Let us make the young our life's mission by coming to know and imitate Don Bosco
Commentary on the Strenna for 2012
«I
am the good shepherd.
The
good shepherd lays down his life for his sheep
» (Jn 10,11)
My
Dear Confreres,
Daughters of Mary Help of Christians,
All
the Members of the Salesian Family,
Young people,
Just a short time ago we began the period of three years of preparation for the Bicentenary of the birth of Don Bosco. This first year offers us the opportunity to draw closer to him in order to know him from close up and always better. If we do not know Don Bosco and we do not study him, we cannot understand his spiritual journey and his pastoral decisions; we cannot love him, imitate him, and invoke him; in particular, it will be difficult for us to inculturate his charism these days in the various contexts and in the different situations in which we find ourselves. Only by strengthening our charismatic identity will we be able to offer to the Church and to society a meaningful and fruitful youth service. Our identity is directly linked to the image of Don Bosco; in him the identity becomes credible and visible. For this reason the first step that we are invited to take in the three years of preparation is precisely coming to know the history of Don Bosco.
1. Knowledge of Don Bosco and a commitment on behalf of the young
We
are being invited to study Don Bosco and, through the events of his
life, to come to know him as educator and pastor, founder, guide and
legislator. It is a matter of a knowledge which leads to love, to
imitation and to invocation.
For us members of the Salesian
Family, he ought to be what Saint Francis of Assisi was and continues
to be for the Franciscans, or Saint Ignatius of Loyola for the
Jesuits, that is to say, the founder, the spiritual teacher,
the model for education and evangelisation, especially the one who
began a world-wide Movement, capable of bringing to the attention of
the Church and of society, with a powerful outcry, the needs of the
young, their circumstances, their future. But how can we do this
without turning to history, which is not the custodian of a past
already buried in time, but rather of a living memory that is within
us and challenges us about the present?
An approach to Don
Bosco, using the methods proper to historical research, leads us to
understand and appreciate better his greatness as a human being and
as a Christian, his practical talents, his skills as an
educator, his spirituality, his work, fully understood only if deeply
rooted in the history of the society in which he lived. At the same
time even with a fuller knowledge of his life story, we are always
aware of God's providential intervention in his life. In this
historical study there is no a
priori
rejection of the valid and respected image that generations of the
Salesians, Salesian Sisters, Salesian Cooperators and members of the
Salesian Family have had of the Don Bosco they knew and loved, but
there is and must be a presentation and re-working of an image of Don
Bosco for today, one that can speak to today's world, making use of a
new language.
The image of Don Bosco and his activity should be
seriously re-constructed, beginning from our cultural horizons: the
complexity of life today, globalisation, post-modern culture, and the
difficulties of the apostolate, the decline in vocations, the
“questioning” of consecrated life. Radical, or epochal changes,
as my predecessor, Fr Egidio Viganò called them, force us to
re-think and revise the image in another light, in view of a fidelity
that is not mere repetition of formulas or formal allegiance to
tradition. The historical significance of Don Bosco also has to be
re-discovered, beyond his “works” and certain relatively original
pedagogical elements, but especially in his practical and affective
perception of the universal, theological and social problem
of ''neglected' youth,
and his great ability to communicate this to large crowds of
co-workers, benefactors and admirers.
Being faithful to
Don Bosco means knowing him through his life-story and in the history
of his times, making his inspirations our own, letting his
motivations and choices become ours. Being faithful to Don Bosco and
to his mission means cultivating within ourselves a love for the
young, especially the poorest, which is constant and strong. This
kind of love will lead us to respond to their deepest and most urgent
needs. Like Don Bosco, we feel moved by the difficulties they face:
poverty, child labour, sexual exploitation, lack of education and
vocational training, trying to find their place in the work place,
their lack of self-confidence, their fear about the future, the
absence of any meaning to life.
With deep affection and
self-less love, we try to be present among them, discretely yet
confidently, offering sound suggestions for them to follow on their
way as they make their choices in life, and experience
happiness in the present and in the future. In everything, we become
their companions on the journey and competent guides. In particular,
we try to understand their new way of living their lives; many of
them are “digital natives” who through the new technologies are
seeking opportunities for social mobility, the possibility of
intellectual development, the possibility of economic progress,
instantaneous communication, the chance to take the lead. In this
area too we want to share their lives and their interests;
animated by the creative spirit of Don Bosco, we educators approach
them as “digital immigrants”, helping them to overcome the
generation gap with their parents and the world of adults.
