Acts_1973_270.ASC


Acts_1973_270.ASC

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YEAR LIV
APRIL.JUNE 1973
No. 270
A[r$ [t iltt $llpml[[ fi[lllllHl
OF THE SALESIAN SOCTETY
SUMMARY
L Letter of the Bector Major (page 3)
-TpMHorperroafoaacppOysyropteiepliluylferreir?rcnicn-oa,,-tmceritoeiiwiotsPnyLn-ssrei:atoanomyBnrtTepeefahrdo.a:neenrTndmbmosrtoortataeuscttnhmsethiordttpefuansSrenduram-gaayiltutenahscmsadTtein-eeaehdrneec-itatyTniiMn.rsohNdguarioeansrgiteasis-mslhtthhe-maarrneieWcunakFwmthltoeshyusoo-rtfibonmtfuhasAootiiinnntsurhkatotrhsitl-sschwoo-eaomrTyfmmhwwDleuiuonaocnervyrhdiaskstileuoo--osennf
ll. lnstructions and norms (nome in this issue)
lll. Gommunications (,page 21)
SecFtCm1htia.ouaoeerBrdlrteimrohzyistsne'qiaChnadu-togeidaops,aonknn:te6Tfrdoae.rn-otreuWcftwptohhho-re1tdearSa'tkthSa.toiimelnapuDeglrprsehooislifnacegsoiaoanmrtuaonutierbmruortysnimhnsmet'soahsSetof-ifaopatolhonetr5-efst.hiMotaCWehBfanoen.otnPChaPrgASgleadrrSueouradSgvgp-.iaGianenttaiCrcoh4ilione.a-drrlCii-nrCaoeg2puoc.pr1utosloi0nnvef.itnecseTStis.lmhraoce-l-feoenMnOsttinaasi37n-nn..eg-anSoMBgtipanrugeo9lgar--.
IV. Activities of the Superior Gouncil and matters of general interest
(page 28)
V. Documents (page 33)
1. The Salesian Ordo
sians in Mexico.
-
2. Letter of the Rector Major to the Sale-
Vl, Pontifical Magisterium (,page 39)
1. Chur.ch
the spread
uonf itdyr:ugdsiv-ine3g. Cifto,mhmumonanteoabchliginagtsionbu-t
2. We must halt
fonmidable truths.
Vll. Necrology - first list for 1973 (page 62)

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8. c. s. - RoMr

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I. LETTER OF THE RECTOR IVIAJOR
My dear conlrires and sons,
Once again it is time for me to maintain and strengthen
my bonds with you with my regular letter, carrying out the
{unction that article 1.29 of the Constitutions assigns to the
Rector Major - to be the Salesian family's cenre of unity.
Happy news: Bishop Trochta made cardinal
The election of our dear confrdre Bishop Trochta to the
college of cardinals is the first happy nev/s to recor.d. Even
though the event was publicized some time back it deserves
mention in these pages. Such an appointment is a well-merited
recognition of the faithful and constant service rendered to the
Church in circumstances most delicate and difficult. It is also an
honour for our humble society to which Cardinal Trochta always
feels closely bound as a member, ever loyal and grateful.
Confident of interpreting the thoughts of the Salesian family,
I hastened to congratulate him warmly. having in mind to express
our joy in a more fitting way when he came to present himself
to the Holy Father for the relevant ceremonies.
Meantime I am pleased to put on record that in all the

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( 1848)
4
difficult, painful and disturbed thirty years of his wotk for the
Church and the Congregation, Cardinal Trochta showed himself
everywhere and always utterly faithful to Don Bosco's teachings
and was always a priest of Christ and his Church; there was never
any question of wavering or doubt; he was always the worthy
son of Don Bosco.
Four months of work
Towatds mid-February the Superiot Council completed its
general meetings which had kept the members busy for four
{ull months.
Halfway through February the Regional Councillors resumed
their visits; and the remaining members of the Council now
have a schedule of meetings and contacts according to their own
particular work and Commission.
Your Rector Major has been busy with vatious visits and
meetings, offering guideJines and encouragement, and dwelling
on the more important matters in getting the wheels of renewal
rolling.
As you will read under section IV of these Acts, in the four
months of full sessions there was much solid work done in tackling
the many urgent matters arising.
rWe spent a lot of time examining the deliberations of the
Special Provincial Chapters that followed on the Special General
Chapter. You are aware, naturally, that these need the approval
of the Superior Council to have binding force. Mote than forty
were examined and approved. Some chapters, for one reason or
another, were unable to complete their work in the time foreseen.
'S(e shall make every effort to examine theit deliberations with
all requisite despatch.
Eventually when we get a bird's-eye view of the general
situation and have made the relative evaluations of the work done
by all the Provincial Chapters we intend to let you know, at least

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-5-
( 184e)
along the main lines, those elements of special interest that have
emerged. Each Province was examined as to its own special
situations and problems, together with its own practical needs
and its practical proposals along the lines of the Special General
Chapter's directives, i.e., in the light of our single mission and
single spirit. This makes each Province not an isolated particle
wandering about in a void, but a living and active cell in the
organic life
gregation.
of
an
equally
living
and
active
reality
-
the Con-
Top priority to formation
Many Provinces have now received back their deliberations
together with possible observations and remarks relating thereto.
They are now able to forge ahead and translate their deliberations
into ptactice. This point of time is not easy, is of great moment
and indeed is crucial. No matter how well conceived and pertinent
these documents may be, as long as they remain on paper only,
they are merely a list of fine ideas, good intentions and generous
resolutions. But all will be << as was >> and the documents pigeon-
holed in the file of wistful fantasy unless we roll up our sleeves
and do battle with the inevitable difficulties that will crop up
as we try to put the deliberations into practice.
This is a job that is complex, vital and of the utmost import-
ance, and those responsible are not only the Provincials and local
superiors. It must be tackled courageously all together, metho-
dically, and with special attention to those areas which should
have priority. But top priority must go to everything that rouches
on formation of personnel (from aspirantship and postulancy to the
curriculum proper to Salesian formation and our spiritual and
religious qualification, and eventually to on-going formation).
This is a << must >> because it is so fundamentally important.
To neglect this essential and vital step, not giving it precedence
in the renewal prograrnme, would show a lack of understanding

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( 1850)
-6-
and rcalization of the all-important interests of the Province and
the Congregation, despite all wotds to the contrary.
The Congregation (every Province) cannot afford to delay
its development, but it must be a development in depth, not in
the rnultiplying or increasing of works.
I am well aware that this policy is not the easiest; but I
also know that the really important things are never easy. Renewal
must begin right here. If perchance we were to take any other line
of thought, not only would we commit a grave error, but we would
inflict irreparable harm on our Province and the Congtegation:
time is not going to stand still and wait for us.
On the subject of personnel in formation, I notice that after
rhe Special General Chapter a very grave danger has come to light.
People seem to believe that for young men in formation, preparing
themselves for the Religious, priestly, Salesian life, mere living
in a Salesian community is sufficient; no one capable or responsible
is put in charge of their formation to give them that care that
is irreplaceable; nor is there any concern to choose a suitable
community that will have an educating influence on them. I have
no hesitation in damning this eror as fatal. Even if we were
not aware of just how much these young men need (far more
today than in the past) at least we should take warning from the
saddening negative tesults furnished by these experiences.
Dear confrBres, vocations are a ptecious treasure enffusted
to us by the good Lord, and their scarcity makes them all the
more precious. \\7e cannot aff.otd to risk damaging or losing these
vocations by adopting a superficial and easy-going attitude. 'We
must not neglect that necessary and elementary care which the
very nature of a vocation in formation demands. This by no means
excludes a wise and balanced understanding of the sensitivity that
belongs to the particular times in which we live.
The problem is a serious one, and much of the future of
the Provinces and the Congregation will depend on the way v/e
solve it: hence all those tesponsible for formation must keep
these thoughts constantly in mind.

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7
( 1851 )
The magisterium
Quite a number of confrbres thanked me for what I wrote
about the Magisterium in the last number of the Acts. It was
my duty to speak of it, and it is one of the responsibilities weighing
on all in the Congregation who have been entrusted with any
authority. Never before has the Magisterium been so much the
mouthpiece of authority as in these days. And just as the Superiors
have the obligation o{ carrying out this important task, so are
all the confrEres bound to its acceptance.
And so I feel I must point out that while the Magisterium
is a duty of the Rector Major it is also proportionately a part
of the office of Provincials and Rectors. They have the special
duty to make known and, to the greatest extent possible, to promote
observance of the the directives and norms, especially those which
in fact already
Regulations.
exist
-
particularly in the new Constitutions and
It is often obvious that directives and insuuctions that have
been promulgated some time, are simply not known. Rather
than indulge in empty laments, those in authority must insist,
charitably but unequivocally, that these directives from our different
legislative bodies be put into practice.
It is both necessary and more than ever beneficial that
Superiors, Provincial and local Councils and every single confrBre
(according to the particular sphere of action and responsibility)
be utterly aware of their sacrosanct duty to the Congregation
in this regard.
If the clear and precise directives coming from the General
and Provincial Chapters are not practised and made obligatory
without fear or reservation, all is wasted.
Another word on prayer
My January letter on prayer aroused many positive reactions,
not only from those in charge of communities, but also from

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(t852)
-8-
individual confrbres, and frequently from the younger members
too; indeed there was some teaction in every continent. This is
a sign that the perception of our < Life with God >> is something
widspread
infidelities
tthorobueghlaomutenthteedChoenrgereagnadtiothne-re.deIstpoiteffedresficcoiemncfoierst
and
and
confidence for our renewal.
However, to agree in words only, to applaud the argumenta-
tion, to stess the importance of prayer at this point of our
history
letter,
a-nd
all this is not good enough. As I
from what is sadly the case in
pointed out in my
many places, every
community and every confrEre must show a ttuly practical conviction
that out vocation only makes sense and is only sustained in faitb;
and faith in turn receives its natural nourishment in prayer.
Without this it may be something else, but it is certainly not our
vocation, certainly not our mission.
Prayer; both lruit and nourisbment ol laith
I have been deeply impressed by a chapter in one of Jean
Guitton's latest books entitled "'Why I believe". In it this
renowned Christian thinker and scholar refers to his personal
experience and develops a thesis that really sets one thinking.
At one point he remarks, "Faith is not real unless it leans
on a continual exercise of what could be termed 'piety"'. (Note
the word "piety".) He goes on to say, "I know that if I had
not been rained to pray, my faith would have starved, like a plant
without soil. And I think that the weakening of faith partly
depends on the fact that all the thought of past centuties is
neglected". He follows up with this observation, "The problem
of faith is not just the problem of knowing where Truth is. It is
also a practical problem: how can we seize this ruth and implant
it in our very being?" And again, "Knowledge is not necessarily
a. preparation for love. To make a truth part of me, to implant
it in my being, in 'the flesh of my spirit', I must embody it, give

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9
( 185' )
it a tangible covering". Guitton concludes that this incarnation
of faith, which is muth, is to be found in piety, which (he maintains)
is the indispensable element for nourishing faith.
I have quoted thus at length to show that souls dedicated
to the diligent and keen quest for truth, souls who have no fear
of new ideas(Jean Guitton is a philosopher, ecumenist and exegete)
recognise
much so
that
that
prayer and piety are deeply
one can conclude that the
linked with
problem of
pfaraityhe-r
so
is a
problem of faith.
Indeed it is apposite to ask, "How is it possible to live our
vocation and mission to the full if it is separated from prayer
and languishes, or if it is reduced to a non-faith? >
Please believe me, dear confrBres: to abandon or neglect
prayer (and there are plenty of specious arguments being urged
-notsauliwciadyasl
sophistry) will diminish or harm our faith; and,
obvious, that entails our vocation and mission
although
too.
There is only one thing left: we must fenew our resolution
responsibly and lovingly. Dear Provincials, Rectors and confrBres,
let us get down to deeds and realities so that prayer may take
the foremost place which belongs to it in the life of every confrBre
and every community.
"Serve God first: the rest will follow". In this way one's
neighbour will certainly be served and better and better loved.
Indeed, the more prayer becomes part of our lives, the more active,
generous and fruitful will our mission be. Our Lord tells us,
"nflithout me you can do nothing", and daily experience shows
just how true this is.
The ualue ol silence
\\)flhile dealing with this matter I wish to develop another
idea that has particular bearing on the subject. Voillaume has
maintained authoritatively (quoting Brother Carlo Carretto) that
prayer is "to think of God and love him". The two actions cannot

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( 1854)
-10-
be separated. I shall not dwell on the second part, but it seems
to the point to emphasise the word "think".
It is plain that to think of God seriously (as is the case
with anything of importance) there must be reflection, calmness.
There must be that fruitful silence in which alone it is possible
to concentfate one's attention and render real that filial encounter,
that speaking and listening to God.
Today, when the subl'ect of silence is broached, we hear
expressions like "monkery and medievalism!" This sophistical
claprap is meant to blind the unwary and superficial. Deep down
it betrays a mentality tainted (perhaps unwittingly) by the think-
ing thrust on us by "consumerism", comfort, hedonism, a world
allergic to all recollection or reflection and delighting in losing
itself in distraction.
A modern author has written, "C)ne has only to take stock
of the colossal 'industry of distraction' and the efforts made in
this field. People must have noisy disttaction at any cost: and
this renders more and mote impossible the silence that makes for
recollection. Modern man does not know what to do with silence,
solitude, lone meditation. lWe used to say, "Nature abhors a
vacuum": and this is man's reaction today. It is an attitude that
makes a person do anything to get away from solitude, silence
and quiet. Obviously reflection and recollection are thus rendered
difficult if not downright impossible. \\7e cannot live with the
God of silence without being ourselves silent, alone, recollected"
(Koser C., Vita con Dio oggi).
Of course we are not monks and we do not belong to the
middle ages: we cannot be other than Salesians, with all that
that name implies; and we are Salesians of our own times. But
this does not negate what the Special General Chapter has so
clearly maintained. Article 35 of the new Regulations reads,
"Let every community decide on opportune periods of silence to
produce an atmosphere conducive to recollection, personal work
and rest".

