of the Salesian missions lo-
cated near the Indian-Chinese borders, or who could no longer re-enter their
former country of apostolate, were welcome. These Salesians would be of
great advantage for the Philippine, since they were already knowledgeable of
the English language81.
Fr. Alfred Cogliandro would express the same predicament when he as-
sumed office as provincial of the Salesians in the Philippines in October
1963. He realized that the scarcity of personnel was worse in the Philippines
than in his former province of San Francisco in the United States82. Now, it
was his turn to express the situation of the Salesian personnel in the new
province and to beg for confreres from the superiors in Turin83.
The reality of the new Province which Fr. Cogliandro had been asked by
Turin to administer was troubling. There were only twenty-nine priests to dis-
tribute in the Province. And worse, he described one third of these as “half-
men who could not be relied upon because they were sick, neurasthenic, ex-
hausted, ignorant of the language and of very difficult character”84!
Besides, the new Provincial had to accommodate the Archbishop of
Manila, Cardinal Rufino Santos, who wanted someone to administer the
Catholic Center that he had recently established85. Fr. Pierangelo Quaranta
(1916-1992)86, one of those “adult” Salesians who first worked for the So-
ciety in the Philippines and who was close to the Cardinal, had somehow
compromised the Salesians to assuming the management of this project of the
Archbishop. This he did without consulting the Superior and in disregard of
the obvious lack of personnel for the already existing houses87.
81 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 9 agosto 1960) 1.
82 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 31 ottobre
1963) 2.
83 To remember, however, that Fr. Braga once appealed to Fr. Cogliandro for some Eng-
lish speaking confreres for Tarlac. Fr. Cogliandro had “loaned” Fr. Anthony Di Falco to Fr.
Braga in 1951; he had asked Fr. Di Falco back in 1955, not knowing that when he would be
provincial to the Philippines, he would be in need of personnel.
84 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 10 novembre
1963) 2: “soli mezzi uomini su cui non si può fare affidamento per mancanza di salute, nevras-
tenia, esaurimenti, ignoranza della lingua, caratteri difficilissimi”. Cf also ASC F163 Filippine:
(Braga) Relazione Annuale 1962-1963, 4.
85 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 10 novembre
1963) 2.
86 Fr. Pierangelo Quaranta was born in Turin, Italy (9 November 1916) and died in
Manila, Philippines (12 April 1992) at 76 years of age, 59 years a Salesian and 49 years a priest.
87 Earlier, Fr. Quaranta had committed Fr. Braga to accepting Pope Pius XII Catholic
Center. But it was Fr. Cogliandro who had to think of whom to put in this Center; he expressed
perplexity why this was ever accepted by Fr. Braga: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza
(Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati 21 dicembre 1963) 1.

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446 Nestor Impelido
Fr. Cogliandro also resolved to change the personnel of the houses for
the coming year, to change certain superiors of the houses88, who had been
long overdue in their positions. Besides, some were showing their defects,
probably on account of their adulthood. These did not have that sense of
family, in as much as these tended to rival and compete with each other.
Some of them easily absented themselves from their communities, even if for
necessity, but which was not necessarily concerned with the apostolate. They
were accustomed to do things by themselves, without consulting neither their
local council nor the Superior89.
The house councils practically did not exist in some of the Salesian
houses. The irony of it was that even if the number of the members of some
houses was already so small, it still was not easy for the confreres to meet and
discuss their problems. Thus, when Fr. Cogliandro made his first visitation of
the houses, he did not find the minutes of house council meetings. Worse, he
found out that the observations during the visitations were recorded but were
never given due importance so as to be complied with90.
Thus, Fr. Cogliandro realized that his initiative to change the rectors was
futile for a very simple reason: “there was no one to distribute”91! He insisted,
thus, to Turin that there was absolute need for reinforcements and younger
confreres. Otherwise, the few who remained and generously gave all of them-
selves to the work risked stretching themselves to the point that they could
not go on further. He was not complaining really, even if the Superiors were
88 Fr. Quaranta was, in fact, one of those whom Fr. Cogliandro wanted to change as
rector of Mandaluyong who was tied down with debts on account of his initiatives which were
sometimes not sanctioned by the previous superior. But because of the influence he had built
with people of authority, he had also been mediator between the Salesians and the Cardinal of
Manila: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 17 ottobre
1963) 2.