We
take care of them throughout their journey of growth and as they
mature, giving them our time and our energy, and staying with them as
they grow through childhood to become young adults.
We take
care of them when difficult situations such as war, hunger, lack of
future opportunities, lead them to abandon home and family, and they
find themselves facing life alone.
We
take care of them when, after completing their studies and
qualifications, they are looking out anxiously for their first place
of employment, and setting about fitting into society, sometimes
without much hope or prospect of success.
We take care of them
when they are building up their world of affections, their family,
accompanying them, especially when they become engaged, and in the
early years of their marriage, and when their children arrive
(see GC26, 98.99.104).
We are particularly anxious to
fill the deepest void of their hearts, helping them seek and give
meaning in their lives, and above all offering a way for growth in
knowledge and friendship with the Lord Jesus, in the experience of a
living Church, in real commitment, and to experiencing their lives as
vocation.
Here then is the spiritual and pastoral
programme for the year 2012:
Let
us make the young our life's mission
by
coming to know and imitate Don Bosco
Already
the many groups in the Salesian Family are fully committed to this
task, which will prove to be of great help to all of us as together
we look at our dear Father Don Bosco. Therefore let us continue to
move ahead together more and more as a Family.
2. Rediscovering the story of Don Bosco
Over
a century after his death, Don Bosco continues to be of interest to
many people in many countries. Also outside Salesian circles, he is
considered a person of significance. In spite of the fact that, of
necessity, the exaggerations that were attached to him for many
decades, and which captured the attention of the pubic, have been
removed, Don Bosco still remains a person highly esteemed and
popular. A long line of Popes and Cardinals, Bishops and priests,
scholars, Catholics and non-Catholics, politicians of different
persuasions, in Italy, in Europe and in the world recognised him and
still recognise him as someone with a message – one which is
modern, prophetic, historically conditioned, but open to many
contemporary possibilities, potentially relevant in the most widely
varied times and places.
The centenary of his death, the 150th
anniversary of the founding of the Salesian Congregation, and now the
preparation for the Bicentenary of his birth, and other special
occasions, have triggered a considerable number of publications and
newspaper articles. As well as high quality academic
studies and research projects, other more modest ones have appeared,
which leave themselves open to reservations regarding their
interpretations, because of unfounded critical premises in some, and
insufficient historical analysis in others.
In fact Don Bosco’s
is a fully rounded personality which cannot be reduced to simple
formulae or newspaper headlines; his is a complex personality shaped
by circumstances at one and the same time ordinary and exceptional,
by concrete, ideal and hypothetical projects, with an everyday
style of life and activity, but at the same time with a special
rapport with the supernatural. Such a person can only be
adequately understood by considering his many-sided and
pluri-dimensional personality; otherwise, presenting one or other of
these aspects, perhaps consciously or unconsciously, instead of a
complete profile, one runs the risk of giving a false
picture.
Sometimes one can remain perplexed faced with books in
which apologetics and the idealistic descriptions of Don Bosco are
given excessive space, in which the adulation of his memory prevails
at the expense of his real personality, at times limited to certain
stereotypes to which Don Bosco can never really be reduced. This
applies particularly at the present time when the number of lives of
saints written with a new critical approach are multiplying; a new
kind of hagiography in fact has come to the fore, based itself on
well-founded historical interpretations and on a renewed theological
interpretation of the spiritual experience of the Saints. For
this reason, it is my hope that a modern “hagiography” of Don
Bosco will be prepared. While this has to be based on recent
historical studies, it ought to give rise to love for him, the
imitation of his life, the desire to follow him on his spiritual
journey; and the same can be said for a new hagiography directed to
the young.
3. Reasons for the study of the history of Don Bosco
There
are undoubtedly quite a number of reasons leading us to study Don
Bosco. We need to know him as our Founder, since our fidelity to the
institution to which we belong demands it. We need to know him as
Legislator, in so far as we are bound to observe the Constitutions
and the Regulations which he directly, or his successors, have given
to us. We need to know him as Educator, so that we may live the
Preventive System, the most precious heritage he has left us. We need
to know him, in particular, as our Teacher of the spiritual life,
since as his sons and disciples we draw on his spirituality; in fact
he has given us a key to the understanding of the gospel; for us, his
life is the criterion for our following the Lord Jesus in a
particular manner; in this regard I wrote a letter to the Salesian
confreres in January 2004 “Looking
at Christ through the eyes of Don Bosco”
(AGC 384).