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- li -
( 1855)
As you see, the Special General Chaptet, while wanting to
relieve our community life of practices not consonant with our
particular mission and style, by no means set at naught the
importance of silence.
There is another consideration. It is a fact that modern
man, caught up in industy, noise and distraction has an absolute
longing for reflection and silence. If we examine the Church
today, in its myriad contrasts and confusions, we see many thou-
sands of simple Christians, men of action, religious and priests,
not indeed "taking the cloister by storm", but certainly flocking
to the ever-growing numbers of retreat houses: they feel that
there they can breathe deeply of the spiritual atmosphere they
find in the silence that envelops them.
Some may ask whether all this is pertinent for Salesians
engrossed in work and feverish activity. My dear confrBres, rest
assured that it certainly is! William Fealher, one of those successful
American businessmen who started from nothing, and always in
a whirl of activity, left in his memoirs his secret of success:
"Spend an evening in your room all alone with your thoughts: this
will help you get to know yourself better. Such an evening passed
looking in on yourself will help you find a few nuggets of gold
or a few diamonds".
But without going as far as America, and certainly not treasure-
hunting, Pascal had already written these wotds (and we septua-
genarian Salesians would do well to ponder them): "I have disco-
vered that all one's misfortunes issue from one thing: not knowing
how to sit in a room and pondet".
I{ we gaze about us with honesty and also look into ourselves,
we have to agree with this great thinker, who always speaks to
man about man.
A propos of Pascal's invitation, lve should put ourselves the
question, "How much time do I give to reflection, to personal
reading of matters that bring me face to face with my innermost
sel{ and with the Absolute?" This kind of reading is indispensable.
The preparation of conferences, lessons, sermons is certainly always

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( 1856)
-1,2-
good and necessary, but it is no substitute: there must be reading
that is for the direct nourishing of our spirit, that puts us in filial
and loving contact with God.
The true Salesian is a man ubo thinks
The quote from Pascal impresses me even more when I think
of a remark made to me by a priest, a man of culture and anxious
for conciliar and post-capitular renewal. After preaching the
annual retreat in various places, he sadly remarked to me, "The
I Salesians have met during these retreats gave me the impression
of being allergic to silence, and also, unhappily, to thinking and
prayer". I can only hope this judgement is not true, or at least
?. greatly exaggerated generalization.
Our classic Salesians, the men who built up the Congregation
from its early beginnings, planning its expansion and progfess,
were indeed men of untiring energy and enthusiasm; but they
were also men who, after the example of Don Bosco, were given
to thought, personal recollection, reflection and prayer. Names
like Rua, Rinaldi, Berruti, Quadrio, Srugi, are representative of
thousands and thousands of confrBres who were able to throw
themselves into their work with great profit; yet always enjoyed
the enlightenment and comfort of that "fruitful thought", that
energizing "silent conversing ith God", which, despite difficulties
that are never lacking, points the sure, safe way to new apostolic
goals.
Dear confrdres, the more active our life is, the more exposed
to the gusty rvinds of wordliness, the deeper our roors must be.
This is achieved exactly by learning how to think, reflect, encounter
God, put ourselves in union with him. For this the atmosphere
and ambient most suitable is to be found in recollection and
silence, especially in those privileged times of the days of recollection
we have every month, every three months and every year. The
thought of our Founder is underlined by article 63 of the Consti-

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-73-
( 1857)
tutions, "Don Bosco saw in these moments of recollection and
renewal 'the basic part' and the synthesis of our whole life
of prayer".
Days of recollection are not study meetings
At the risk or repetition I wish ro srress that the days of
recollection should not be turned or distorted into study meetings,
round-table discussions or debates on all kinds of cultural matrers.
Admittedly such gatherings can be very useful, but they must
not substitute the days of recollection; other times and occasions
should be found for them. The days of recollection, with their
special programming, must serve to restore and recreate the
Salesian's spiritual and apostolic life: and this is done by reflection
baenldonpgertsoonsaulcahnddacyosm. mOunneitcyapnraaydemrit-
these are the things that
that there are many forms,
many ways and means, for achieving recollection, silence, solitary
bwuitthtdhreawbaasl ic-
and perhaps we have much
necessity of these elements for
to learn in this
prayer and the
matter;
interior
life cannot be gainsaid.
For the sake of man and his "life in God" we must get rid
of the modern phobia regarding recollection, silence and prayer.
Recollection and silence are indispensable not only for life in
God but also for rue culture and civilization.
These ideas may not "conform", but they are absolutely
correct; and if Provincials and Rectors keep them before their
minds, I am sure that the logical consequences will not fall on
barren soil. They are well aware of their duty to see in one way
or another that these days the Constitutions set aside for the
spiritual and apostolic nourishment of the confrEres be not emptied
of their precious contents. The rights and ffue interests of the
confrEres in this regard must not be denied them.

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(1858)
- 14 -
'Vby insist so mucb on prayer?
Now it may be asked why so much is being said about prayer'
The answer is seen in plain facts. I see how urgent it is to take
courageous, total and methodical action for our renewal along the
clear lines of the Special General Chapter. It is exactly because
of this that it would be a grave mistake to insist on the other
sections (important though they are) without making our starting
point the dedicated renewal of our prayer life; and when I say
prayer I include the sum o{ our personal and community relation-
ships with
mission".
God
-
as people consecrated and "sent forth on our
"This is the very centre, indeed it is the true secret of the
renewal of our Salesian vocation today." This unequivocal state-
ment is not mine: it was made by the Special General Chapter
(SGC 519). And a little further on are these words, "\\(/e are
convinced that only a spiritual rebirth and not a mere set of
new structures will give the go-ahead to a new era in the history
of the Church" (SGC 523).
These affirmations issue from the most important organ of
our Congregation and are the fruit of bitter experience. They come
from the desire to see the Congregation extend itself without
delay in bold apostolic dedication; and it is for this very reason
that the Chapter bids us rechatge our spiritual life with God's
urging action, so that we become men of the spirit, men of prayer
that is not formalistic but convinced. \\ile must be ever mindful
of these statements, especially at this decisive moment when the
Congregation is gathering its forces to set in motion the complex
machinery of its renewal. It would be a sorry day for us if we
were to set our shouldets to other sections of renewal and neglect
our life in
thing else.
GRoedne-walfoisr
this is the pivot and foundation of every-
not a case of getting ourselves reotganized,
but alligning ourselves with the Lord in fidelity and spiritual
docility. \\(e would run the risk of setting up a lot of showy
and apparently efficient machinery; but it would be soulless and

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-15-
( 185e)
Iacking that irreplaceable spiritual energy for the service ro youth
and the Church that the Congregation must render. It would
be a poor structure that would very soon prove useless.
My dear Salesians, we have been invited to undertake the
task of renewal; then let us be sincerely convinced of the solemn
and ever-relevant statement of Don Rinaldi that is backed by the
Regulations themselves: "Untiring work sanctified by prayer and
union with God must be the characteristic of the sons of St. John
Bosco".
Lent and Temperance
One last thought. As I write these pages we are just
beginning Lent. In tune with the whole thought of the Council,
article 50 of our Regulations invites us to live this important part
of the liturgical year intensely, turning Lenten austerity into
practical reality, both as individuals and communities.
A general but important observation: I make frequent
references to the Constitutions. It is important not only to be
well aware of them, but to be thoroughly versed in them. This
is the surest way we shall come to appreciate them and discover
in them all the spiritual and Salesian wealth they contain. Thus
it will not be a case of mere formal observance: rather we shall
then live them in practice.
To be consistent and faithful to the promise we freely made
rve have to eschew all empty and false formalism: 'u/e must accept
sincerely and cordially this means the Congregarion ofiers its sons
in order to help them measure up adequately to rheir mission
and consecration. It is not just fitting, it is necessary that each
community find a time for the public reading of the Constitutions
and Regulations.

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(1860)
- 16 -
Not sbackles but railway lines
Local Superiors, especially Provincials and Rectors, should
refer often to the Constitutions and to the spiritual values therein
-andapnrdacItirceafle, rbaulst owthoicthhoosfeteanrtcicolenstatinhaetsasreentniaoltasnudicbtalysicjurviadliuceasl
for the Salesian life and spirit. \\7e must remember that our
Holy Rule is not a straitjacket, or a set of shackles to deprive
us of libetty, but a railway line along which the Congrega-
tion can progress, develop and act in harmony. A little thought
will make it obvious that the Constitutions are a synthesis of the
-"pirit proper to our Congregation:to know them, practise them,
acancdiohuasvweaoytshearnsdpmraecatnissetothekmeep-
these are the simple
us united in this spirit
and effi-
which is
the vital element of our Congregation.
I should add too that we should do more than just refer
to the Constitutions: when proper and necessary, especially those
in authority should demand respect fot them. Professional loyalty
requires this; but there should also be a desire to respect and
defend the "law" itself. It is, after all, the expressed will of
the Congregation, written up in fidelity to our Founder's charism.
Any well-ordered and organized society would expect this loyal
observance from its members. The day when the law (our Holy
Rule) is regatded as a "scrap of paper", and whims and individual
caprices take over, and there is contempt (in practice if not theory)
then that day would see the end of the Congregation.
Don Bosco gives a further reminder of this in his last will
written from the depths of his paternal heart when he was about
to leave his children: "If you have loved me in life, continue to
love me after death by observing the Constitutions". He has given
us a yardstick to measure our love for him and the Congregation,
his creation and our mother. \\Tithout this there would be no
tue love of Don Bosco, no matter how different things might
eppear. Don Bosco himself, our Father, has said so.

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Mortification rteafl.s strength
( 1861 )
Let us dwell a moment now on Lent and its invitation to
mortify ourselves. This is the special time for penance, but obviously
the obligation extends throughout the year.
This austerity is referred to by Don Bosco and our Salesian
tradition as ternperance. \\We know well how today's pundits (and
they are not
despise and
dailsl plauytefoltkhe-se
possibly some
values. They
are in our own ranks)
substitute (at least in
practice) values of comfort, well-being and status-symbol buying.
But indeed where these values become criteria for evaluating
persons, groups ot peoples, man is no longer man. \\7e should
note how this is happening, especially among the young, in
those countries in which progress is confused with the tat-race
after the myth of plenty.
True human values are lodged on a higher plane than mete
well-being (we are not denying the usefulness and validity of the
latter, provided it be subordinated to the uue values).
The highest human values are reached only when a man is
master of himself; and to attain this he must face up to discomfort,
austerity, i.e., mortification, temperance.
Pope Paul VI spoke some very apposite words at the
beginning of Lent: "Christian abnegation, mortification, penance
are not forms of weakness, they are not infetiority complexes;
but, issuing from grace and will-power, they are rather forms
of strength; they train us to be masters of ourselves; they give
unity and balance to our faculties; they help the spirit prevail over
the flesh, reason over fantasy, will over instincts; they bring to
our being a need for fulness and perfection. Rigor means vigour!"
(Address of Pope Paul VI at Santa Sabina, T March, 1973).
It is good to see Scripture quoted so freely these days. Then
let us recall Jesus speaking simply and clearly to us in particular,
who have elected to follow him closely: "I{. any man would come
after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross daily and
2

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follow me". \\(/e cannot escape this: it is part of the Christian
message that we as consecrated men publicly accepted in full.
Three threats to oar cornrnunities
Our Special General Chapter was very much aware of the
importance of
and essentially
Christian self-abnegation
temperance. Don Bosco
-knewwhiwchhamtehaenswparsimaabroiluyt
rvhen he gave us our Salesian diptych: work and temperance.
In article 606 the Chapter remarks that our witness to poverty
is particularly meaningful when lived in community. ft goes on
to explain that in practice this means frugality in food, rejecting
the superfluous, functional simplicity in our buildings, the way
we own things (we place ourselves and everything we have at the
common service of our mission), and our generous solidarity
with the houses and Provinces of the Congregation and the vatious
needs of the Church and the world.
Lent invites us to reflect and to ask serenely and sincerely
in every community: "As individuals and as communities, how
do we stand in the matter of austerity and temperance?" Let us
not try to salve our consciences with smart, comfortable but
unconvincing arguments; we must ansurer the question without
hedging.
According to Don Bosco the three enemies that threaten our
communities are "cibus, potus, lectus" (food, drink and sleep),
and he dilated on the atay of factors therein that could negate
our lives. I think our Founder's words are relevant today, especially
in certain sectors.
The lack of frugality and temperance in food, in certain
prolonged and costly holidays, in going after all kinds of comforts
and conveniences, in recreations that belong to the well-to-do, is
an offence to so many of our confrEres who live in genuine
poverty and Salesian frugality; it is an offence to the infinite
number of poor who lack even the necessities of life; and it is an

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_L9_
(1861)
ofience to the thousands of good souls who uy to help the Sale-
sian mission by conducting their lives in a kugal pattern of sacri-
fices, living far more modestly than those who enjoy the fruits of
their mortification.
ril7e are aware how critical the young are in this matter that
touches on our personal poverty, our community poverty and the
very meaning of consecrated life. It should be remembered
what a positive influence a life showing the stamp of austerity
and temperance can have on young vocations.
Our rnission dernands austerity
The Special General Chapter had indicated the missions as
the main avenue of our renewal. Hence my words on stirring
up in every community a constant awareness and interest in the
missions. But if we live a soft life, a life spent in anxious questing
for bodily comforts, if the stuff of which we are made is mere
jelly, if we lack the srength and energy that comes from Don
Bosco's style of temperance, how can the missionary spirit flourish
in us? Don Bosco knew what he was about when he exhorted
his missionaries to "great moderation in food, drink and rest"
-
and it holds for us too!
One just cannot be a man of prayer with God's interests
at heart, and be always anxiously striving for a comfortable little
world, lacking nothing. This is very different from what Christ
wants and offers us.
Lack of temperance is one of the weak spots; and history
ieaches us that the enemy makes use of it to undermine the walls
of our Congregation. Don Bosco knew his history and shouted
the danger to his sons loud and strong.
Our Founder urges us forward to a mission that demands
self-giving, and this requires austerity and detachment, "a heart
that walks barefoot", as St. Francis of Sales used to say.
Dear sons, it is my wish that you dwell on rhese thoughts

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-20
of mine and use them to check how you stand as individuals and
communities. There are so many people who love and esteem
the Congregation and want the Salesians to be faithful to their
Founder. God grant that they may join our Founder and say
of you, "Indeed these are true sons of Don Bosco".
I hope this lettet arrives in time to carry you my sincete
greetings for Easter.
Affectionate good wishes. Let us be united each day "in the
breaking of bread".
May out Father Don Bosco biess you all.
Father Ar,ovsrus Rrccpnr
Rector Major

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III. COTVIIVIUNICATIONS
1. Bishop Ttochta out foutth Salesian Car&nal
The Rector Major's letter in this issue of the Acts has already
made reference to the Sacred Consistory of 5 March in which Pope
Paul VI announced that Stephen Trochta, Salesian Bishop of Lito-
merice had already been created Cardinal "in pectore" in the Sacred
Consistory of. L969. We give herewith the Pope's allocution to the
recent Consistory in which he explains the reasons for the appointment
and why the matter was kept secret since 1969.
"And now we have a special announcement to make", the Holy
Father said. "\\7e refer to the last Consistory of 28 April 1969 in
which we announced the creation of two cardinals for the Sacred
College. \\7e then reserved these appointments "in pectore". It is
now our pleasure to proclaim that the first of these is our venerable
brother, Stephen Trochta, Bishop of Litomerice in Czechoslovakia.
"The reason we chose him was not only to give solemn recognition
to the merits of this faithful and zealous pastor but also to show our
affection for his splendid country which for many reasons is particularly
close to our heart.
"And now the motives for our delay in making public his name:
first of all, our venerable brother Joseph Cardinal Beran was still
u,ith us (although suffering a severe illness which was soon to cause
his death), and although nor living in his country, he still had title
to the illusttious archdiocese of Prague. But the main reason was
that we always desired, and never at any time lost hope, that eventually
relations between the Government and the Church in the Republic of
Czechoslovakia would return to normal. Over the years great efforts
rvere made to attain this goal.
"Although in its early stages and not yet finalised, certain progress

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has been achieved recently with the appointment of four new bishops
belonging to that country. !7e are confident that the hoped-for
development will soon be realised; and so we are happy to give you
this news which we are sure will bring satisfaction and joy not only
to the Catholics but to all the Czechoslovakian people".
2. Intetcontinental meetings for the implementation of the directives
of the Special Geneml Chapter
The Superior Council has now decided on the procedure for the
intercontinental meetings envisaged by XX SGC. The Acts of the
Special General Chapter (761:1.2) speak
a convenient time the Rectot Major and
osfomtheesme emmebeetirnsgos fththues:S-upe"r[io1r
Council will arrange m€etings with the Provincials of the different
regions to take stock of the progress that has been made in the
implementation of the directives of the General Chapter".
This section of the Acts also provides in a general way for the
necessary programme to be adopted in the preparation of such meetings.
The Superior Council has now further detailed this procedure, dividing
it into four phases.
1.) In every Province the Provincial and his Council will prepare
a report on how the Province has implemented the directives of the
Special General Chapter and the deliberations of the Special Provincial
Chapter.
2) An intermediate Provincial Chapter will be held between the
two General Chapters (cf. Acts SGC 761:10). Its scope is to examine
the report prepared by the Provincial with his Council and to approve
the definitive text.
3) When the report is apptoved it will be forwarded to the
Supetior Council for examination.
4) Finally the intercontinental meetings will be held, with the
Rector Major, some Council members, and Provincials with their
Provincial Delegates.
In broad lines and subject to unforeseen problems the Superiot

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23
( 1867)
Council has fixed the places for these meetings: Rome, Brazil and
Bangalore.
The dates for the different phases of preparation are here
tabulated:
Meetings
ROME
BRAZIL BANGALORE
1) Preparation of re-
port of Provincial
and his Council
2) Intermediate Pro-
vincial Chapter
3) Forwarding of re-
port to Superior
Council and exam-
ination thereof
4) Intercontinental
meedngs
for end
o[. 1974
January
197 5
Feb-Mar
197 5
first 10 days
of April 1975
by January
197 5
February
t97 5
Mar-Apr
1975
by May
197 5
June
1,975
Aug-Sept
1975
last 10 days second 10 days
of. May 1975 of. Oct 1975
3. The PAS: specialized and up-dating cources
The PAS at Rome has publicized the specialized and up-dating
courses it has organized for the next few years. These specialized
coutses ate: a) a two-year course of theology, b) a two-year course
in spirituality and c) a yearly course in up-dating.
a) The tuo-year course ol specialized tbeology is open to those
who have completed their institutional theological course. It offers
a choice of dogmatic theology and pastoral theology (the latter special-
. izing further into pastoral-moral, pastoral-liturgy and spirituality). The
course carries the "Licentiate in Theology" degree.
b) Tbe tuo-year coarse ol specialization in spirituality is open
to all members of t}e Salesian family (SDB, FMA, VDB, Co-operators,
Past Pupils), the mininum study requirements being the successful
completion of the pre-university yeer (licenza dalla scuola media supe-
riore). The course awards a "Diploma in Spirituality".