89 Fr. Cogliandro remarked in his first Annual Report (1963-1964) to the Rector Major:
“I Direttori si sono abituati a fare tutto loro, senza consultare mai nessuno, alle volte, neppure
l’ispettore, il cambio negli orari, nelle tradizioni della casa, nel costruire e demolire edifici,
nell’arrangiarsi finanziariamente senza dare un resoconto chiaro a che sia… Non sono ancora
venuti nell’idea esatta che tutta l’ispettoria è una famiglia e che siamo uno per l’altro, e non
uno contro l’altro armati, una cosa contro l’altra… I direttori sono troppo interessati, per neces-
sità di cose nella vita fuori della scuola”: ASC F163 Filippine: Relazione Annuale (1963-
1964), 19-20.
90 ASC F163 Filippine: Relazione Annuale (1963-1964), 20.
91 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 10 novembre
1963) 2: “non c’è nulla da distribuire”. In the provincial council, the councillors were the fol-
lowing: Clifford, Baggio, Quaranta, Roozen, and Buchta. These practically have been council-
lors since the establishment of the Visitatoria in 1958; they have never been substituted! At the
arrival of Fr. Cogliandro in October 1963, the rectors of the houses were the following: Baggio
(Victorias); Schwarz (Tarlac); Quaranta (Mandaluyong); Braga (Makati); Roozen (San Fer-
nando); Clifford (Cebu).

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to think that he was. “This was not to complain; it was to tempt Divine Prov-
idence”92. He was ready to provide the Superiors in Turin “a situationaire” of
the province which had been entrusted to him93.
In the Technical School of Victorias, in Negros Occidental, the rector
was sick. The catechist of the school had been transferred to Rizal Institute of
Canlubang to replace the director who was also incapacitated, having been
run over by a jeepney. The parish priest of the Church in Victorias entrusted
to the Salesians was still recovering, after having contracted tuberculosis.
There were only two confreres in-charge of the agro-technical school
which Fr. Braga had accepted in Canlubang. Fr. Cogliandro had no one to
augment the number. And there were 500 students enrolled therein.
In Cebu, there were also 500 students in the school which was formerly
intended to house the street children. But the school catechist had to be trans-
ferred to the adjacent Parish of Our Lady of Lourdes, which was involving
more Salesians rather than the school. The confessor of the school had left for
vacation for Italy, but with no intention of coming back.
Don Bosco Makati in Manila had 2,500 students. But it had neither a
prefect nor a catechist. The former had left for the States to make propaganda
for the Salesian work in the Philippines; and he probably would not be
coming back because he was out of place in the Philippines. The latter was
very sick, after he had a nervous breakdown; he had frequent attacks of con-
vulsions, in fact.
Don Bosco Mandaluyong, considered as “mother house” of the Sale-
sians in the Philippines and which had about 3,000 students, likewise did not
have a prefect, a catechist and a confessor. The actual catechist was also
down because of too much work; the confessor had gone back to Germany
for vacation. The cleric, who was general assistant of the complex school,
was sick with tuberculosis and was physically consumed. And to think that
this school had 168 employees “as teachers, shop heads and instructors and
employees in the administration office”94.
Further north of the Philippines, in San Fernando, Pampanga where
there was a school with about 518 students now, there was no prefect nor
principal. The actual prefect had to be transferred to Don Bosco Tarlac. There
had never been a principal for the school, which had also the aspirants now.
Moreover, it was losing its actual confessor in a little while; it would be diffi-
92 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 10 novembre
1963) 2: “Ma questo non è un lamento: è un tentare la Divina Provvidenza”.
93 ASC F163 Filippine: Relazione Annuale (1963-1964), 20.
94 SAFIN-Mandaluyong Quaderno delle Osservazioni (Acquistapace, 1 gennaio 1954) 5.

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448 Nestor Impelido
cult to find someone to substitute him when he leaves for the General Chapter
of which he was eager to participate after the one elected had ceded to give
way to him95.
In Don Bosco Tarlac, a school with a growing enrollment of about 422
students, there was no rector, since he had gone back to Italy for family rea-
sons. The school never had a prefect nor a catechist. Its principal was also
down and sick; he walked with a stick and was still recovering96. The same
confrere, who was now practically the only priest in the school of Tarlac,
would again be sick in August 1964, this time with meningitis. Fr. Cogliandro
had to find someone to substitute him, since the confrere was hospitalized.