Nowadays we are growing more aware of the risk we are
running if we do not strengthen the links that keep us united to Don
Bosco. Historical knowledge, well-founded and affectionate,
helps to keep these links alive; initial and ongoing formation ought
to foster Salesian studies. More than a century has now passed since
Don Bosco’s death; all the generations who came in direct or
indirect contact with him, and with those who knew him personally
have passed on. As the chronological, geographical and cultural
distance increases between us and him, so too, more and more does the
affectionate climate, that familiarity even psychological, that made
Don Bosco and his spirit, simply by seeing his picture, something
spontaneous and familiar to us. What has been handed down to us can
be lost; the vital link with Don Bosco can be broken. Should we no
longer see things in terms of our common Father, of his spirit, of
his praxis, of the criteria that inspired him, as the Salesian Family
we shall no longer have citizens’ rights in the Church and in
Society, being deprived, as we would be, of our roots and of our
identity.
In addition, keeping alive the memory of one’s own
history is the guarantee of having a sound culture; without roots
there is no future. Therefore it is quite important to work on the
historical memory and to make use of it, as a reminder of our common
roots which urge us to re-think the problems of our own times with a
more mature awareness of our past. That is the guarantee, while
taking into account historical transformations and inevitable
changes, that our Family will continue to be the bearer of the
charism of the origins, and to make itself the vigilant and creative
guardian of a fruitful tradition.
Obviously knowledge of the
past should not become a form of conditioning. It is necessary to
know how, in a critical manner, to distinguish between the essential
historical significance and gratuitous exaggerations and unfounded
subjective interpretations; in this way, attributing charismatic
historical truth to reconstructions which have little to do with
“real history” will be avoided. A similar way of approaching
history is sometimes used in order to avoid the serious problem of
the reconstruction of the historical context. A healthy process of
discernment is needed in the interpretation of the history of Don
Bosco. The warning of Pope Leo XIII will always be valid for us: the
historian should never say anything untrue nor be silent about the
truth. If a saint has a weak point it has to be honestly recognised.
Recognising the imperfections of the saints has the three-fold merit
of respecting historical accuracy, of emphasising the absolute nature
of God and of encouraging us poor vessels of clay, showing us
that in the heroic follower of Christ, blood was not water.
The urgent need for a deeper and more systematic knowledge of Don Bosco has been emphasised in recent decades by the official documents and authoritative statements of my two predecessors. This is how I expressed it myself in a letter at the end of 2003 (AGC n. 383, p. 14-17):
“But
Don Bosco succeeded in staying young and hence in harmonizing with
the future through being always among his boys. .. In the
Valdocco experience there was clearly a maturing of the mission and
hence a transition from the joy of “staying with Don Bosco” to
“staying with Don Bosco for the young”; from
“staying with Don Bosco for the young in a stable manner” to
“staying with Don Bosco for the young in a stable manner with
vows”. Remaining with Don Bosco does not exclude a priori a
study of the times that modelled or conditioned him, but it requires
us to live with his commitment, his options, his dedication, his
spirit of enterprise and pushing ahead […]. All this
makes of Don Bosco a fascinating person, and in our case
a father to love, a model to imitate, but also a saint to invoke.
.. We are well aware that the more the time separating us from
our Founder increases, the more real is the risk of speaking
of Don Bosco only on the basis of well known incidents and anecdotes
without any real knowledge of our charism. Hence the need to
know him through the medium of reading and study; to love him
affectively and effectively as our father and teacher
through the spiritual legacy he has left us; to imitate him and try
to reproduce him in ourselves, making of the Rule
of life our personal life plan. This is what is meant by
returning to Don Bosco, to which I have invited the whole
Congregation – myself included – from my first “good night”,
by means of a process of study and love that tries to
understand, the better to throw light on our life and
present-day challenges. Together with the Gospel, Don Bosco is
our criterion of discernment and our goal of identification.”