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24
c) Tbe twelue-rnontbs course in up-dating is suited to Salesians
who have spent some yeats in the ministry and is based on four main
themes: knowing modern man and today's world; study of the renewed
theological thought of our times; examination of pastoral action; and
deepening and up-dating of the Salesian vocation.
\\7ith these initiatives the PAS is offering an ever-increasing
service and guidance to the Salesian family.
4. Coutses of "On-going Formation" at the Salesianum (Genetalate,
Rome)
The Salesian Formation Commission is preparing courses of on-
going formation at the Rome Salesianum.
These courses aim at offering Salesians a "renewal experience"
along the following lines: deep spiritual dedication; Salesian community
li{e; pastoral searchings and new attitudes; cultural up-dating.
The first course of on-going {ormation is planned for next October
and will last four rnonths.
5. The world-gathering of Salesian Brothers
The Superior Council has fixed the date and procedure of the
meetings of the Brothers which (in compliance with SGC 76):4) are
to be held at the Provincial level, then regional, and finally world level.
The organization of these meetings has been entrusted (according
to the level) to Provincials, Regional Councillors and the Commission
for Salesian Formation.
In these meetings the Congregation will study in depth how the
Salesian Brother was envisaged by the Special General Chapter and the
practical directives the same Chaptet gave in his regard.
The world meeting of Salesian Brothers will take place at Rome
in the last week of March 1975, coinciding with the opening of
Holy Year.
6. The wotk ptogramme of the Supedor Council
This programme has been scheduled to suit the members' alternat-
ing presence at the Generalate and absence on regional visits.

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-25-
Up to 1976 the general scbedule is as lollows
(186e)
On regional uisits
At the Generalate
15 Feb - )0 June 1973
1 Oct. 1973 - 14 Jan 1.974
16 Mar - 30 June 197 4
I Oct 1974 - 15 Jan 1975
16 Mar - 30 lute L975
1 Oct 1975 - 15 lan 1976
1 July - 30 Sept 1973
15 Jan - 15 Mar L97 4
1 July - 30 Sept 1,974
16 Jan - 15 Mar r975
i july - 30 Sept t975
7. Mgt. Coronado: new Salesian bishop
The Holy Father has appointed Mgr. Jesris Maria Coronado Caro,
SDB, Prefect Apostolic of Ariari, to the residential see of Girardot,
Colombia.
8. Prcvincial appointments
Father Gennaro Honda has been appointed Provincial of the
Province of Japan.
Father Robert Falk has been appointed personal delegate of the
Rector Major for the Delegation of South Korea.
9. Study Centte for the history of the Salesian Congregation
A Study Cenre for the histor), of the Salesian Congregation has
been set up at the Generalate under the aegis of the Theological
Faculty of the PAS (Rorne).
Its aim is to fill an obvious gap in this sector, and to collect facts
and trends that may be of use not only in understanding the past
but also for projecting the future.
The Superior Council has assigned to the Centre turo tasks: the
wtiting up of Salesian history in general, and the particular history

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26
of the Salesian missions (which will celebrate their centenary in 1975).
This latter work will be direced by Father Raphael Farina (Dean of
the Theological Faculty at the PAS) with the collaboration of the
Commission for Salesian Missions at the Generalate. The Centre aims
to collect and catalogue published and unpublished material from
missionary centres or lying in various archives; to set up a library of
missionary reviews and magazines; prepare a monograph on the history
of the Salesian missions (to be ready for 1975); and publish various
scientific contributions on the Salesian missions.
The Centte is already at work and has enlisted the aid of Regional
Superiors in the organizing of men and suitable initiatives in various
parts of the Salesian missionary world for the collection of material
for study and publication.
10. Salesians in the Managua eatthquake
The violent earthquake which struck Nicaragua 23-24 December
last, destroying its capital Managua, also involved the Salesian work
in that city. Buildings were seriously damaged, but confrBres and all
other persons in our houses escaped harm.
The Salesian foundation v/as on the outskirts of the city in a
working-class area that was developing rapidly. It consisted of a school
building and work-shops (for printing, mechanics and carpentry) with
1500 pupils; also a free elementary school. Many other works of a
social nature were
suffered damage to
about to
the value
be opened in
of g 150,000.
January.
The
buildings
During those tragic days the confrBres spent themselves utterly
in helping the homeless, and the Salesian houses of Masaya and Granada,
not far from Managua, were placed at the disposal of the authorities as
emergency bases.
Through the good offices of the Superior Council, a few Salesians
from the Missionary Office of New Rochelle travelled immediately
to the disaster area. Venezuela also sent confrbres;and practically all
parts of the Salesian world showed their solidarity by doing or sending
something in the way of help.
As a result of these efforts, and especially due to the dedication
of the Managua confrdres, the youth centre is once more engaging

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( 1871 )
in some of its activities. News is to hand that in the usable parts of
the centre two crash courses in arc-welding for apprentices and workers
arc already in progress. The idea of these courses is to train men
in a hurry to help in the prompt rebuilding of the ruined capital.
For the same purpose there are further crash courses in electricity,
carpentery, joinery, etc. Meanwhile, the youngsters are drifting back
to the youth centre, and life round about is gradually returning to
normal.
These pages record and renew the lively solidarity of the Salesian
family towards these stricken confrEres and especially towards His
Grace, Michael Obando Bravo, Salesian Archbishop of Managua.
1 1. Donations for Managua
After the earthquake tragedy and the damage to our Don Bosco
School of Arts and Trades (as described above) various Provinces have
hastened to forward to the Rector Major thefu contributions to the
solidarity fund for these confrbres so hard-hit. Below are details.
North Belgium
United States East
Quito
Portugal
Bahia Blanca
United States ril7est
South Germany
Madtid
Lire
Pesetas
130,000
309,000
1,240,000
1,064,000
300,000
1,335,165
1,goo,o0o
176,385
From the general BROTHERLY SOLIDARITY FUND the
Rector Major has sent to His Grace, Obando Bravo, Salesian Archbishop
of Managua, L 1.,000,000 to help in the many needs of his stricken
people.

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IV. ACTIVITIES OF THE SUPERIOR COUNCIL
AND IVIATTERS OF GENERAL INTEREST
1. Superior Council meetings
Half way through February the Regional Councillors began their
second journey to their respective Provinces. From the thitd week
of last October till then, the Superior Council was in full strength at
the Generalate and was busy with many of the Society's problems.
During these four months at Rome it held meetings at various
levels: meetings with the Commissions, both separately and together;
meeting with the Regionals; with various committees; and sixty-seven
general meetings.
The general meetings dealt with a vatiety of matters. First there
was the ordinary governing of the Congregation, and with modern
times presenting special problems calling for exceptional decisions, time
for ordinary governing is greatly reduced; nevertheless government
must proceed: for many decisions (regarding persons, works, Provinces)
the Rector Major wants the opinion of his Councillors, or must have
their consent.
The Council's first item was the examination of the Regionals'
reports on the Provinces they had just visited. These visits, though
rapid, were nevertheless sufficient to highlight some questions of
moment, and the Council discussed way and means for suitable
solutions. The teports covered the whole of the Salesian world.
The Superior Council also appointed eight Provincials. The choice
of a confrdre to take on the responsibility of a Province is a grave
one, especially in these times of renewal; and for that very reason the
procedure for appointment is now a more lengthy and detailed matter.
According to the Acts of the Special General Chapter the Regional
Councillor must see that there be an opinion poll conducted among
the confrdres of the Province. The Superior Council then carefully
examines the confrBres' prefetences and proceeds with the appointment.
Besides the ordinary work, the Superior Council examined the
various Special Provincial Council deliberations. The procedute of this

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-29
(1873)
new and difficult task was described in the last number of the Acts
(page 54). Fortysix out of the seventyfour Special Provincial Council
deliberations have now been examined. They are herewith listed.
Italy and tbe Middle East.
Adriatic, Ligurian-Tuscan, Southern, Novarese, Romano-Sarda, Sicilian,
Subalpine, East and \\fest Veneta, Middle East.
Central America €s Soatb Ameica (Pacific side).
Antilles, Bolivia, Central America, Messico-Mexico, Venezuela.
South Arnerica (Atlantic side).
La Plata, Belo Horizonte, Manaus, Recife, Pamguay.
Iberian Peninsula.
Barcelona, Bilbao, Cordoba, Leon, Madrid, Seville, Portugal.
Nortb €v Central Earope and Cerutral Africa.
Austria, North & South Belgium, North France, Ljubljana, Zagreb,
Holland, Central Africa.
En glisb-s peakin g Re gion.
Australia, Hong Kong, Bombay, Calcutta, Gauhati, Madras, Ireland,
Japan, Thailand.
The examination of the Special Provincial deliberations has proved
very helpful to the Superior Council, putting the members in close touch
with the realities of the Provinces and the confrdres' obvious desire and
efforts for renewal. The work will be resumed in July when the
Regionals retufn from abroad.
2. The work of the Commissions
Each Commission has made practical proposals to the Superior
Council and received approval for several.
in Tbe Commission lor Salesian Formation is helping the PAS (Rome)
the programming of the new academic courses mentioned in
"Communications", page 23. It is also preparing for the \\)7orld
Congress of Salesian Brothers (v. page 24).

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-30-
More generally, the Commission is studying ways and means for
a constant increase in the effectiveness of the work of formation
in the Provinces (for it is to the Provinces that the Special General
Chapter has entrusted the immediate and practical matters of confrBre-
formation).
Finally the Commission has made considerable progress with a
document on on-going formation which the Constitutions describe as
the right and duty of every Salesian. The matter is treated as a typically
modern fact, aimed at attaioing "formation through change". The
prevailing stability in the past could have fostered the idea that a
formation once acquired lasted for good. But these days see our whole
social fabric subjected to constant and regular changes. The grorvn-up,
as well as the youngster, will not survive if he does not "learn how
to learn", if he does not form himself "for change and in change".
Thus (the document-in-preparation continues), on-going formation will
always need to be extended to span the whole of our existence from
infancy to old age. This study of the Salesian confrEre is not treated
as a matter of broad ditectives, but delves into practical situations: for
it is of ever-increasing importance that the Congregation take its on-
going formation seriously if it wishes to fulfil its Salesian mission
today.
This is why courses of on-going formation are being organized
at the Salesianum as described on page 24.
Tbe Coramission lor Youth
Council with its programme of
"Pastoral" has presented the
action and the objectives it
Superior
plans to
achieve.
On J and 4 February it organized a meeting at the Generalate for
Salesians representing schools and youth apostolate in Italy and Spain'
The problem of the Catholic school in a pluralistic society was dealt
with and an outline of proposals for Salesian schools drafted.
The Cornmission lor Adults also presented its plan of action to
the Council. It has set in train a two-fold enquiry into Salesian
Bulletins and Salesian publishing houses. It plans to make an estimate
of the situation, examine the problems that come to light, and, where
possible (in line with the directives of the Special General Chapter),
co-ordinate initiatives for common action.
Also part of the Commission's scope is information regarding the

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(1875)
internal affairs of the Congregation (communications that are mutually
beneficial, exchange of experiences, questing for new methods), especially
the Provincial newsletters (now widely in use), and the need to increase
the exchange of informadon at the inter-Provincial and wodd levels.
The Commission is also working on two documents close to the
heart of the Salesian {.amily: the new past pupils statutes and the
new Regulations lor salesian co-operators. The preparation of the
latter is still in the initial stages, and the commisslon, together with
the National Councils of Co-operators, is mapping o,rt i1s [nes of
procedure.
On the other hand, the Statutes of the pasr pupils are well
advanced. A first draft has been forwarded to the National councils
and their observations are already to hand. A meeting of the con-
federated committee of Past Pupils will soon be held to ]inalize details
and arrive at a definitive text as soon as possible. The meeting will
also deal with two other matters of general interest: the coigress
of Past Pupils in Latin America (themes, programmes , organization),
and the seting up of an international news bulletin.
Tbe Cornmission for tbe Missions has also put its programme to
the superior council and received approval. Its aim is missio"n renelval,
and the approaching centenary of the Salesian missions will be u gooi
occasion for the launching of various initiatives now in pr.p"ruiiorr.
One of these latter is the founding of a study centre foth. ;,Hirrory
of the Salesian Missions" (v. page 25).
3. Other activities of the Superior Council
Foa-fthth_eDer uRcroainuingnetcrhiilelaotprtseenrmdioeaddnaomgfeetdehteitnoggsevniose(irtapvlaamsrteioeputuisnpgpilsrooavf innthdceecsoC-"oonpudenrcaHilt,oors.srorm"irne.
Spain and Portugal. Father castillo took part in the Inter-American
Catholic Education Conference in January at panama.
For the first time the new Generalate celebrated the feast of Saint
John Bosco. on the eve of the feast many salesians, co-operators and
past pupils accepted an invitation to be present at the concelebrated
Mass presided over by Cardinal Confalonieri.

