In the footsteps of the teacher: The Salesian - 100 years in Slovenia 41901-2001) 335
tion of Salesians in this part of Europe. In 1922, the Yugoslav Vice-Province
was established, and three years later it became an independent Province.
Pietro Tirone was the first visitor and then the first Provincial; he was fol-
lowed in 1926 by the Pole Stanislaw Pływaczyk. The Yugoslav Provincial Dr.
Francis Walland (Provincial from 1929 to 1936)12 was also the delegate for
Czechoslovakia until 1935, when a new Salesian province was founded
which included the colleges and parishes in that nation.
The Salesian presence and their activities were still deeply influenced by
the institutions, the ways of reacting and even of the models of behaviour that
were characteristic of the Italian cultural milieu. The system of religious for-
mation and that of schools, of daily prayers and of theological literature,
sometimes even ways of thinking and writing texts strongly echoed the atti-
tudes received during their presence in Italy. Youth organizations that were
introduced in the colleges were copied from the same cultural and religious
background. Actually, the Salesians were considered an Italian community
until the late 1930s, when with the Provincial Ivan ˇpan (Provincial from
1936 to 1954) started a process of accommodation. It was hardly carried out,
however, because of the beginning of World War II which changed the subse-
quent political situation in Slovenia.
All of the characteristic activities of Salesian institutions came to life. A
lower grammar school opened at Veržej for Salesian candidates only, then,
beginning in 1934, opened to others. A novitiate and upper grammar school
(philosophy) were opened in Radna. The college of Radna became a kind of
cradle for young Salesians from Slovenia, Croatia, and for a certain period
also from Czechoslovakia. The students of Radna had their own literary re-
view called Naše delo (Our Work). In both places, the schools were private
educational institutions, without public recognized certificates. Students,
therefore, had the duty to pass public school examinations at the end of each
school year. In 1929, a higher theological school was established at
Rakovnik. In spite of the lack of adequately prepared teachers, a rather poor
theological library, and the intense involvement of the students in the activi-
ties of the Oratory, the Provincial Dr. Franc Walland was successful in car-
rying out the main purposes of the theological formation of young Salesians.
For some subjects, the Salesians attended lectures at the Faculty of Theology
at the State University in Ljubljana13. Some professors prepared school texts
that gained a more wide spread acceptance in the ecclesiastical circles.
12 Dr. Francis Walland (1887-1975) completed the building of the church of Mary Help
of Christians at Rakovnik and gave a fresh impetus to the salesian press. He resigned in 1936.
See B. KOLAR, In memoriam III..., pp. 422-423.
13 See 75 let Univerze v Ljubljani. 75 let neprekinjenega delovanja Univerze v Ljubljani
1919-1994 (75 Years of the University of Ljubljana), Ljubljana 1994, pp. 96-100.