But how? He had to ask the principal and director of the Rizal Institute in
Canlubang to come to Tarlac. The result however, this time, was that the
school of Tarlac acquired a priest; but in Rizal Institute Canlubang, there was
neither a principal nor a director97!
In December of 1963, there were seven houses with only 29 priests. And
of these, a tenth was unable to work “either for exhaustion or for age or for
nervous breakdown or for the ignorance of the language”98. It was no dif-
ferent by October of the next year. There were thirty-five priests of which
only eighteen were in actual work. All the rest were either back in their
country or sick, in the hospital or in the infirmary99. The confreres worked, in
spite of the health difficulties. However, “someone had to rest either for ail-
ment or nervous breakdown every week“. Fr. Modesto Bellido (1902-1993),
Superior in-charge of the missions, ought to know about this. Fr. Archimede
Pianazzi (1906-2000), in-charge of Salesian formation, would see this if only
95 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Ziggiotti, Makati, 19 dicembre
1963) 1. A juniorate for aspirants to the Salesian life was added in 1963 to the school in San
Fernando. Fr. Braga was assigned to San Fernando as confessor after his term as Visitatoria. He
was asked to be delegate of the Philippine Province for the General Chapter of 1965. This was
after Fr. Carreño declined his election, in order to yield his place to Fr Braga whom he knew
wanted to go to the General Chapter. While in Italy, Fr. Braga planned to celebrate the 50th an-
niversary of his ordination: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti,
Makati, 31 dicembre 1964) 1.
96 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Ziggiotti, Makati, 19 dicembre
1963) 2.
97 Ibid., (Makati, 26 agosto 1964) 1.
98 Ibid., (Makati, 19 dicembre 1963) 1: “o per esaurimento, o per età, o per nervosismo, o
per ignoranza della lingua”.
99 Ibid., (Makati, 14 ottobre 1964) 2. Indeed, confreres “have gone home”, and some
have decided not to come back, in spite of the invitation to them to please come back. Because
these felt healthier in Italy rather than in the Philippines. This was not surprising, for it was
true that confreres were overworked so that their health could no longer hold. Besides, some
of them found it difficult to be in the warm and humid climate in the Archipelago: ASC F163
Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 12 febbraio 1964) 1.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 449
he would go and pay a visit to the Philippines from India. Fr. Cogliandro de-
clared that he was not exaggerating in what he was saying100. It was enough
for the Superiors to look at the second volume of the Elenco Generale of that
year and see which confreres were in the Philippines, or even if listed in the
Elenco, were not really able to work for some reason or another101!
When Fr. Cogliandro asked the Rector Major for personnel, he was very
precise with the Salesians that he needed most. Moreover, he demonstrated
the actual positioning of the confreres and their movements. His being precise
and detailed was for his “peace of mind”, of his duty to present the gravity of
the situation of the lack of personnel in the Philippines. If anything happened,
he at least could no longer be held responsible before God102.
Furthermore, the Philippine Provincial added that if there had been mis-
understanding and troubles in the past, it was caused precisely “by this
scarcity, by too much work, by the tiredness, by the impossibility to carry on
so many things according to one’s responsibility”103. Indeed, the Superiors of
Turin had reprimanded him for his seeming pretension of wanting to have
everything at once, as he started his work as provincial. But he could not be
also so sincere and frank in exposing the situation. For in that scarcity of per-
sonnel, the result was to have “willing confreres but worn out; workers but
tired; generous but with nerves on the edge; good but discouraged; zealous
but sick!”104.
Here, indeed, was the Philippine Province said to be “born already
adult” and now risked to remain “adult” in the absence of young recruits
and blood! Worse, it was not just a Province “già nata adulta” but also “am-
malata” because confreres were very sick; and “impoverita” because confr-
eres were leaving and were not coming back.
Some of the confreres in the Philippines, even the exemplary ones, were
bitter regarding this situation. In their mind, Turin was indifferent and was not
concerned with their plight. Worse, they believed that the Superiors of Turin
100 Fr. Cogliandro was however grateful for the clerics who had arrived. Their coming
was an encouragement for the confreres: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a
Ziggiotti, Makati, 14 ottobre 1964) 2.