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32
On 9 February the members of the Superior Council marked the
conclusion of their work in Rome by repairing to St. Peter's to con-
celebrate Mass at the tomb of the Apostle.
During the next few days the Regional Councillors set out on
their visits; and the Councillors for the Missions and Youth "Pastoral"
also left for important journeys: Father Tohill to spend four months
in the ten missionary territories of the Congregation in Latin America,
and Father Castillo to visit all the aspirantates in Italy.
The Rector Major, too, journeyed to the Iberian Peninsula and
was there from the 14th. to the 26th. of February.
4. The Rectot Maiot in Spain and Portugal
During the period 14-26 February the Rector Major visited the
Salesians ir, Spui" and portugal in company with Father M6lida
(councillor for the Iberian Peninsular) and Father vigand (who also
attended the various meetings scheduled)'
The visit included Madrid (14-18 Feb), Lisbon and Oporto (18-21
Feb) and Barcelona (21-25 Feb).
At Madrid the Rector Major attended the < Iberian Conference >>
and also met the five novice mastefs. He gave a conference on vocations
to the Daughters of Mary Help of christians and addressed three
hundred Salesians on the subject of renewal.
In Portugal he met the Provincial Council, spoke with the Nuncio
and visited a number of Salesian Houses'
At Barcelona he addressed two hundred confrEres on the subject
of renewal and spent a few quiet days of prayer at the monastefy of
Monserrat.
The Rector Maior worked to a tight schedule that was crowded
yet calm. (Among other things, Father Ricceri had to front up to an
,U-orr, attack of 140 aspirants atCarubanchel Alto - all fierce autogfaph
hunters.)
The Salesian family in the Iberian Peninsular enjoyed meeting the
successor of Don Bosco and saw in his urging and encoutaging directives
the continuation of that dialogue which was begun so many years ago
by Don Bosco himself.

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V. DOCUNIENTS
1. The Salesian Otdo
On 13 March 1973 tbe Sacred Congregation lor Dioine'Vorsbip
approued tbe Salesian Ordo. Tbe text in Latin and English follous.
a) Latin text
SACRA CONGREGATIO PRO CULTU DIVINO
Prot. N. 476/73 socrETATrs sANCTT FRANCrscr sALEsrr
fnstante Rev. Domino Decio Baptista Teixeira, Procuratore Gene-
rali Societatis Sancti Francisci Salesii, litteris die 28 {ebrualiri L973
datis, vigore facultatum huic Sacrae Congregationi a Summo Pontifice
Paulo VI ributarum, Calendarium proprium eiusdem Societatis, prout
in adiecto prcstat exemplari, perlibenter probamus seu confirmamus,
ut ab iis qui eo tenentur in posterum servetur.
Huiusmodi Calendadum servatur etiam in ecclesiis et oratoriis
Instituti Filiarum Beatae Mariae Virginis Auxiliatricis et inseri potest
sive in Calendarium Romanum generale sive in Calendarium Ecclesiae
localis, iuxta electionem a Superioribus competentibus singulis in regio-
nibus faciendam.
Contrariis quibuslibet minime obstantibus.
Ex aedibus Sacrae Congregationis pro Cultu Divino, die 13 manii
1973.
Anrunus Card. TesBxt, Praelectus
A. BucNrNr, Archiep. tit. Diocletianen., A Secretis
3

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( 1878)
34-
SOCIETATIS SANCTI FRANCISCI SALESII
CALENDARIUM PROPRIUM
IeNuenrus
24 S. Francisci de Sales, ep. et Eccl. doct., Societatis Tituli, lestunt
3l S. Jouemvls Bosco presb., Societatis Fundatoris, solernnitas
FrsnuRRrus
L Commemoratio sodalium defunctorum Societatis
Merus
6 Dominici Saaio, lesturn
1,3 S. Mariae Dorninicae Mazzarello virg., Instituti Filiarum Mariae
Auxiliatricis fundatricis, lesturn
24 B. Manrlr Vrnc. titulo Auxrrruru CnntsrteNonuu, Societatis
Patr. Princ., solemnitas
ItrNrus
23 S. Iosepb Calasso presb., menoria
Ocrosen
29 B. Micbaelis Rua presb., menoria
&) English manslation
SACRED CONGREGATION FOR DIVINE TTORSHIP
File no. 467 /73 soclEry oF sAINT FRANCIs oF sALES
At the request of Rev. Father Decius Baptist Teixeira, Procutator
General of the Society of Saint Francis of Sales, in his letter of 28
February !973, and by virtue of the faculties accorded to this Sacred

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Congregation by the Supreme Pontiff Paul VI, we willingly approve
and confirm the calendar proper to the said Congregation u, ,.t o.rt
in the copy attached, so that it may be used henceforth by all rvho
are bound thereto.
This calendar is also for use in churches and oratories of the
Daughters of Mary Help of Christians and may be inserted into the
general Roman calendar or the calendar of the local Church according
to the choice of the competent superiors in each region.
A11 things to the contrary notwithstanding.
From the Office of the Sacred Congregation for Divine \\7orship,
13 March 1.973.
Anrsun Cardinal TearRe, Prelect.
Archbp. A. Bucurxr, Seuetary.
SALESIAN "PROPERS"
JeNuenv
24 St. Francis ol Sales, Bp & Doctor of the Church, Titular of the
Society: Feast.
3l St. Jonu, Priest, Founder of the Society: Solemnity.
Fpnnueny
1 Commemoration of the deceased members of the Societv.
Mev
6 St. Dominic Saoio: Feast.
13 St. Mary Mazzarello, Virgin, Founder of the Institute of the
Daughters of Mary Help of Chistians: Feast.
21 N{eny Hrrp or CnnrsrreNs, Principal Patroness of the Society:
Solemnity.
Jurve
23 St. Joseph Calasso, Priest: Memorial.
OcrosBn
29 Blessed MrcHer,r Rue, Priest: A[emorial.

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2. Lettet of the Rector Maiot to the Salesians in Mexico
On tbe occasion ol tbe 8Oth. annittersary ol tbe arriual ol tbe
Salesians in Mexico, the Rector Maior sent tbe lollowing letter to tbe
conlrires ol tbe two Mexican Prooinces.
Beloved confrBres and sons,
The glory and serenity of Don Rua's Beatification is still with
us as I take up my pen to write to you on the occasion of the 80th'
anniversary of the arrival of the first Salesians in your magnificent
country which, from the dawn of its histoty has been blessed with
the ever-abiding presence of its patroness, Our Lady of Guadalupe.
It is a happy coincidence that I am able to sign this letter on the
very day on *hi.h
eighty years ago, in
we can
October
honour Don Rua at the
1892, he decided to send
altar. Exactly
the (irst group
oisul.iirnr to Mexico. This coincidence fills our hearts with joy and
confidence.
The first day of December 1972 is a date that is memorable for
Mexico and for the whole Congregation. We look with joy over the
first eighty years since the first small group of five Salesians arrived
in Mexico under the leadership of their energetic rectot, Father Angelo
Piccono; and the presence of a cletic and brother in that tiny party
gave it the characteristic of an authentic Salesian community.
In a way such a small group seemed out of all proportion to the
-vast work ahead, and but a small offering to the deep affection of so
many Mexicans anxiously awaiting their arrival. But Don Rua (like
Don Bosco) knew that a small community of Salesians with a deep
love for the young could imbue their activities with a boundless energy
and enthusiasm. Don Bosco used say, "In things that will help
youngsters in peril, in things that will bring people to God, I forge
ahead to the point of rashness" (MB XIV 662).
My dear confrEres, this great Salesian occasion prompts us to
ponder both past and future.
The past evokes the great pioneers: magnificent men like Mgr. Piani
and so many other generous Salesians who worked and sweated in the
making of the vivid history of the Congregation in Mexico' They have
left you the spirit of those eady days as your heritage; they opened
up tire way for yout Salesians activities. Let us never forget this:

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we must be deeply aware of our vital links with those who blazed
the trail of this grand Salesian adventure.
As we think back we recall the unforgettable magedy that caused
kthneelpl aoinffuthl edisCpoenrsgarel goaftioonurinconMfredrxeisco-.
it seemed to sound the death
Those were tough and heroic
years: but a glorious resurrection was in the making, and we were to
witness the rebirth of the Mexican Provinces and watch them forge
ahead with renewed vigour.
O_ur
The past obliges us to thank from the very depths of
Father who is in heaven, Mary Help of Christians
our being
,,who hai
accomplished everything of us", and Don Bosco who was the inspiration
for this vivid page of Salesian history.
An we have to look forward too. The future presents an obvious
pattern as we page through the Acts of the Special General Chapter.
To build a future true to the mark and create a "new world',, our
Special General Chapter urges us to rapid renewal along the lines of
the three-fold aspect of our Salesian vocation: youth, the ordinary
people and the missions.
There is no need for me to detail these matters: this is done
magnificently by the special General chapter and the deliberations of
the Special Provincial Chapters. However, in view of the work to be
done in the next few years, I wish to point out and emphasise a matter
of top priority and fundamental importance: the need to intensify
our vocational and formative work.
Like all Latin-American countries, Mexico is young, and its hectic
development means that we have to multiply our preserrce (which, after
all, is the presence of the Church) for the sake of the young. Our
missionary traditions in Mexico and the urgent needs of the Church
and the Congregation all call for a speedy answer. This among other
things is the justification of my behest.
I call on the Mexican Provinces to take practical and energetic
steps in the matter of vocations. This, of course, presupposes a carefully
planned post-capitular Youth Apostolate and spicific iffortr to create
a vocational mystique round the Salesian mission. Far more basically,
in- every vocational apostolate there is the need for a deep awareness
of the priority that must be given to formation, and how vitally
important is the personal and community realisation of one,s own
vocation,

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Furthermore, this awareness of our Salesian vocation presupposes,
today more than ever, that both individual Salesians and communities
,.rccied in discovering the presence of God in their lives and actions.
I pointed this out when I presented the practical guideJines of the
Spicial General Chapter (cf. Doc. page XIV). This is simply discovering
what Don Bosco used to call in his day the supernatural. Our
Salesian mission will achieve the full force of its srength when the
individual Salesian is seen by the young as "a man in whom the Holy
Spirit dwells,,, and when the community shines forth as a reality solidly
o.r. with God. In this v/ay the life of the Salesian and the work
o^rf the community will constitute a compelling call for those for whom
we work and wiil fulfil their iresistible role in the Salesian apostolate
for vocations and in the creation of a Provincial community that is
g" enuinely
Thi;
formative.
is the thought
I
offer
the Mexican
Provinces;
and I
know
that the Mexican Salesian will shape up to his wonderful future and
will be able to render help to his brothers in other latitudes'
The answer lies with you. As I make this appeal on the occasion
of the arrival of the first salesians in Mexico, my prayer is that it
will result in a vigorous activity along the lines I have indicated.
Before conclrrding, I must make special mention of the tremend-
ously important role our salesian co-operators played in the event we
are commemorating. Before the salesians came to Mexico the co-
oinpdeereatdo,rsthebyuiwltourpke"d
,t.ong affection for Don
without stint to make it
Bosco among the
possible for Don
people:
Bosco's
sons to come. To them goes our deepest gratitude; to them our request
ro carry on with their comforting presence that is evidenced so actively
and generously in our Salesian mission.
As Don Bosco's successor I want to be very near you on this happy
occasion; and in joyous hope I bless all the Salesian family in Mexico
-of
q6nf1|1gs, pupils, past pupils,
my fatherly affection for all.
co-operators
and
friends
-
in token
Affectionately youts,
Father AroYsrus RIccrnr,
Rector Maior.

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VI. PONT]FICAL IVIAGISTERIUM
1. Church Unity: divine gift, human obligation
, On 24 January 1973, on the
Cbristian Unity", Paul VI gaae
occasion ot' tbe,,Week
the lollowing address
ol prayer
on what
for
be
described as "ofie ol tbe two great problems ol tbe cburch, ecurnenisrn".
(Translation taken frorn English edition of ,,Osseruatore Rornano',
dated I Feb 197)).
Today, beloved Brothers and Sons, a thought-an idea, a Truth,
a- Reality-lights up before the eyes of our mind, attracts our gaze,
absorbs us, fills
gain our love.
us both
lwhat is
with
this
enthusiasm and worry, as do things that
thought? It is the unity of the Church.
As soon as this thought is grasped in its general significance, it
takes hold of us, dominates us. Unity: immediately it imposes itserf
orr account of its logical and metaphysical force. It refers to the church,
that is, to mankind called by Christ to be one thing only with Him
TanhdeninitHtoimrm.enIttshuosldbseucasussepeollbf oitusndhisbetocraiucseasopef citt,syiehsetoelrodgaiycaarnddeipttihll.
today, bleeding and suffering like that of Christ crucified. it ."prorr.,
us and awakens us, like the sound of a trumpet, calling us rviih the
urgency of a vocation, which becomes relevant and characteristic in
our times. The thought of unity irradiates over the world scene,
scattered with the magnificent rent limbs and the ruins of so many
churches, some of them isolated as if selfsufficient, others broken
r'nto hundreds of secrs. All of them are now invaded by two conflicting
forces, in a rnoving tension; one centrifugal, fleeing, in its pursuit of
autonomy, towards schismatic and heretical goals; the other centripetal,
demanding with reborn nostalgia the recomposition of unity. Motherly
and fearless, Rome, certainly not faultless, and burdened on her own
account with immense responsibility, stubbornly affirms and promotes

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this unity as her own duty, smacking of witness and martyrdom. It is
the authentically ecumenical and unitarian force, which is seeking
its principle and its centre, the base, which Christ, the real cornerstone
of the ecclesial edifice, chose and fixed, in his stead, to signify and
perpetuate the foundations of his kingdom." And again it reverberates,
this thought of unity, in the conscience of so many thoughtful, religious
souls, raising in them a spiritual problem: how do I respond to this
imperative of unity?
I belieue in the one Churcb
"I believe in the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church"'
How often do these words of the Creed rise to our lips during public
or private prayer; and how often we must considet them and meditate
on them because they express the great truth that "Christ established
and ceaselessly sustains here on earth His holy Church, the Community
of. {aith, hope and charity" (Lumen gerutiurn, n. 8), and communicating
his Spirit through her works in us and with us in the world for its
salvation. "By her relationship with Christ, the Church is a kind
of sacrament or sign of intimate union with God, and of the unity of
all mankind" (Luraen gefltiilm, n. l).
S0e have frequently read and heard the words of the Apostle
Paul: "There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to
the one hope that belongs to your call, one faith, one baptism, one
God and Father of us all, who is above all and through all and in all"
(Eph. 4, 4-6); "You are all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3, 28); "Now
there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties
of working, but it is the same God who inspires them all in every one"
(1 Cor. 12,4-6); "And let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts,
to which indeed you were called in the one body" (Col. 3, 15).
And above all the sublime words of the Lord urge us irresistibly:
"that they may all be one; even as thou, Father, art in me, and I in
thee, that they may also be one in us, so that the world may believe
that thou hast sent me". (Jn. 17, 2I).
These words of our Lord and of his great Apostle have a universal
value. They are destined to touch the minds and the hearts of all
Christians, to be a source of inspiration and to guide the actions of

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all those who bear Christ's name. The remind us of the divine gift
of unity, but at the same time also of the obligation that is incumbent
on men, unity. The II Vatican Council, almost summing up its orvn
doctrine on the mystery of the Church, says: "This is the unique Church
of Christ which in the Creed we avov/ as one, holy, catholic, and apost-
olic. After His Resurrection our Saviour handed her over to Peter to be
shephetded, commissioning him and the other apostles to propagate and
govern her. Her He erected for all ages as "the pillar and mainstay of
the truth". (Luruen gentiuru, n. 8).
Christian comtnunities ntirror tbe unity ol tbe Church
The epistles of St. Paul quoted above contain a deep theology,
but they do not constitute a theoretical treatise. They had in mind the
concrete situation in the churches of Ephesus, Corinth, Colossae. In
the priestly prayer for unity Jesus was speaking in the intimate circle
of his Apostles, referring, however, to all those who will believe in
Him through the word of the Apostles.
Therefore if the principles enunciated by Jesus and the Apostle
have a universal value, for all Christians of all times, they are put into
practice concretely in pamicular communities and through these comm-
unities.
Unity, which is a real gift from Christ, develops and glows in
the concrete situation represented by the lives of the Christian commun-
ities. Understanding of the important role of the particular commun-
ities, of the particular churches, was clearly formulated by the Council:
"The individual bishop is the visible principle and foundation of
unity in his particular church, fashioned after the model of the universal
Church. In and ftom such individual churches there comes into
being the one and only Catholic Church" (Luneru gentium, n. 23).
In fact the unity of the Chutch, as we said, in the historical cha-
rism of the whole Catholic Church and the Roman Church particularly,
is already ateality, in spite of the deficiencies of the men composing it.
However, it is not complete, it is not perfect in the statistical and social
framework of the world, it is not universal. Unity and catholicity are
not equal, either in the sphere that calls for this cotrespondence most,

