Don Bosco can not be counted among educators, scholars and philanthropists of the 18th and 19th
centuries who were involved in the study and research regarding the causes and remedies of the
abandonment of youth and the dangers in which they find themselves. But he equals and perhaps, even
surpasses them in the acute perception of the needs of abandoned youth and in his involvement in
answering those needs. Generally Don Bosco stops at establishing and describing the problematic aspects
of the youth situation. And then he goes deeper by identifying the religious and moral causes and above
all, by proposing on a vast scale the means, institutions and methods of resolving the problem.
DON BOSCO ACCORDING TO OTHERS
Canon Ottavio Moreno calls him a new priest of social charity. He writes: “For some years he has worked
to instruct and gather abandoned youth or street urchins who wander here and there along the streets
and boulevards of the capital…. He has done everything he could, even without sufficient means;
therefore, he relies on Christian charity and likewise on the charity of the government, that is no less
concerned with the problem.”
L’Armonia (1851) praises his tireless zeal and calls him a very good director and a very good priest.
“Everyone knows with what zeal and with what charity the priest John Bosco sacrifices himself for the
instruction and education of the youth of the lowest classes of society, who in general are abandoned to
themselves as regards education. How many crimes the charity of this pious priest prevents!”
THE PRIEST IN THE WRITINGS OF DON BOSCO
In the introduction to the “Piano di Regolamento” of 1854, Don Bosco described the image of the new
priest as a father, a brother and a friend to the young. He models this new image in his account of his
meeting with Bartholomew Garelli in the sacristy of the Church of St. Francis de Sales. Garelli himself
represents the kind of youth Don Bosco intended to reach out to: an orphan, 16 years old, illiterate, has
not yet made his first communion, ashamed to go to catechism. In his account of that providential
meeting, Don Bosco assures Garelli, “You shall be my friend.”
Don Paolo Francesco Rossi was a director of the Oratory of San Luigi. Upon his death, Don Bosco gave a
eulogy in which he described the new priest of charity. He was not only zealous in preaching, catechism,
instruction, confession, in giving advice and correction. He also went about in search of employers for
unemployed boys and counseled employers to be patience with the boys. He procured bread, clothing and
shoes for the boys.
When Don Cafasso died he delivered two eulogies: “Vita sacerdotale pubblica” and “Vita sacerdotale
private”. In those eulogies he painted Don Cafasso as a man of God and a man of charity, a great
benefactor of humanity.
In the 1850’s DB did his best to tell stories of priests, real or idealized, close to all, youth and adults, who
reproduced the Salesian and Vincentian ideal of affective and effective love. In “Fatti contemporanei
The Salesian Priest, Page 3 of 5