What
I have in mind is not very different from the reflection of Fr
Francis Bodrato, the first Provincial in Argentina, who on 5 March
1877 wrote in a letter to his novices:
«Who
is Don Bosco? What can I say to you about him? I can tell you the
truth as I know it and have heard it from others. Don Bosco is our
beloved and most loving father. We who are his sons all say this. Don
Bosco is a man of Providence for these times. This is what the
learned people say. Don Bosco is a philanthropist. This is what the
philosophers say. And I say, while agreeing naturally with what these
people have told us, that Don Bosco is truly that friend that
Holy Scripture describes as a great treasure. Well then, we have
found this true friend, this great treasure. Mary Most Holy has given
us the light by which to recognise him and the Lords allows us to
have him. Woe, therefore, to any one who loses him. If you only knew
my dear brothers how many people there are who envy us our lot […]
And if you come to believe with me that Don Bosco is that true friend
of Holy Scripture, then you will see to it that you keep him for
ever, and take care to imitate him in yourselves ». (F.
Bodrato, Letters,
edited by B. Casali, Rome LAS 1995, pp. 131-132).
Not for
nothing does the introduction, as well as articles 21, 97, 196 of the
current Constitutions of the Salesian Congregation present Don Bosco
to us as “guide” and “model”, and the Constitutions
themselves are described as his "living testament." Similar
expressions can also be found in the Rule of Life of the other groups
of the Salesian Family. For all of us who see in Don Bosco our point
of reference, he continues to be the founder, master of the spirit,
the model for education, the one who began a Movement on a world-wide
scale capable of very effectively turning the attention of the Church
and of society to the needs of the young, to their situation, to
their future. We cannot but ask ourselves whether nowadays our
Family is still the force it was; whether we still have the
courage and the imagination that Don Bosco had; whether at the
dawn of the third millennium we are still capable of taking up his
prophetic stance in the defence of the rights of man and those
of God.
The urgent need for the knowledge and the study of Don
Bosco by the Salesian Family, by the single groups, communities,
associations and individuals having been pointed out, the path has
still to be followed; the path indicated is not yet the path
followed. It is up to each one to identify the steps to be taken, how
and in what way opportunities are to be created so that this task may
be carried out in the course of this year. We cannot arrive at the
celebration of the Bicentenary without coming to know Don Bosco
better.
4. Function of history in bringing things up to date
To
achieve this aim, it is not sufficient that within each one of us
there be an awareness of the greatness of Don Bosco. The
indispensible condition is to know him well, over and above the very
attractive anecdotes which surround our dear Father and also the
edifying literature on which entire generations were formed/brought
up. It is not a question of going in search of cheap remedies to
face, as a Family, the current “crisis” in the Church and in
society, but of coming to know him in depth so that he can be “made
relevant” at the dawn of this third millennium, in the mild
cultural climate in which we are living, in the various countries in
which we are working. What is needed is a knowledge of Don Bosco
which is to be arrived at in the continuously striking the right
balance between our asking ourselves questions about the present, and
our seeking answers which come from the past; only in this way will
we be able once again today to inculturate the Salesian
charism.
Attention has to be paid to the fact that at the
moment of “changing historical times” a charismatic
Movement can grow and develop only on the condition that the founding
charism is “reinterpreted in a vital manner” and does not remain
a “precious fossil”. The Founders experienced the Holy Spirit in
a precise historical context; on this account, it is necessary to
identify the contingent elements of their experience, in so far as
the response to a determined historical situation has value for
as long as that contingency lasts. In other words, the “questions”
posed by today’s ecclesial community and those of the current
socio-cultural situation cannot be considered as something
“extraneous” to our historical research; this has to determine
what is transitory, and what is permanent in the charism, what needs
to be left aside, and what needs to be taken up, what is at some
distance from our present circumstances context and what is close to
them.
It is not possible to start putting this into practice
without looking at history, which – as I have already said – is
not the custodian of a past already buried in time, but rather a
living memory that is within us, and which challenges us about the
present. Any updating that is undertaken ignoring the progress of
historical studies, would be of little real use. In the same way,
research and writing undertaken in an amateurish-fashion without
clear theories, appropriate methods and sound working
instruments, and without a vital and uptodate approach to historical
writing, do not produce good results from neither the historical nor
the updating points of view. The writing of history implies a
constant process of a critical revision of previous judgements made,
a revision that is necessary since we have to recognise that
the past cannot be set up as a sort of monument only to be
looked at, precisely because it is linked to the persona one wants to
come to know.