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the sphere of the baptized and believers in Christ, or, even less, in that
of the whole of mankind on earth, where most do not yet adhere to
the Gospel. These are the two great problems of the Church, the
ecumenical and the missionary, both dramatic.
Today we are speaking of the first one, that is, the union of
Christians in one Church.
n7e would like to indicate as one of the ways to the solution,
even though it is a way that is already known, long, delicate and
difficult, the duty and the possibility of interesting the local churches
in the ecumenical question, in harmony, of course with the universal
and central Church, (if we do not want to make the situation worse
instead of better).
\\il/e see how important it is that the particular churches of the
Catholic communion should keep in mind their tasks and their
characteristic ecumenical responsibilities.
Through the particulat church the Catholic Church is present in
the same local and regional environment in rvhich other Christian
Churches and Communities also live and work. The establishment of
contacts and brotherly relations often turns out to be easier in this
context.
!7e therefore exhort all our Brothers and Sons wholeheartedly
to bring it about that the commitment for the unity of Christians will
become an integral part of the life also of the particular churches.
Communities open to one arrotber
"The dialogue of charity", the expression so dear to our brother
of venerated memory, the ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Athe-
nagoras, can be fully realized between persons and communities that
have frequent mutual contacts, share sufferings and hopes, open to
one another and, together, to the Spirit operating in them in the course
of the concrete experiences of their lives.
The catholicity and the unity of the Church are manifested in the
capacity of the particular churches and of the whole to take root in
different worlds, times and places; to find themselves in reciprocal fellow-
ship in every wodd, time and place.
Unity at the local level is always a sign and manifestation of the

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mystery of the unity which is the Lord's gift to the Church. The
particular churches can enrich the ecumenical movement as a whole
with their experiences, can make a conribution fruitful for the whole
Church. At the same time they will receive suggestions and directives
coming from the centre of unity, that is the Apostolic See, "universo
caritatis coetui praesidens" (Ignatius ad Rom. Inscr.), to be helped
in their problems and to be able to judge the validity and fruitfulness
of their own experiences.
us,
"I believe
therefore, to
idnedthiceatOe noeursCehlvuerschto...t"he-
this profess,ion of
cause of the unity of
faith urges
Christians,
with all the ardour of which we are capable, and with all the possibilities
that the life of the Church offers us at many levels.
Dear Sons, we all ask for forgiveness for the faults committed
against this great gift of unity, greater than any merits of ours. Let
us join wholeheartedly in the sublime prayer of Jesus, which He, as
priest and victim, addressed to the Father for his Church: "that they
may all be one; even as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that
they may also be one in us, so that the world may believe that thou
hast sent me".
2. We must halt the sptead of drugs
On L8 December 1972 the Holy Fatber receiued in audience a
group ol 150 persons engaged in the anti-drug campaiglt arnong school
children. His address uill be ol delinite interest to Salesians working
lor the youltg.
(Translation taken lrorn English edition of "Osseruatore Romano"
dated 4 Jan 1973).
\\7e extend to you our fathedy welcome, and we thank you for
offering us, with this meeting, the possibility of setting forth to you
our concern, which is also youts, with regard to a problem which we,
too, have so much at heart: the problem of drugs.
\\We do not wish to lose the opportunity of associating our voice
with yours to call public attention to a fact of morals that cannot
be neglected. It is an appeal which we also address to all men of
goodwill.

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44
The distressing spread of the use of drugs among the young and
the very young is a motive of deep sadness for us, especially on
account of that undermining of spiritual and intellectual energies which
they cause in their lives. If the phenomenon is not checked somehow,
it will soon be directed against the human community, when the new
generations, their ideals and their energies it fatal disorder, in their
turn occupy the posts of responsibility.
A danger ot' colossal propoltions
It is an established tact that drugs, beyond their more immediate
effects, which are akeady grave in themselves, such as the distortion
of sensory perceptions, the weakening of the central psychic functions,
longafter-effects of apathy and depression, with forms of lack of balance
which can even reach manifestations of the psychotic type, lead before
long to a psychic dependency which ties the subject to drugs as the most
enjoyable and simple solution of his difficulties, in the beginning, but
later it becomes dramatic. Hence the step to complete spiritual aridity,
to the loss of all ideals, to the subsequent contact with increasingly
strong drugs and with their criminal background, is a very short one.
On the plane of scientific research the hypothesis has already been put
forward that some drugs may leave painful traces even in the offspring
of the victims. You are well aware of all these things.
Before a danger of such insidious and colossal proportions, we
would like to make known some obvious reflections of our own to
you, social animators, who with intelligent timeliness have chosen this
specific field as the expression of Christian charity and human solidarity;
to all those who, directly or indirectly, by means of study, assistance,
proposed laws, initiatives of prevention or of rehabilitation, wish to
play your part in the struggle against this new social evil.
Let us leave aside the analysis of the hedonistic attraction, namely,
the temptation of pleasure and the curiosity of the experience, that
drugs, like other things pleasing to the senses and forbidden, may
exetcise on the inexperienced minds of youth.
Let us look rather at the phenomenon of drugs. Nour gro$/n to
alarming proportions, it has certainly been prepared and encouraged

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for some time by deep motives the importance of which had perhaps
escaped pedagogical investigation, as sometimes happens in the case
of the early symptoms of serious diseases.
Tbe real causes and people mainly responsible
It seems that the real causes are to be sought in the discontent
and distrust of the young in regard to the adult generation, whom they
accuse of indulging in things which they forbid to them (cf. "no admit-
tance to minors"), of highlighting false values, of inconsistency of life,
exclusive concern with gain, tolerance and insensitivity with regard
to their own hedonism and injustice to others. Under these conditions
of disgust, unable to change the system by themselves, perhaps after
seeking dialogue and answers within the family, they have chosen
escapism and complete imesponsibility,. they have looked for groups in
which they could recognize themselves and to which they could belong.
And it is here that they may easily meet with drugs, turned into a
symbol of rejection, used as a factor of compensation and as an
instrument of comradeship. A good dose of curiosity and exhibitionism
accelerates this phenomenon of detachment.
The call of the young to their elders to face up to rheir responsi-
bilities is not always objective; but it undoubtedly induces us to re-
examine our conduct, our educational systems, our ideals, our ideas.
Perhaps people have been too much concerned with providing for their
children's prosperity and the possibility of studying, and too little con-
cerned about raining them gradually to the responsibility of life, and
making them enthusiastic about ideals and active interests from their
earliest infancy. Today youth's encounter with reality calls for training,
commitments of value and a certain aptitude for sacrifice.
Perhaps, too, there has been a wrong approach to the dialogue
between parents and teen-agers. Parents, perhaps, have not succeeded
in making it possible for their children to ask questions with frank
and serene {reedom and in offering them proposals that are morally
uplifting. Sometimes they refuse to broach moral ,subjects as if they
had been attacked. The outcome has been a situation of mutual mistrust,
which has led to the emotional detachment of the young from their
parents, inducing them to look, often without any control, for a group

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46
outside the family, where feeling themselves at their ease, they have
no possibility of escaping its negative influences.
The drug problem, however, would still not exist, at least in
its present proportions, if there did not also exist a whole network of
responsible conspirators: the clandestine producers and drug peddlers,
whose earnings, it is said, are incalculable. These are the people on
v,hom responsibility falls in the first place for the hundreds of thousands
of lives that are irremediably undermined. 1We find it almost incredible
that these traffickers should pay couriers and distributors to give free
samples of the drugs, in the perverse conviction that after trying
them the young people will become regular customers.
Drugs are no tDay to reacb God
Furthermore, a certain ideal justification and a flavour of adventure
is given to drug taking among the young by a set of ideas that are
apparently philosophical and even mystical in content. Man, it is said,
is about to be overwhelmed by his technical advances and his inner
unrest. The only way to emerge from this state of dissatisfaction in
order to find more personal and authentic horizons is drug taking,
which intensifies consciousness, digs deep down and leads to interior
horizons, which modern life has made inaccessible. It is then that
there takes place, they say, the encounter with superior worlds, which
put the subject in a dream state that has something divine about it.
Everyone can see the subtle danger of these auto-suggestions.
In this connection it would be enough to recall what science teaches
about the biochemical action of the drug introduced into the organism.
lWe would like to learn from you, who are extremely well informed,
the description of these phenomena. riTe are told that it is as if the
brain were violently struck: all the structures of psychical life are
upset by the impact of these exceptional disordered stimuli' The subject
emerges from these experiences with his mental capacities still in a
state of confusion; he remembers only a few absurd and fantastic
scenes, which vanish as quickly as figures in a dream. Now it is
impossible to think that a subject for whom these conditions are
almost habitual will be able tomorrou/ to dictate the lines of a new
society, much less offer his collaboration in sectors of commitment.

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As for the religious and mystical character that the experience of
drugs is claimed to assume, to the extent, according to somi theorists,
of leading to the hearing of God, we wish to warn people of the
glaring ambiguity on which this statement is based. Realty religious
experience and spiritual contact with God are fruits of lucidity and
mental activities in full consciousness; they are tensions and ascents in
the rvays of intuitive knowledge, which in most cases cost sacrifice
and always call for the exercise of self-control. On the contrary, drug
taking "deeply affects the human spirit, and compromises its delicate
receptiveness to the mysterious interior influence of the divine Spirit,,.
If in archaic and prescientific cultures, some drugs were thoutht to
be capable of putting one into a state of ecstasy, that was because the
psycho-active principles of some plants were not yet kno'qrn. Today
it is known that those sensorial and psychic states of exaltation were
only modifications of the nerve centres, produced by chemical stimuli.
Therefore it is no longer possible today, by way of support for the
thesis of the use of drugs in order to reach the ascetico-mystical plane,
to put forward the use made of them by primitive peoples before and
during prayer to the divinity.
Drugs a form ol escapism
At this point, a matter of fundamenal importance arises spontane-
ously. Granted that the young turn to these forms of escapism to
manifest their dissent with society, we can see that the way they have
chosen is quite unsuitable to get out of the present social situation.
Owing to drugs, they are becoming poorer and poorer in ideals and
energies; their attitude is limited to a hostile and idle criticism of a
society that ought itself to know that it is sick; they are unable to
propose alternatives and rcmedies. It is, therefore, a squalid and almost
cruel dissent, from which the community certainly cannot expect
anything consffuctive.
These drug addicts, in fact, do not seem to have been able to
emerge from their hallucinating experiences strengthened in their ideals
of good, enriched with programmes, for example, against poverty and
hunger. None of them has gone to the Third Vorld to dedicate him-
self completely in helping those needy peoples; no young drug addicts

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have ever been found alongside spastics, congenital defectives, old
people, attentively giving assistance and comfort.
In this context, the comparison with another category of young
people is very significant. Those rich in spiritual and human ideals,
precisely because they wish to correct the errors and injustices of the
iommunity of which they are responsible members, feel the need of
clarity of purpose, ideals of understanding and commitment; theirs is
constructive criticism, made up of proposals and personal sacrifice.
Drugs seldom take root among such people.
First duty: accurate inlorming
Having said this, the question always arises: what can be done
to control and reduce this terrrible tide of poison. In the first place, it
is indispensable to mobilize public opinion, as is being done, by you
especially, by means of clear and exact information on the nature and
the rcal and deadly consequences of drugs, against those misunder-
standings that are circulating about their alleged harmlessness and
beneficial influences.
This task of information rests mainly on those who run schools
and youth associations of whatever kind; recourse must be had to any
medium of social communication specially suited to drive home the
danger to the young. There should be instruction for parents, so that
they will know to prevent situations of detachment from the family
and assist their children if they should take drugs. Courses on toxi-
cology should be made compulsory for those training to be teachers;
up-to-date knowledge on the problem should be available in secondary
schools.
Well-planned radio and television programmes could be helpful,
or simple Looklets in keeping with the spirit and tastes of youthful
readers-. It would also be useful, in youth clubs or parent'teacher
associations, to arrange meetings with experts on the matter so as to
be constantly informed about the evolution of the phenomenon and
the ways in which drugs make their way into our environments
of life.
\\7e do not share the opinion of some people that this type of
early and planned information, if it is carried out with great judgment,

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can become a form of propaganda and stimulation to drug taking.
Confronted with a phenomenon which the young p€rson will almost
inevitably come up against,sooner or later, the most constructive remedy
is to give him timely warning, thereby instructing and strengthening
him to defend himself in a responsible way. The effect of the informa-
tion will also certainly depend on the way in which it is given. As
happens in every other type of preventive instruction, there may always
be some one who will take advantage of the alluring news out of
curiosity or a spirit of adventure. But at least young people will be
prevented from getting involved in drug-taking without realizing it.
Special legislation needed
A decisive contribution in this programme of containing and
curbing drug addiction should come from special legislation for the
various drugs, which are very dicerent from one another in nature and
effect, and for the ways in which they are peddled among the young.
n(/e hope furthemore that, alongside an agreed contol and repression of
clandestine producers and distributors, a modern programme of preven-
tion and treatment will be undertaken, duly organized also locally,
by means of cenmes for the detection of those who are using them,
specialized medical wards distinct from psychiatric hospitals, or by means
of treatment at home or in dispensaries. Some norms of special assist-
ance for young drug addicts will perhaps be necessary, such, however,
that while ensuring the health authority the possibility of initiating and
completing a serious detoxicating treatment, do not constitute for
the young person concerned a motive for evading the necessary therapy.
Specialists in the matter will know what measures to take.
For the purpose it will be opportune to legislate in such a way
that, while recognizing that also the occasional consurner of drugs
has a certain responsibility, a cleat distinction is made between the latter
and the trafficker for the sake of gain. In the first case, a state of
physical and psychical illness is very often prevalent, from which he
must be freed; in the second case th€re is the will to spread evil, while
knowing that very high personal and social values are at stake.
This is what we wished to say to you, even if you already know
all these things, in the pastoral distress that afflicts us, like a thorn
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50
in the side, at the thought of a calamity now so widespread and
menacing.
We trust we have, with our reflections, confirmed you in the
resolution of commitment and assistance which distinguishes you;
and while we congratulate you on the attention you devote to the
problem, we, together with you, rally all the forces of good to check
an evil that endangers our beloved young people, and the society of
tomorrow.
May our special Apostolic Blessing encourage everyone in this
noble effort.
3. Common teachings but formidable truths!
"Dear sons and daughters, they are, as you see, teachings that
are very common and more or less well-known to all; but the truths
contained in them are indeed formidable and sublime. ..". On 7 February
last Paul Vl tbus described tbe addrcsses be was giuing at bis usual
'Wedruesday aadiences.
These aadiences ale always crowded, lor tbe Pope expresses bis
thoughts to tbe Faithlul in sirnple language and uith a fatber's con-
lidence, ollering decisiue answers to the distressing problems ol
rnodern xzan.
Tbe lollowing are lour ol the Pope's more receflt "meditations".
a) Has modetn man no longer any need of God?
(Address of Paul VI at the audience of 17 January 1973)
(Translation taken lrorn Englisb edition ol "Osseruatore Romafio"
dated 25 lan 1973).
\\7hy do you come to this meeting?
Vhat do you seek from him who is happy to receive you, make
your acquaintance, speak to you, feel he is with you? An unusual man?
A historical phenomenon? A witness crying in the desert?
\\7e know that you come here not so much to seek, as rather to
find. To find one whom, perhaps, you have never seen, nor approached,
but whom you know very well, as a father, a brother ot all, a friend,
a teacher, a representative of that Christ to whom you yourselves belong