101 Ibid., 1. Cf also Elenco Generale, 1963, 473-476; ibid., 1964, 478-481.
102 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Ziggiotti, Makati, 14 ottobre
1964) 2.
103 Ibid., (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 10 novembre 1963) 2: “da questa scarsezza,
dal molto lavoro, dalla stanchezza, dall’impossibilità di poter tenere dietro a tutto secondo le
nostre responsabilità”.
104 Ibid., (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 21 dicembre 1963) 2: “confratelli volonterosi,
ma sfiniti; lavoratori, ma stanchi; generosi, ma nervosamente tesi; buoni, ma scoraggiati; ze-
lanti, ma malati!”.

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450 Nestor Impelido
had never been really been interested in the Salesian cause in the Philippines.
Sometimes, they asked why. They already harboured this sentiment of the
seeming neglect of the Superiors in the past; and seemingly, it was being con-
firmed now. However, what they asked now was some sign of “paternal in-
terest” from Turin105. If ever the Salesian province in the Philippines was born
“adulta” in the mind of Fr. Cogliandro, it was also due to Turin’s seeming “in-
differenza”106!
The Philippine Provincial had in fact previously sent to Turin a list of
confreres of various provinces who were ready to go to the Philippines107.
These confreres were mostly young students of Theology who were willing to
go to the Philippines after ordination. Others were of good age but who vol-
unteered to come to be confessors in the houses108. He hoped that the respec-
tive provincials of these confreres would permit them to leave for the Philip-
pines. Turin had the chance to prove that it wanted to help him if it would in-
tervene of his behalf with the provincials of the confreres who wanted to go
the Philippines.
In a later date, Fr. Cogliandro once more wrote Turin with a longer list
of volunteers to the Philippines: this time, fourteen young priests, plus a
cleric who wanted to come for practical training in the Philippines109. Again,
he hoped that Turin would flex some muscles to convince the provincials of
these confreres to allow them to go to the Philippines. At the end, though, a
dismal three finally went to the Philippines out of the possible fifteen110! Fr.
Cogliandro must have wandered if Turin was really interested and in earnest
in helping the Philippines from remaining “adulta” as a Province.
105 Ibid.: “che i Superiori di Torino non siano mai stati molto interessati della causa sale-
siana nelle Filippine”. They even noticed that when the Vice-Province was changed into a
Province, there was not even an official mention of it in the Acts of Superior Council! Cf ibid.
106 Ibid., (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 10 novembre 1963) 2. Fr. Cogliandro pre-
sented his reflection of the actual personnel. “Questi poveri confratelli venuti qui da altre ispet-
torie come rifugio, alcuni raccolti qua e là, hanno fatto meraviglie, ma ora hanno bisogno di
sentire che tutta la Congregazione è indietro a loro a sostenerli, non solo a parole, ma coi fatti,
in un paese dove ultimi arrivati abbiamo si grande avvenire e dove le anime vengono a cercarci
per chiederci i sacramenti”.
107 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Ziggiotti, Makati, 26 agosto
1963) 1.
108 These were the Salesian priests Vincenzo Scuderi, Luigi Cazzola, Oreste Brogli,
Luigi Ferrari and Giovanni Righetti. The last two have worked in the Philippines; now they
asked to return. Cf ibid.
109 There were seven priests and a cleric from the Spanish Provinces of Zamora, Madrid,
Bilbao and Barcelona, three from the Italian Provinces of the Sub-Alpina and the Centrale, and
one from the San Francisco Province, U.S.A. Cf ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza
(Cogliandro, Makati, undated) 1.
110 These were the Salesians Giuseppe Savina (1936-1999), Luigi Ferrari and Juan Mar-
tinez. The last later transferred to Thailand and from there left the Congregation in 1974.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 451
5. Vocational Growth
It was understood that the Salesians should have generated their own
personnel as soon as they had laid down the foundations of the Salesian work
in the Philippines. This was to ensure the continuity of the work began; in
order to make the work not “adulta” but to be continuously of the young and
for the young. Fr. Braga, for one, had already observed how the existing Reli-
gious Orders in Manila had vocations111. And he was only enthusiastic of the
possibility that the Salesians would have their own soon. But it would not be
he who would initiate the search for the local vocations.