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and whose name and likeness you bear, as Christians, a minister of
his, a successor of the one to whom Christ entrusted the keys, that is,
the powers of that kingdom of heaven, of that religion He had come
to set up, and to found as a new society, visible, spiritual and universal,
the Church, and to build it on that same humble man, since then called
Peter, the foundation, the centre, the principle constituting the building,
the servant, the pastor of humanity, which is really linked with Christ
himself. Yes, you come to us, because you believe and know that
hete is the Church in her most genuine and characteristic expression,
as St. Ambrose said: ubi Petrus, ibi Ecclesia, where Peter is, there
is the Church. And this, of course, is independent of the littleness
and the unworthiness of the physical person that is speaking to you
norv; rather, precisely because of the religious sense that guides you
here, it is all the more beautiful and consoling.
Why beautiful and why consoling? Because it contrasts with
an attiude, which is also characteristic and widespread in certain cases
in the modern world: the negative attitude to all that is connected
with religion, f.aith, the Church, Christ, God.
Absence ol God
\\ffe would like you, at this moment of intimate conversation, to
read in our heart one of the most constant and painful thoughts
imposed on us, on the one hand,by our apostolic and prophetic office
as upholder and promoter of the kingdom of God, and on the other
hand, by observation of the absence of God in such alarge sector of the
rnentality and life of contemporary man.
1i7ell, consider for a moment with us this fact that seems to
characterize the history and civilization of our times: the absence of
God. So much has been said and written about this fact, atheism, in
its many expressions, secularism, namely, the exclusion of all religious
reference from the actual life of man and of society, the intentional and
in practice radical negation of God's very name from the expressions
of culture and of the scientific conception of the world and of human
existence. A famous French review, for example, has informed us in
the last few days of the ban that a certain country, despite its great
religious traditions, has placed on writing the name of God with a
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Have certain representatives of modern man become enemies even
of the holy and ineffable name of God? This is nothing but the
extreme and external aspect of modern atheism. But there are other
aspects that deserve our reflection. Modern man, it is said, is allergic
to religion. He is no longer disposed to think, to seek, to Pray to God.
He is indifferent, he is spiritually insensitive. At bottom, there is a
more serious objection, which is tacitly, but strongly, operative, we,
men of today, do not need God; religion is useless, it serves no purspose,
on the contrary it is a restraint, an embarrassment, a superfluous and
paralysing problem. Today man has broken free from the old
theological, mythical, pietistic ideologies; and convinced that he is
winning a higher freedom, he has put out the lamp of religion: better
the darkness of unbelief than the mystification of superstitious
speculations.
How many people think in this way? And is it true-but
we do not want to believe it-that youth, the new generation,
is turning to this facile and victorious irreligiousness? Today minds
are filled with concrete knowledge, both empirical and scientific,
and are completely taken up with mastering useful things,
machines for example, or with interest in trivial things, amusement,
for instance; one would think they lack nothing. The world of
economy and of pleasure, the experimental and sensible world, the
so-called world of the real, tangible and commensurable realities of
experience, suffice for them, and they neither wish nor need to seek,
in the sphere of the invisible, of the ttanscendent and of mystery,
the completion and fullness for the inner emptiness, which, it is said,
no longer exists.
This absence of God deeply distresses us, and gives us the desolate
impression of being alone, anachronistic.
Perbaps an unconscious qilest
This, brothers and sons, is one of the reasons that make your visit
most welcome to us. It brings us the comfort not only of your pres'
ence atound our ministry, surviving down the centuries and in modern
human vicissitudes, but also of God's presence in contemporary life'

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And so the dialogue with you, though casual and very short,
confirms to us, on the one hand, the supreme and harmonious necessity
of religion, faith and prayer, and insructs us, on the other hani,
about the origin and nature of certain frightening phenomena of mod-
ern mentality: the anguish, the confusion, the rebellion, the deep unhap-
piness of a part of mankind today. Man has lost the profound, meta-
physical sense of things, the meaning of his own life, hope in any
I'ind of destiny. Yes, rhe light that illuminated the whole suiroundings
has been put out, and people are all groping like blind men in search
of a point of orientation and support, bumping into one another and
embracing one another, as if by chance. Is Babel rising again? And
is that "spirit of confusion", of dazed bewilderment, of which the
prophet Isaiah speaks (19, L4), blowing through mens minds? Or does
this denial of God's name hide, indeed, an iconoclastic intention, but
against the false conceptions of divinity, against imperfect or corrupt
religions, and which can therefore be solved in the quest, perhaps an
unconscious one, of the unkown God? (cf. Acts 17, 23). Of a God
who is Truth? A God who is Goodness? A God who is Life? In other
words, is not the absence of God today an obscure and tormenting
aspiration to the presence of a God who is salvation? That is, ultimately,
a Messiah, a Christ, light of the world, in whom the man of today
can find again at the same time himself and God the Father, his
beginning and end? His hope and joy?
Let us think about it: it is the great problem of our times. As
for us, we have this confidence; and in this painful absence let us
stand firm and straight, stretching out our arms again to suffering
mankind, and repeating the words of Christ: "Come to me, all you
that labour and are burdened; I will give you rest" (Mt. 11,28).
b) Ftom the absence of God to the search for God
(Address of Paul VI at the audience o{. 3l lanuary 1973)
(Translation taken lrorn Englisb edition ol "Osseruatore Romaruo',
dated 8 Feb L973)
Let us pick up again the thread of a reflection that can never and
must never end: reflection about our attitude to the question of God,
the religious question. This is what is happening: the boldness, rash

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or unconscious, with which the negation of God imposes itself today,
reinvests this question with a tormenting urgency. God is absent,
we have said, fiom modern life, because He is forgotten, because He
is excluded; is nothing happening in the world? Is nothing happening
in human culture? Is nothing happening in the conscience of the living,
thinking person? Ve will not ry now even to make these questions
explicitl we will merely mention them, to stimulate you to a search
that can take any of the hundted paths that open up before-you,
precisely because of the immense and indefinite emptiness produced
Ly th. ubr"rr.. of God. It is enough for us to drive home this explosive
word: the search. \\What shall we put in God's place?
That is to say, the absence of God, which characterizes modern
life with certain macroscopic aspects, is followed, willy nilly, by the
search for God. Let us simplify this phenomenon, by classifying it into
some of its elementary categofies, beginning with the one that seems
the most obvious and the most convenient.
Knowledge increases the enigrna
The first search returns at once to the original denial, namely, the
search suffocates itself, trying to convince itself that the religious ques-
tion is a pseudo-question;
of shadow gather around
it is useless, harmful. Even if
the human mind in this way,
immense areas
and if no one
now claims ihat science can satisfy the supreme aspitations of the human
mind, people are resigned to live within its horizons, which are con-
tinually expanding, but without rcalizing that the more the marvellous
field of scLntific knowledge is extendend, the more the enima of the
being that pervades them all, grows. This being of himself urges
us tJ rise to a higher sphere, where it is necessaty to arrive, the sphere
of the ,...rrury, the absolute, the sphere of creating causality, the
sphere of God.
lWe are well aware that the logical effort to arrive at this first
pale knowledge of the first principle often does not suceed in establishing
ihat vital relationship between man and God, which we call religion,
but is its premise: the subjective premise, because the window of
transcendeni reality is thrown wide open before thought, which is
made humble and exalted; and the objective premise, because above

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the mystery, which can always be explored, of finite things, we see
the ineffable and inexhausible mystery of the infinite Beingl with this
incomparable discovery, which is fundamental for the whole religious
order:__ that ,our thought is made to reach the peak of divinity) A
marvellous discovery: we are essentially destined for a personai rcra-
donship with God. Let us recall the ever quoted words of 51. Augustine:
"Thou hast made us for Thyself, O God, and our heart will ,r*.. ,.rt
until it rests in Thee" (Conf. 1, 1). To deprive man of this goal would
clip the wings of hi." spirit, lowering his stature to the level o{ beings
without spiritual souls, deceive his supreme aspirations with objects of
insufficient dimensions, feed his religious hunger with food that
increases it, but cannot satisfy it.
The ancient altsueri "Seek bigber up',.
Does the search for God stop here? It is so deeply rooted in
our nature that in some way even those who forget Him and deny Him,
continue the search, deflected to false, incomplete, or impersonal and
abstract representations of God. \\X/e moderns, ffained to think, are
particularly predisposed to this mystification, this idolatry: we make
every desire, every ideal abstraction of unity, of truth, of goodness, every
conception, real though it may be,of happiness, power, art, beauty and
love, we make them a supreme good, an absolute that dominate, ,rr. W.
fall back again into the human sphere, often no less childishly than
the ancient worshippers of sensible things or of natural ph..rom.na.
Now man is not enough for man. If we really listen to the voice of
this humanistic sphere, we must record the ancient ansv/er: seek higher
vp; qaaere supla ltos. And above man, supposing u.e arrive at the
threshold of the religious world, is our search finished, we repeat?
No, we ansv/er. It rather begins on a nev/ plane, in a new
kingdom.
or doubt
s7e
that
would like this to be understood by those who think,
to give one's spirit to the religious experience may
rrustrate its freedom,
myths, scruples and
its autonomy, its energy;
fears. \\We must admit
fill it with ghosts and
that not a[ refigious
expressions are valid; but we have the good fortune and the duty
to affirm that there exists a real religion, subjectively modelled according
to the measures and the needs of our spirit, objectively set up by that

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God whom we are seeking, with the surptise, here too, of discovering
that even before we moved in search of God, to an infinitely greater
degree, God came in search of us (cf. Abraham Heschel, Dieu en quite
de I'bomme, Seuil, 1968).
So the search continues. And, as you know, in an ocean of truths
and mysteries. In a drama in which each one has his own part to play.
This is life. Can it be exhausted in this temporal existence of ours?
No. In spite of the immense light of our Catholic religion, the search
and expectation of futther revelation afe not complete: on the contrary
they are still at the beginning. Faith is not complete knowledge, it
is t'he source of hope (cf. Hebr. 11, 1). Now we see religious realities,
even in their incontrovertible reality, in mystery, in their impossibility
of being reduced to the purely rational yardstick; we know these
realities "in a mirror dimly" (1 Cor' 13,I2). Study, research, let us
say the word that comprises the whole human-religious process, love,
remain active and dynamic'
Is it possible that man today, ever stiving, anxiously, elatedly, for
conquest, is not able to listen again to this perennial stimulating invita-
tion to seek God?
Let us repeat to ourselves the exhortation of the Prophet: "Seek
the Lord while He may be found, call upon Him while He is near"
(Is. 55, 6).
c) The teligious rebith of modern times
(Address of Paul VI at the audience of 21 February t973)
(Translation taken lrorn Englisb edition ol "Osseraatore Rornano"
dated I Mar 1.973)
When we go in search of traces of religion, and more specifically
traces of the faith, our Catholic faith, in the modern world, we are
often struck by the negative aspects that we find. \\X/e see the religious
sense diminish, and in certain sociological contexts even die out; the
fundamental conception of being and of life necessarily related to God,
is dimmed; ptuy.i is silent and worship and love of Christ and God
is replaced by indifference, profanity, and even hostility to religion,
,o-ii-., ofiicial, active and fierce, that pseudo-security that sensible
and material experience can offer us, those substitutes for real spirituality

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with which criticism, doubt, self-autonomy, fill the mind of man over-
confident in his own culture (cf. J. Dani6lou, La culture trabie par le
sens, Epi 1972). Statistics speak clearly: religion is losing ground.
This may be true, and, unfortunately, it often is. But if we limit
our observation to the purely sociological level, we commit an error
of method; that is, we forget to consider the objective reality of reli
gion, authentic religion, at least. This is a composite, bilateral reality,
that is, it consists not only of man, but also and in the first place of
God, who is not absent, nor inert in the realm of religion.
God seeks us rnor€ than we seek God.
In the plan of revelation and faith, God has the main part and
the initiative, while man has certainly a necessary and not purely
passive part but one which, if we look more carefully, is rather
dispositive and cooperating. The true religious relationship consists in
the gift that God, on the one hand, makes of Himself, limited, of
course, in form and extent, were it only by his own mystery and
by the need of faith on our side (cf. 1 Cor. 13, l2); and it consists
on the other hand in man's acceptance. God seeks us, we can say,
even mote than we seek God; because God is love and it is He who
has the first initiative; He loved us first.
This realistic vision of the religious world is a source of gratitude
and tenderness for the faithful who breathe the atmosphere of God's
house, and can be a source of surprise for anyone who considers reli-
gion only from the human, historical and earthly standpoint. Let us
recall the dialogue of Jesus with Nicodemus by night: "...you must
be born anew. The wind blows where it vrills" $n. 3,7-8).
Here, then, we have a question which may be answered by facts that
cscape positivistic analysis. Religion may arise from spiritual processes
that lie outside purely scientific processes. It is indeed a miracle; but it
is, in a certain sense, normal, because it is part of the economy of the
kingdom of God. The meeting with God may take place outside any
calculation of ours. Hagiography offers us admirable examples, and
the chronicles of our times record some sensational ones (cf. A. Frossard,
Dieu existe, je l'ai rencontr4, Fayard, 1969), and innumerable other
silent ones. '$7e are in the charismatic sphere, cf which there is so

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much talk today: the wind blows where it wills. We will certainly
r-rot quench it, r.ecalling the words of St. Paul: "Do not quench the
Spirit" (1 Thess. 5, l9). Only we must remember at the same time
the following words of the same Apostle, "but test everything; hold
fast what is good" (ib. 2l); the famous "discernment of spirits" is
necessary in a field in which deception can be very easy.
Tbe Cburch: bighway ol tbe Spirir
But the fact remains that the marvellous meeting with God can
take place in spite of the modern world's refractory attitude to religion'
\\We see strange and also consoling symptoms of this in various countries.
And the crucial thought returns: has our religion no longer a
power of its own to testify to itself, to preserve itself, to renew itself
in traditional and extraordinary ways? Does the Spirit breathe only
outside the usual framework of canonical structures? Has the Church
of the Spirit left the institutional Church? Is it only in the so-called
spontaneous groups that we will find the charisms of the real, original,
pentecostal Christian spirituality?
\\We do not wish now to open a discussion on this subject, which,
however, is worth a respectful examination. \\7e wish, on the other
hand, to say two things. The ordinary and institutional sructure of
the Church is always the highway by which the Spirit reaches us.
T'oday, too, and more so than ever. Only it is necessary that the idea
of the Church, the "sensus Ecclesiae" should be re-established in us,
rectified, deepened. Anyone who alters the conception of the Church
with the intention of renewing religion in modern society, spoils in so
doing the channel of the Spirit established by Christ, compromising the
religion of the people.
In this connection our times have had the gtace to see t'il/o elements
of prime importance for the refloutishing of religion in our days, gush
forth from the Tradition of the Chutch by means of the Council: the
conciliar doctrine on the Church and the liturgical reform.
Let us remember this well, let us all remember.

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d) Prayer: dialogue with God
(Address of Paul VI at the audience of 14 February 1973)
(Translation taken lrom Englisb edition ol "Osseruatore Romanc"
d"ated 22 Feb 1973)
This is a subject that extends to the whole psychology of the man
of our times; and so we examine it, not indeed, to offer you an exposi
tion befitting the merit both of the subject and of the immense literature
concerning it, in the past and today; but only to point out one of the
characteristic, and perhaps essential lines of the profile of modern man.
Do people pray today? Do they rcalize what significance prayer
has in our life? Do they feel the duty, the need, the consolation of
doing so? Its function in the framework of thought and action? 1il7hat
afe the spontaneous sentiments that accompany our moments of prayer:
haste, boredom, confidence, inner recollection, moral energy? Or also
the sense of mystery? Darkness or light? Or finally love?
1We should try in the first place, each one on his own account, to
make this examination, and to think out a definition of prayer for our
personal use. \\7e could propose to you a very elementary one: prayer
is a dialogue, a conversation with God. We see at once that it depends
on the sense of the presence of God, whom we manage to represent
to ourselves, either by natural intuition or by a certain conceptual
form, or by an act of faith. Ours is an attitude like that of a blind
man who cannot see, but knows he has before him a real, personal,
infinite, living Being, who observes, listens to and loves the person
praying.
Then the convetsation begins. Another Person is here; and this
othet is God.
Dialogue, not monologue
In the absence of this realization that God is to some extent
in communication with the man who is praying, the latter would be
holding a monologue but not a dialogue. It would not be a rcal act
of religion, a t6te-A-tete between man and God, but only a monologue,
beautiful, perhaps, superlative at times, like a supreme effort to soar
towards a dark and boundless sky, crying out and, in this case, often

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vreeping,in the void. We would be in the realm of the most lyrical
and profound phenomenology of the spirit, but without certainty,
rvithout hope; a desolation, rather, and music swallowed up in silence.
It is not so for us, who know that prayer, the meeting with God,
is a possible and real communication. Let us put this affirmation
among the unquestionable certainties of our conception of the ttuth,
of the reality in which we live. In simple terms: religion is possible;
and prayer is a par excellence religious act. 1We spoke about this on
another occasion, concluding, in fact, that there exists not an absent
and insensitive God, but a provident God, a God who watches over
us, a God who loves us, and who expects from us love, above all.
Hence a primary and very important state of mind can be produced
in the one who prays, the result of the synthesis of two different and
apparently opposite sentiments, that of the transcendence of God,
dazzling, overwhelming, and that of his immanence, that is, his im-
mediate nearness, his ineffable presence; two sentiments that complete
each other in the poor little cell of our spirit, and at once kindle there
an extraordinary religious intensity, which can at once stammer out
its twofold prayerful expression, praise and invocation, or, in certain
mystical souls, can remain absorbed.
This is the genesis of prayer, which, raised to the plane of faith,
issuing from the school of the Gospel, assumes a quiet, soft voice,
almost of the same nature as our human language, authorized as it is
to call the God of the abysses by the sweet and confidential name
of Father. "Pray then like this, our Master Jesus teaches us: Our
Father who art in heaven..." (Mt. 6, 9).
The dilliculties tbat exstinguish prayer today
Sublime. But we must admit that the wodd today does not ptay
willingly, does not pray easily; it does not usually seek prayer, it
does not enjoy it, often it does not want it. Analyse for youtselves
the difficulties that uy to extinguish prayet today. Let us list some
of them. Incapacity: where there has not been any religious instruction,
it is very difficult to have prayer: the man, the child, remains dumb
before the mystery of God. And where belief in God has been denied,
has been declared vain, superfluous, harmful, what other voices take

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the place of prayer? And after the insistent lessons against spirituality,
both natural and that educated by the faith, lessois of naturalism,
secularism, paganism, hedonism, lessons, that is, for the benefit of the
desired religious aridity, with which such a large part of modern
pedagogy has paved the soul of the masser, ,"t,rr"t.d with materialism,
how can the poetry of prayer bloom in hearts?
Two difficulties are typically contrary to it today. One is of a
psychological nature, stemming from the overwhelming, fantastic and
profane profusion of sensible images, unfortunately too often polluted
ri'ith sensuality and licence, with which the modern instruments of
social communication, marvellous in themselves, fill social psychology.
The room of sensible experience is not in itself the one suiiable ior
religious life; it may serve as an ante-room, if it is wisely connected with
the one set aside for the life of the spirit and reverence for the sacred.
The other difficulty is the pride of man striding along the ways of
science and technology, which are also marvellous, but charged with
the illusion of self-sufficiency. Prayer, it is true, is an act of humility,
which calls for higher but easy wisdom in order to find its logical
;ustification and its magnificent apologia.
But fortunately outstanding contemporary examples still srengthen
our innate tendency to seek in God the one, infinite complement of
our limits, and the blessed fulfilment of our desires and our hopes.
Here we will end. But we trust you will continue the study of
prayer; it is a study of one of the factors of our salvation.

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VII. NECROLOGY
Brotber Filello APrili
t * Bologna (Italy) 25.11.1882, Mother House, Turin 5.10.1972, 89 years of age,
68 profession.
His long Salesian life was spent at the Mother House, Turin. His early
work was ai bookseller at the SEI when the publishing house was in its
infancy. Then he was put in
owfortkhefroMmissLio9n2a4ryonTwraarndispo. rt
charge of the delicate and complicated task
& Shipping Office, putting in good, solid
a period of intense missionary development.
His poverty and spirit of work were an inspiration. He patiently offered
to God the increasing blindness that afflicted the last tv/enty years of
his life.
Brother Etnanuel Baeza
t * Fuentes de Andalucia (Seville - Spain) 15.2.1885, Carmona (Seville - Spain)
).9.L972,87 yeats of age,70 profession.
He spent his long life completely dedicated to teaching the young' His
services ai music-master and band-master were much appreciated. A great
love of Don Bosco and a deep desire to be of help to others formed the
basis of his life: he was a genuine first-generation Salesian.
Fatber Paul Bazzichi
* Stazzema (Lucca - Italy) 30.6.1888, f Pietrasanta (Lucca - Italy) 6.2.1973, 84
years of age, 64 profession, 53 priesthood, 21 rectot'
Ftom the tradionally austere example given him in his eatly days he
derived a solid piety and Christian and human training that gave his long
life a faith that stood the test, an activity that was tireless, and a love of
souls that was prudent and unassuming. He spent his last years in the
confessional "nd i, silent and solitary prayer, in complete acceptance of

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the will of God in all things. He will be remembered with gratitude by
his innumerable past pupils and the many priests who were hefied in their
vocations by his example and advice.
Brotber Josepb Bianconcini
* f Firenzuola (Florence - Italy) D.4.LBB6, Mother House, Turin, 2i.11.1972,
86 years of age,6l profession.
SalesAianTlirfel
of prayer,
was spent
simple, serene,
at Guayaquil,
optimistic and untiringly active. His
Ecuador, then at the iatican poliglot
Press, and after the war at valdocco, Turin. He is remembered with
pleasure for his zealous work in the mission fields, his dedicated care of sick
confrares when infirmarian, his regular and fervent prayer at the urn of Don
Bosco and his persuasive way with words.
Fatber Peter Bolognani
f * P-att! (Messina - Italy) 24.8.1880, Messina 26.12.1972, 92 years of age, 7l
profession, 53 priesthood, )2 rector.
A sincere and apostolic missionary. Soon after ordination he went to
tsthielerlviFc1ea9r5d2Eu,ariwsntghmesins7sohiorelndsc\\a(V1ma9er11bI.)a; cbAkafcttokerihntihsIetaSwlyiacrhilyeh.ewpraehstyucsraincleaedldlytuoepxthhfaoeursmmteisidsliitoabnursyt
spiritually alert, he continued to work, true missionary thai the was, giving
generously of his services as confessor to confrdres, sisters and bolis tili
God called him to his reward,
Fatber Albert Bouchet
f * Opglabbeek (Belgium) 2l-5.191i,
38 profession, l0 priesthood.
Hasselt (Belgium) L.1.197),57 years of age,
Most of his life was spent teaching in technical schools, where his
deep understanding of his charges made his apostolate a fruitful one. He
died unexpectedly on New Year's Day, and his loss is a bitter one indeed
for the Province.
Brotber Josepb Bilcherl
* Rtitz-oberpfalz (Germany) 18.i.1908,
29.10.1972, 64 yearc of age, 40 profession.
f
waldwinkel Kraiburg (Germany)
He never spared himself
rvoodwork and art. He was
in working for his charges; his subjects
noted for his obedience, simplicity and
were
great

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spirit of work. His free time was sPeflt doing jgbs about- the house and
for the boys, who were greatly atrached to him. \\flhile at the Front duting
the war he contracted a sickness r.vhich caused him much suffering and
rvas responsible for is untimely death.
F ather N azarene Carnilleri
f " Sliema (Malta) 20.71.1906, PAS (Rome) 13.197),66 years of age,49 profession,
38 priesthood.
From his early days he showed he was ascholar of note, with a leaning
toq/ards the speculative studies. Degreed in philosophy and theology, he
q'as much esteimed as teacher and spiritual guide by generations of students,
priests and sisrers. He was Dean of the Faculties of Philosophy and
Theology. His ffeatises in philosophy and theology 'il/ere. noted.for acuity,
..."u..f,- and speculative penetfation; and his work in the hagiographical,
spiritual and pastoral field was invaluable. He gave his-services unstintingly,
rvas utterly loyal to the magisterium of the Pope; and his insatiable thirst
for the knowlidge of God was the basis of his research and his apostolate.
Father V itus CarnPobasso
f " Triggiano(Bari - Italy) 27.9.L908, Lanuvio (Rome - Italy),28.10.1972,64 years
of age, 48 profession, 39 priesthood'
A brilliant man with a prodigious memory. He taught for many years
till his health broke down, and bore his many illnesses with patience.
He was a great help with the boys' confessions and was endowed with deep
humility, for..ty and meekness' FIe died a happy death on the vigil of
the Beatification of Don Rua.
Brotber Florentius Celdrin
f " Benijofar (Alicante - Spain) 7.L1.1899, valencia (Spain) 14-12-1972,73 yeats
oi age,45 profession.
A good, simple soul, whose love for others u/as gfatefully teciprocated.
He hal lost an arm, but still worked without stint in the class-room, in
the theatre and in the playground with pupils and past pupils' In his last
years, blind and too wiak io work, he was still to be seen surrounded by
irl, fri.ndr, big and small, patiently going over their schoolwork with them.
It was only na-tural that his life of work prayer and love of God should end
in a courageous facing uP to the difficult tials of his long illness'

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( 1909)
Brother Francis Chiappello
f * Dronero (Cuneo - Italy) 13.4.1888, Bagnolo, Piedmont (Cuneo - kaly) 27.11.1972,
84 years of age, 40 profession.
He orked for 10 years in Brazil as driver, mechanic and electrician.
Then he looked after the maintenance at Valdocco for as long as his health
held out. After that he was in charge of the sacristy of St. Francis of Sales
and the the chapel of relics. His deafness made his life lonely and he gave
himself much to meditation and prayer. His death was neither sudden nor
unexpected, and he faced it with serenity, being well prepared.
Fatber John Del Degan
* Faibano (Udine - Italy) 24.6.1912, I Gotizia (Italy) D.LL.1972, 60 years of age,
42 profession, 34 priesthood.
He was a gifted thinker and deeply versed in Rosminian thought and
imitated his mentor in his search for truth and goodness and was a real
cusader for this philosophical discipline. r7hen failing health prevented
his working further, he offered his trials to the Lord, being particulady
sensitive that he could no longer help others with his great talents of heart
and mind.
Brotber Cbailes Dell' Acqua
* San Vittore Olona (Milan - Italy) 22.9.L906; t there L2.L0.1972, 66 years of
age,41 profession.
He worked for nine years in India then for twentyfive in Burma. The
u/ar and its aftermath caused him great sufferings, especially because of
under-nourishment and illness. He spent his energies helping refugees and
fugitives, giving them milk, eggs and rice and whatever his work produced.
His labour was dedicated and intelligent, and he added serenity to the
community; he was strictly observant and had a great love of Don Bosco.
Brother Isidore De Snet
* Ghent (Belgium) 1.4.7891, f Sleidinge (Belgium) 21.6.L972, 81 years of. age,
60 profession.
The oldest Brother in the Province In his long Salesian life he fulfilled
many duties and was a good, simple soul, always readily available.

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F atber Laurence D'Heygere
* t lfattrelos (North France) )0.6.L902, Montigny-Lencoup (France) 22.2.L973,
70 yeats of age, 42 profession, 35 priesthood, 6 rector.
A late vocation. He was assistant and socius in the novitiate. He also
undertook tasks of great responsibility in other houses. Finally he rvas
chaplain of the prison at Fontainebleau. His work was always accurate,
responsible
faiihfulness
and
and
lpoeyrasletyverreincegi,vaedndtohpepcroioulrditya.lwAalythsobueg-hrenlioedt
on: for him,
demonstrative,
he appreciated any'small sign of friendship and v/as always deeply concerned
for the good of others.
Fatber Nicholas Endres
" f - Limbach (Renania Germany) 10.12.L904, a Benediktbeuern (oberbayer -
Germany), 25.8.7972, 67 yearc of. age, 47 profession, 37 priesthood'
I{/ar and imprisonment interrupted his studies (which he eventually
completed with a thesis on Don Bosco). The Episcopal conference of
Germany appointed him Education Liaison officer. His area of activity
u,as in ih.^ dio..r. of Bavaria. For many years he was president of the
"Catholic Villages Committee" for the youth of all Germany. Those- who
knew him r"-..b"r him as always kind and gentle. His excessive labours
slowly wore him down and he died unexpectedly, mourned by all'
Patber Angelo Fidenzio
* Turin (Italy) 4.6.1879, f Taranto (Italy) 19.11.1972,91 years of age,75 profession,
69 priesthood, 26 tectot.
In his early priestly life he v/as fector and master of novices at san
Gregorio di Caiania and Genzano, Rome. Later he was ffansfeffed to
Tarinto, where he edified all by his lively faith, prayerfulness, prudence,
deep understanding of the Salesian mission and balanced adaptability to
the times. He was a man of action rather than words and left an imposing
educational monument (the Don Bosco Institute at Taranto) where the young
receive a magnificent preparation for life and where there is a fine spirit
of study.
Brotber Angelo StePhen Fossati
* Novi Ligute (Alessandria - Italy) 26.12.1899, t Mother House, Turin, 7'l'L97),
t-3 yeas of age, 35 Profession'
Certain happenings during his military service of \\7orld \\Var I and