In the Salesian house of Mandaluyong112, a budding aspirantate was
started by Fr. Ferrari when he accepted in 1953 the offer of the Archbishop of
Manila that the Salesians take over the old “Seminario Conciliar de
Manila”113. In the same house, there was a flourishing daily oratory and a
technical-academic and vocational school. But soon, a sort of boarding house
was added to the growing complex work. The aspirantate, however, became
onerous to the limited personnel of the house114. Thus, it was transferred after
a couple of years to the Salesian school of Victorias in Negros island, while
the boarding house, proving to be impractical and more burden to the already
overworked Salesians, was instead abolished.
The aspirantate in Victorias flourished for some years. Fr. Braga was in-
deed very enthusiastic about it, so much so that he foresaw that by 1961,
there would be over a hundred aspirants115. But he decided to bring it back
nearer to Manila, in the island of Luzon116. The parents of most of the aspi-
rants who came from the Salesian schools located in the island of Luzon were
hesitant to have their children far from them.
The Filipino family was a closely knit one, different from the European.
Consequently, the aspirantate was once more transferred in 1962 to the Sale-
111 ASC F158 Cina: Corrispondenza (Braga a Ricaldone, Hong Kong, 29 marzo 1951).
112 The Salesian House of Mandaluyong was the third foundation in the Philippines (15
September 1953), and the first to be established in Manila. The former seminary of the Arch-
diocese was first offered by Archbishop Gabriel Reyes to the Salesians so that they might take
care of the orphans who were lodged there. But it was Archbishop Rufino Santos who would
finally consign the place to the Salesians.
113 ASC F157 Cina: Corrispondenza (Notizie e programmi del Sig. Don Acquistapace, 3
marzo 1954) 1; ibid., (Acquistapace a Bellido, Hong Kong, 1 aprile 1954) 1.
114 SAFIN-Mandaluyong Quaderno delle Osservazioni (Acquistapace, 1 gennaio 1954) 5.
115 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 9 agosto 1960).
116 Ibid., (Braga a Ziggiotti, Makati, 21 luglio 1959) 3; ibid., (Braga a Ziggiotti, Tarlac, 9
febbraio 1960).

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452 Nestor Impelido
sian school in San Fernando, Pampanga117. It would remain and grow signifi-
cantly there until 1992 when both day school and juniorate were covered by
lahar due to the eruption of the Pinatubo Vulcano located in the area.
Fr. Acquistapace would initiate the move to establish a novitiate in the
Philippines. However, there was already an existing novitiate in Hong Kong
itself. It was the typical case of a province which, because it included other
nations, had two novitiates. Fr. Acquistapace had reasons why he wanted a
separate novitiate for the Filipinos in the Philippines. The Filipino was dif-
ferent from the Chinese. The Philippines was a safer place to have the novices
rather than Hong Kong. Besides, it was not that easy for the Filipino to enter
Hong Kong118.
The novitiate in the Philippines was prematurely erected in the house of
Mandaluyong in 1954; but it never opened there. Soon, it was canonically
erected in 1955 in the school of Victorias119, where it neither started too. The
next year, the first novices finally began their novitiate in a villa in
Muntinlupa leased to the Salesians by a benefactor. It remained there until
1962; the place was adjacent to the maximum security of Manila120. In the be-
ginning of 1962, it was temporarily transferred to the school of San Fernando
in Pampanga. The former novitiate house of Muntinlupa was returned to its
owners. Meanwhile, a permanent home in Canlubang, Calamba, about 40
kilometers from Manila was being constructed. This was due to another prov-
idential donation effected to Fr. Braga. So that in June 1963, the seventh
batch began their novitiate in their new residence121.
The novitiate had experienced two masters of novices in its first seven
years: for five years, from 1956 to 1962, it was under Fr. Vincenzo Ricaldone.
The confrere was a trusted man of Fr. Braga. He was also a veteran formator
of young Salesians, having been rector of the post-novitiate in the formation
house of Shaukiwan in Hong Kong. But he was also an old and a tired man
117 The Prefect General, Fr. Albino Fedrigotti, had also recommended that the aspirantate
or juniorate be transferred from Victorias. The Bishop of San Fernando, Bishop Emilio Cinense
was happy to have the Salesian Minor Seminary within his diocese for it meant that with the
Salesians, there would more priests to help him. Cf ibid., (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 12 set-
tembre 1961) 1.
118 ASC F548 San Fernando-Fi (Acquistapace a Puddu, Hong Kong, 15 novembre
1954).