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immediately afterwards convinced him that he was under the very special care
of Our Blessed Lady. He vowed to give himself to God, and enteted the
Salesian Congregation. He made his novitiate in Mato Grosso, where he
worked as a missionary {or 32 years. He was a good Religious, with a
lively faith, a filial trust in his Superiors and a sincere piety.
Father Louis Franceschini
" Romagnano di Trento (Italy) 1.6.1904, f Casale Monferrato (Italy) 24.L.1973,
6ti years of. age, 46 profession, 38 priesthood.
He is temembered for his simple, reserved, sincere, consistent and
completely dedicated life: he had the knack of helping others without
ostentation. He took a childlike delight in God's world and constantly
thanked him for his wonderful creations. In his long years as a teacher
he sang the praises of "brother sun, sister moon, brother fire, brother wind"
and finally of "our sister death", putting a fitting seal on his religious
consecration.
Brotber Meinrad Frey
* - f Dielmannsried (Baviera Germany) L3.7.L899, Benediktbeuern (Germany)
28.10.1972, 73 yearc of age, )6 profession.
A man of simple and deep piety, he worked hard and gave a faithful
account of his religious duties. His great spirit of sacrifice was sorely tried
during the 19 years of illness that preceded his death.
Father Peter Gil
* Valdealc6n de Rueda (Leon - Spain) 5.5.1911, f Madrid (Spain) t5.12.L972,
4L years of. age, 19 profession, LL priesthood.
He gave his best to his apostolate and was a man of fine human and
religious qualities. God permitted the purification of his spirit by a painful
illness borne with religious resignation.
Fatber Richard Giooannetto
* Fobello (Novara - Italy) 16.6.188r, f Biella (Vercelli - Italy) 17.L.L97r,89 years
of age,72 profession, 63 priesthood, 2 rector.
A man whose faith was great, simple and childlike, ransforming itself
into hope and love while he waited expectantly to enter "the Kingdom".
5*

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-68-
He is remembered for his meekness, kindliness, poverty and incapability
of giving offence to anyone. He eschewed the limelight and spent himself
for others.
Fatber Francis Glon
f * Malestroit (Motbihan - France) 30.L.L%1, Sion (Switzerland) 16.12'1972, 4l
years of age, L9 profession, 10 priesthood.
He became a Salesian "to make Christ better known and loved, to
consecrate his whole life to the young". Despite poor health, he fulfilled
the duties of catechist and prefect of studies, but was prematurely stricken
with Parkinson's disease. He underwent surgery and came out of the
operation well: however, the disease progressed rapidly. Sflhen he realised
that he was cut off from the active life, he resigned himself alter an
obvious interior sruggle and turned his illness to good account by forging
a chain of friendship with the other sick confrBres of the Ptovince.
Fatber Loais A. Gorosito
t * Roldtin (Santa F6 - Argentina) 2).L.1901, Alta Gracia (Cordoba - Argentina)
2l.1L.l972,7L years of. age,55 profession, 46 priesthood.
fIe was known as author and poet under the pen-name of "Nice Lotus".
His most famed works were "Namancurd", "Amor Azul" (dedicated to
the Blessed
belonged to
Virgin Mary), and
the National Cultural
"CEosmpimritisusaiolidn,adthedAergSeanntiJnuearnWBritoersscSoo"c. ieltlye,
and the La Plata Literary Academy. To the pupils and in artistic and
literary circles he was known as the Priest-Poet.
Fatber Casto Gaede
* f San Martln de Nogueira de Betan (Orense - Spain) 19.8.1899, Arcos de la
Frontera (Cddiz - Spain) 31.8.1972,7) yeats of age, 53 profession, 44 priesthood'
He devoted his life to teaching and training youth and in his last years
he made the confessional
p-aarrteardioeschliesroqsuisaplirtioevsedanad
his apostolate. He was a Salesian who
lived a solid interior life. Progressive
healy trial for him, gradually depriving
did not
cerebtal
him of
all movement.

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(Let3)
Fatber Loais Hern,indez Ledesna
* Ciudad Rodrigo (Salamanca
years of age, 50 profession, 40
- Spain) 17.4.1904, t
priesthood, 1, rector,
Seville
(Spain)
1j.L.L972,
67
A humble man in the service of humble people. !7hen catechist and
rteoctaorllh. isHaisutghioftritoyfwuansiteinnghahneceadrtsbyanhdismhiunmdsblegaavnedhsisaccroifimcimngunaivtyailaabtirluitye
family atmosphere. In his work for vocations he knew how to make real
Christians out of his pupils and nurture excellent vocations. The city of
Mor6n de la Frontera, where he spent many years, honoured him with
special citizenship and called one of the state schools after him.
Fatber Henry Heyns
* I7eelde
62 years
(Anvers -
of age,28
t Belgium) 5.5.L9L0, Saint-Pieters-\\floluwe
profession, 21 priesthood.
(Belgium)
20.8.197 2,
He became a Salesian at the age of 33, a timid and kind man always,
enjoying the affection of both confrBres and youngsters. As confessor and
infirmarian he was always available and willing.
Father Aagaste lamaux
* Sain M'Herv6 f (France) 29.4.1897, La Guerche (France) 7.L2.197L,80 years of
age, 51 profession, 48 priesthood.
After the war (during which he was awarded the Croix de GuBrre),
he decided to give his life to the service of the young in the family of
Don Bosco. At La Marse (Tunis) he worked enthusiastically in things
religious, sporting, musical, educative and scholastic. As parish priest he
was greatly loved by his flock; and for many years he worked for the
Co-operators and proved a valuable bond of union between the various
Salesian gtoups. His life was a wondetful example of Salesian work.
Father Josepb Klaanann
* Calmesweiler (Saar - Germany) 3L3.L91.3,
years of age, 37 professon, L7 priesthood.
f
Kassel (Germany) 24.1.1973, j9
As a young Salesian he had to intemupt his studies for military service
when war broke out. Ten years of prison life in Russia undermined his
health; but he returned to his studies and was ordained. Bad health dogged
his whole life, frustrating his generous dedication - there v/as so -rr.h to

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do and he had so little strength to do it. Nevertheless he continued till
his death, rvhich was caused by thrombosis'
Fatber Anthony Macik
f * Vystuk (Slovakia) 25.IO.lgO7, Muran (Slovakia) Jl.8'1972,64 years of age,
42 profession, 34 priesthood, 6 rector.
He worked with great success in the education of young Salesian
clerics. As an educator he was methodical, understanding and fatherly and
his teaching and formation of the clerics cafried the stamp of his earnestness.
In the last ten yeafs he was parish priest and in all kinds of difficulties he
always proved himself a true pastor, totally given to the good of souls.
He Lad a gre t interest in the research and study of folk songs, and to
have them known abroad he translated many (even into Latin).
Father loseph Marti Sena
f * Barcelona (Spain) 9.6.1882, Algeciras (c6diz - Spain) 2.5.1972, 89 years of
age, 74 profession, 67 priesthood, 18 rector.
He was the Provincial doyen in age, profession and priesthood. He
worked in various houses and at various pastoral and educative tasks. More
than once the Salesians used his delicacy and tact in the unpleasant task of
closing certain houses. Contact with Salesians who knew Don Bosco perso-
nally, left in him a deep love o{ our Society.
Father lulius Morelli
f o Genazzano (Rome - Italy) 9.9.1909, Ravenna (Italy) 16.1.1973,63 yearc ol age,
47 profession, 39 priesthood, 12 rector.
He carried out the delicate tasks of economer, rector and teacher, al-
ways the priest and educator in his dealing with the boys, their families and
the stafi. He found his greatest consolation in prayer and the Mass, and he
contiflued celebrating Mass even when his sight was failing. To a
by his death-bed he confided, I<< have loved the Church: on this
conftEre
point I
have nothing to reprove myself >.
Brotber Tbeodore Mooelldn
* Fuentes de Valdepero (Palencia - Spain) 23.10.L9L2, f C6rdoba (Argentina)
6.2.797r,60 years of age,28 profession.
After an apostolate of a few years in his own country he went to Uru-

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( 191r)
guay, but his poor health necessitated a ransfer to a better climate and he
v/as sent to Argentina. He ofiered the sufierings of his last illness for the
success of the Special Provincial Chapter and the good of the Congregation.
Fatber George Nitscb
t * Nieder-ohlisch (Silesia - Poland) t4.i.L9oo, oberthalheim
72 years of age,53 profession, 46 priesthood,24 tector,12
(Ausuia) 29.r.L97i,
provincial.
From a large and deeply Christian family he entered the Society at 17
years of age. In 38 years he fulfilled the duties of rector, proviniial and
again rector. He is remembered by all as a man of deep faith, always serene
and imbued with zeal for souls.
Fatber Ferdinand Palkoait
f * Hmcatovce (Trnava - Czechoslovakia) 6.12.L908, Marseilles (France) 9.12.1972,
64 years of age, 40 profession, 32 priesthood.
He left his country to work for North Africa: Tunisia, Algeria, Moroc-
co. He also worked in various houses in the south of France. He laboured
hard, and had a generous, sensitive nature, and was always understanding
and attentive to his confrEres.
Brotber Josepb Paoli!
f * Velkd I-evdr'e (Bratislava - Slovakia) 31.L.L902, there 20.9.1972,70 years of
age, 46 profession.
A humblh and hard-working son of Don Bosco, he remained faithful
to his vocation amidst great dificulties and persecution. Fidelity to his
vows and to the spirit o{ Don Bosco were the mainspring of his life, even
when he had to live << in the world >> without the help of community life.
Father John Perouiek
* Krnce - S. Gregorio (Jugoslavia) 21.10.1880, t Zagreb (Jugoslavia) 14.L.I973,
92 yearc oI age,75 profession, 66 priesthood.
Simplicity, kindness, understanding and apostolic zeal marked his Reli-
gious life. Most of his priestly ministrations were devoted to the confessional:
he was available from 5.30 a.m. for confrdres, novices, students of theology
and parishioners. He was a shining example of complete apostolic serviie
for others.

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Father Blaise Re
f * Pedalino (Ragusa - Italy) 16.4.1974, Modica Alta (Italy) 6.12.L972,58 years of
age, 35 profession, 25 Priesthood.
Health reasons demanded his return from the Ecuador missions in t961.
His first assignment v/as to Ragusa, then to Modica Alta as confessor and
in charge of ihe infant parish of Mary Help of Christians next to the Insti-
tute. H"e $/as a man of simple methods and truly christian charity and he
soon v/on the goodwill of ihese humble people on the city outskirts. He
rvas lagically t nea in a road accident, and the huge gowds at his obsequies
demonstrated the deep sorrow of his parishioners.
Fatber Jarnes Riuera
f S*pJauinn)q-ufOe.rSa.fdge72A, m42blaye(aorrseonsfeag-eS,2p4ainp)roDfe.s6s.i1o%n,01,5
Puerto de
priesthood'
S.Maria
(c6diz
-
He died on the anniversary of his profession in an accident at sea.
His first apostolic activities were with thi aspitants in whom he inspired
enthusiasm- for theit vocation, theit studies and their work. As a priest his
apostolate was with the students of philosophy. He lvas childlike, genetous
and humble, and he was happy in helping others' He had a great devotion
to Mary, who substituted foi-him his own mother lost in his childhood.
r" ath er Ram 6n Rodri guez
* t Durazno (Uruguay) 26.L2.7896, castillos (Rocha - utuguay) L5.6.1972, 75
years of age, 54 profession, 40 priesthood, 3 rector'
He died suddenly in Castillos where he was in charge of the padsh'
His apostolic, priestly aod Salesian work was perfotmed in various places.
He wi. "lwayt ut "ur. among the young, like a good son of Don Bosco'
Brotber Bernard Rui
f * Sampeyre (Cuneo - Italy) 5.5.1880, Bagnolo, Piedmont (Cuneo -IttLy) l0'L'197)'
92 years of age 48 Professioo.
He entered the Society at
profession he had written, "If
iould not have the hardihood
t4oI 4wmyeaekraeercttohoifscoarngeseqi.udIeensrtm;hbiysuoat wpapnsli,IcpacotoioonrnstiadfoelerrnftthusasItt
in this congregation there are many tasks, and one of them will be possible
for me, f tuf." courage to make tlis application." This was the style of

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(tet7)
humility, untiring work and sttict poverty that accompanied him to a grand
old age.
Brotber Accursias Schinelli
t l2_6l.a9.l1tl9le72ll,o4tt3aye(Aagsriogfe. nagtoe,
- Italy) 30.r0.L929,
L4 profession.
Araguaiana (Mato Grosso, Brazil)
i.n
.hi.sHgfiewldasofbawreolyrka.
year
He
in Mato
possessed
Grosso when
a joyousness,
he
an
lost his life tragically
optimism and a great
F&udciscaatniodnF_atothethrePeptoeor rs.aHcileotrtei,sttws onobwravceiomr"istsoionthareietsoairmbsonogfthFeatxhaevraJnotehsn,
Fatber Louis Uhl
f * Gltit (Germany) L.L7.1902, Los Teques (Venezuela) 23.12.1972, 70 years of
age,45 ptofession, 38 priesthood,
wor.kA.nH_eexwamilpllea.lwoafyps iebtey,recmomemmbuenreitdy
life and tireless and
by the great number
self-sacrificing
of workers to
whom he dedicated much of his Salesian life.
Fatber Benignus Vacca
t * lVluravera (cagliari - Italy) 10.8.1888, Fossombrone (pesaro - Italy) 29.12.L972,
84 years of. age, 65 profession, 58 priesthood.
A diligent and tireless worker in the Lord's vineyard. He has passed
on in its completeness the genuine Salesian spirit he received from Don
Rua and the first salesians. Through his teaching and his music (inst,u-
mental and vocal), he helped in the formation of great numbers of Salesians
and boys. He sleeps the sleep of the just,a serene old pariarch.
Fatber Adolpbus Vagli
- f - (i_ItaI-lsyg)la1.1S.a1n9t7a3-,
Careggine
55 yeats
(Lucca
of age,
)5
Italy) r6.8.19L7, Geona
profession, 25 priesthood.
Sampierdarena
- His life was a programme of serene humilit'yh,isrel,igious observance, si-
lence, and the constant and careful fulfi"lment of priestly ministry. He
was stticken with illness as he was resuming his teaching uciiuiti.s, uo o..o-
pation he ca*ied out with great dedication and deep love for many years.
He had a great afiection for the society and had the gift of infusini the
young with love and stiming up in them great devotion to Don Boscol

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Father Jobn VogelPoth
f ,. Essen - Berge (Rheinland - Germany) 17.9.1909, Essen (Germany) 7.12.1972,
63 yearc ol age, 44 profession, 35 priesthood.
After ordination he went to the central A{rican missions and wotked
with zeal and self-saoifice' Health problems brought him home again
urhere he
f-Ut".,
v/orked as economer and in the pastoral ministry'
of his poor health with fortitude till called by the
He bore
Lord on
the
the
vigil of Mary Immaculate.
Fatber losePb Volek
f * velk6 Scirovce (Bratislava - Slovakia) )3.lgll, Sinovce (slovakia) l).10.1972'
61 years of. age, 42 profession, 33 priesthood.
he reAfnuseexdemtJplacorynSfoarlmes, itahnewghoovneernvmeresnwt efrovrebaddfreomhihmisidtheealcsa'Breecoafussoeuls'
However, his was a completely apostolic life alt the time he lived among
the working people. He had if,. gift of seizing on opportunities for giving
instruction and was a convincing ind eficacious speaker. He was t help
and a spur to his confr6res, coirpelled as they are to live scattefed here
and there. He will always be remembered for his dedication to the Salesian
cause in such dificult times.
Father John Luis Zuretti
f * Mesenzana (Varese - Italy) I7.L2'1,880, Mother House, Turin, 2l'11'1972' 9l
years of age,l) profession, 68 priesthood.
He was the good
candour, solid wiork
and
and
faithful servant,
frugality. For
a man of
60 years
complete faith, disatming
he dedicated his life to
iihi".adf,rap.a"ftlta,h.ierf.f*jooyiofwotfrhiteteinacgclah,sin'stgrivotiohliie,snaVnteiaonenisrarFberlveaenrZgeenapciieehd"ytbi(nayusatenNx-taarmumsayendocfuinptda'ssetHcpoeunpdaaillssroy'
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and a French Gram-
search of sun' fresh
air... and to be a priest among the mountain-climbers'

8.5 Page 75

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