119 Ibid., (Fedrigotti, Torino, 4 maggio 1955).
120 Ibid., (Fedrigotti, Torino, 15 maggio 1956). Here, six groups of novices, from 1956 to
1963, underwent their first formation. The novitiate was interrupted for the first time in the
years 1960-1961; its next interruption would be from 1968 to 1970. Cf (Manuscript) Salesian
Novices in the Philippines: 1956-1997..., 2, 5.
121 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 4 ottobre 1963).

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 453
when he assumed the novitiate in 1956, one who never updated and who pos-
sibly was holed up in his outlook of the religious and Salesian life.
There were no novices for the year of 1960-1961122; this became a mo-
tive to substitute the old Fr. Vincenzo. Fr. Braga outlined some reasons for
having have to change him: Fr. Vincenzo did not speak good English, and he
did not keep the novices cheerful and joyful. But a real motive for his retire-
ment, in the mind of the one who had put him as novice master, was that he
was “out of order” and totally “drained in nerves and in health”123. So that Fr.
Braga had decided to ask the Superiors of Turin to send him a substitute.
Indeed, Fr. Vincenzo was already at the brink of a mental breakdown.
Consequently, Fr. Braga planned to send him back to Italy for a much needed
rest and so that the confer could regain his health. At the same time, he
wanted someone who would now takeover the novitiate so as not to interrupt
for long and to give the needed “aggiornamento” for the new set of novices.
This time, Turin’s answer was a welcome one to him and for a Vice-Province
so much tested: the Superiors had decided to send Fr. Jose Luis Carreño.
6. Carreño’s College
Fr. Carreño (1905-1986)124 was a known Salesian and was a very re-
spected man125. Although he was almost towards his 60’s when he was made
novice master, he maintained his openness and his vision of the Salesian for-
mation of the young. It was due to him that the Seminary College in Can-
lubang was established126. His was a first serious attempt to really create
122 There was no novitiate group for the year 1960-1961, for lack of a sufficient number.
123 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Ziggiotti, Makati, 7 maggio 1962) 3:
“fuori uso... esaurito di nervi e di salute”. According to Fr. Braga, Fr. V. Ricaldone had his crisis:
“di mania di persecuzione, di squilibrio psichico... gli pareva di dover morire ad ogni passo... era
indeciso, aveva paura di assalti notturni ed assoldò di guardie armate che vigilassero il noviziato...
passò mesi di insonnia e nonostante pillole sedative e tranquillizzanti non chiudeva occhio”: ASC
F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 26 novembre 1963) 1.
124 Fr. José Luis Carreño (1905-1986) was born in Bilbao, Spain (23 October 1905) and
died in Pamplona, Spain (29 May 1986) at 81 years of age, 64 years a Salesian and 54 years a
priest. He was master of novices in Tirupattur, India (1933-1943) and then provincial of
Madras Province (1945-1951). He did not stay long in the Philippines, being novice master in
the Philippines only from 1962 to 1965; for some reasons, he had to leave. Cf SAS 22B015.
125 Fr. Clifford described Fr. Carreño to the Rector Major as “una persona amabilissima,
di buona stampa salesiana”: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Clifford a Ziggiotti, Cebu,
4 gennaio 1962) r.
126 Fr. Braga had accepted the offer of 6 hectares of land, about 50 kms. From Manila, by
Mr. Jose Yulo without the previous consent of Turin. He envisioned to put there the aspirantate
and novitiate: ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Braga a Fedrigotti, Makati, 9 agosto 1960).

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454 Nestor Impelido
young Salesians who were really Filipinos, immersed in their actual place of
work in which they too in a little while would be involved and would be
committed.
Fr. Carreno had envisioned to start a college for the Filipino Salesians
where they could study and be qualified to teach in the Salesians schools. In
his mind, the current set-up of sending the newly professed to Hong Kong for
Philosophy did not help in qualifying the newly professed Salesians to teach
in the schools. The fact was that many of the confreres who were then at work
in the schools were not qualified themselves. Some had trumped up their
qualifications and falsified their diplomas, if only to manage the schools.
Their being foreigner had minimally served their purpose of being qualified.
Moreover, in the Philippines, the nationalization of the schools was very
much on the move127. Thus, the Salesian schools were practically being run
by the lay, not only because the Salesians were not enough but also because
the existing Salesians were not qualified to teach128.
Fr. Carreño was optimistic. He claimed that there was now a “new
house” in Canlubang, ready to accommodate and host “50 novices and pro-
fessed members plus twelve professors”129. He had only one condition to at-
tain his vision: that the post-novices should no longer be sent to Hong Kong,
and that those who were still in Hong Kong should be recalled back to
Manila.
But to do so, Fr. Carreño had to battle with the ex-Visitatore Fr. Braga
and the new provincial Fr. Cogliandro. Strangely though, he had the support
of some of the elder Salesians who also believed that the post-novices should
not be sent anymore to Hong Kong. Thus, he had recourse to the Rector
Major and stated his argument to him, if only to win his point130. And this he
did, even if it was not easy. Fr. Cogliandro resisted his initiative in the early
months of his coming; but he was quick to see the wisdom of such an initia-
tive of a newcomer like himself to the Philippines. And it was timely one as
well, indeed one step forward, and a giant one at that, in order to insure that
the Congregation in the Philippines remain “giovane”131.
Fr. Carreño told Fr. Ziggiotti that he was ready to go to Europe, as he did
before, to look for personnel for the Seminary College of Canlubang. Further-
127 Ibid., (Braga a Pianazzi, Makati, 9 settembre 1962) 1.
128 Ibid., (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, Makati, 31 ottobre 1963) 2.
129 Ibid.
130 Ibid., (Carreño a Ziggiotti, Canlubang, 5 settembre 1963).
131 Sometime in the 1980’s, the average age of the confreres in the Philippines was
between 25 and 30. In the current 2000’s, it has risen to about 30 and 35. While in Italy, it has
indeed aged, with practically an average age of confreres between 65 and 70.

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The Salesians in the Philippines (1951-1963): “dove la nostra opera… 455
more, he wrote and gave another of his suggestions to the Rector Major for
the new Philippine Province to solve its situation of lack personnel. He asked
that Fr. Bellido should send from Europe about twenty novices as he once did
for India132. In his mind, the injection of young foreign clerics would give
fresh blood to the personnel. These would easily learn the local language, not
just English. They could even become Filipinos if they opted, in five years
time. And studying in the Seminary-College, they were already qualified to
teach in any Philippine school. Finally such a mixture of the clerics, local and
foreign, would be to the advantage of both for the Salesian Society in the
Philippines133.
Conclusion
Fr. Carreno’s wish of having young confreres from Europe began to be
realized in his time. His call was heeded almost at once, with the advent of
young novices134 and clerics from Italy to Canlubang for the study of Philos-
ophy; although, such move of Turin did not last long on account of the events
which were travailing Europe in the immediate post-Vatican II period135.
Some time later, Fr. Cogliandro wrote Fr. Fedrigotti, informing him that
Fr. Carreño was doing well as novice master and superior of Don Bosco Sem-
inary College in Canlubang. In fact, they expected for that August of 1964,
about 50 clerics between novices and students of Philosophy, young people
who have not yet reached or who were just past their twenty136. Finally, there
were now young Salesians for the Philippines where the “work was born al-
ready adult”.
132 Ibid., (Carreño a Ziggiotti, Canlubang, 5 settembre 1963).
133 Ibid., 2. “Questi giovani imparerebbero il Tagalog e potrebbero prendere la cittadi-
nanza di qui in 5 anni, insieme ai titoli di insegnamento; la mescola coi filippini sarebbe van-
taggiosa per ambedue”.
134 In 1964, young clerics (Pietro Uras, Giuseppe Zuchelli, Ovidio Zaccheddu) started to
come to Canlubang to join the local novices and post-novices for the studies in Philosophy and
in College. Earlier though, there have been clerics (Felice Furlan, Giuliano Venturini, Pierluigi
Zuffetti, Giovanni Arienti) to provide practical trainees to the new province. However, practi-
cally all of them returned to Italy in order to study Theology.
135 The increase in vocations was rather prodigious in the Philippines so that there was
practically no need of outside help. Moreover, in the second half of the 1960’s, the first impact
of the reform promulgated by Vatican II began to be felt in a crisis of vocations. In Europe, the
vocational growth began to decline.
136 ASC F163 Filippine: Corrispondenza (Cogliandro a Fedrigotti, San Fernando, 10
luglio 1964) 2.