Nor should we undervalue the fact that the
life-story of Don Bosco is not only “ours” but belongs to the
Church and to the human family, and therefore should not be missing
from the ecclesiastical and civil history of individual countries,
even more so since Salesian history is a history which consists in
dynamic interaction, in relationships of dependence and collaboration
and sometimes of conflicts with the social, political, economic,
ecclesial and religious, educational and cultural worlds. Now we
cannot expect “the others” to take into account our “history”,
our “pedagogy”, our “spirituality” if we do not offer
them modern instruments of knowledge. Dialogue with others can only
occur if we have the same linguistic code, the same conceptual
methods, the same skills and professional approach; otherwise we
shall be on the fringes of society, removed from the cultural debate,
absent from those places in which solutions are found for current
problems. Exclusion from the cultural debate taking place in every
country would also be an indication of the historical
insignificance of the Salesians, their social marginalisation, the
absence of their contribution to education. For this reason I look
forward to a renewed commitment in the preparation of qualified
people for study and research in the field of Salesian history.
Salesian literature, Salesian publications, Salesian preaching,
the circulars of those in positions of responsibility at various
levels, communication within the Salesian Family all need to be on
top of the situation. The traditional popular nature of Salesian
literature, its widespread dissemination, ought not to mean
superficiality in its contents, disinformation, the repetition of an
untrustworthy past. Whoever has the gift or the opportunity to write,
to form, to educate others needs to ensure that he is constantly
updated regarding the subject he talks or writes about. Popular media
products need to be of a high quality and of the greatest
possible reliability.
The study of Don Bosco is a necessary
condition in order to be able to communicate his charism and to
propose its relevance. Without knowledge there can be no love,
imitation or invocation; and then only love urges us to that
knowledge. It is a question therefore of a knowledge which comes from
love and which leads to love: an affective knowledge.
5. Over a hundred years of historical writing “at the service of the charism”
Salesian
historical writing in over 150 years of life has made considerable
progress, from the first modest biographies of Don Bosco in the
seventies and eighties of the XIX, to the encomiastic biographies
inspired by a interpretation of his life and of his work which was
theological, anecdotal and concerned with wonder-working, which from
the eighties well into the XX century were distributed widely. The
solemn occasions of Don Bosco’s beatification and
canonisation were naturally the occasions for a series of writings
and works of a spiritual and edifying nature. Similarly, in the
area of pedagogy one could mention the valuable series of writings
and discussions on Don Bosco the educator, following the introduction
of Don Bosco’s preventive method of education in academic
programmes in Teacher Training Colleges in Italy.
In the period
immediately after the war and in the 50s of the last century, , the
new generations of Salesians began to express a sense of unease with
the hagiographical literature of the past. The need arose for
an hagiography of the Founder which was not aimed merely at
edification or being an apologia,
but rather at the truth about him in all its many aspects: a
hagiography, in other words, that would place him in his historical
context, and as such would observe all the necessary critical
requirements. In some way this meant breaking out of a by-now
consolidated circle, in order to encourage the taking of a fresh look
at the history of Don Bosco, philologically informed and with the
sources thoroughly examined, conducted according to up-to-date
historical methods. It was necessary to go beyond the point of view
of the first Salesians, which undoubtedly was that of the
providentially-inspired, theological, wonder-worker, in which the
concrete circumstances and the forces at work at the time tended to
disappear.
Similar approaches to the study and further
understanding of Don Bosco, which for some time had been promised,
were given a strong impetus by the invitation of the Second Vatican
Council to return to the genuine human and spiritual
circumstances of the origins and of the Founder in view of the
necessary renewal of consecrated life (Cf. Perfectae
Caritatis, Ecclesiae Sanctae).
This demanded, as an indispensible requirement, a knowledge of the
historical facts. Without going back to the roots, updating in
fact runs the risk of becoming arbitrary and uncertain speculation.
And so in the new cultural climate of the seventies, making use of
assumptions, trends, methods, modern research tools, as used in the
most serious historical research projects, further study was
undertaken into a knowledge of the patrimony and heritage of Don
Bosco, full of events and guidelines. The historical significance of
the message was identified, the inevitable personal, cultural and
institutional limitations were described, which almost paradoxically
indicated the reasons, then as they do now, for the vigorous growth
in the present as in the future.
6. Towards an interpretative reading of Salesian history
As
a first requirement of renewal, the Second Vatican Council
asked for a return to the sources. In this regard the Congregation
published dozens of volumes of the “Published Works” and those
unpublished of Don Bosco; the Centre of Don Bosco Studies at the UPS
and the Salesian Institute Historical made themselves responsible for
them. Thanks to their work thousands of pages of Don Bosco’s
writings are available to us, in editions which are academically
produced and revised, so as to make possible the necessary
philological
analysis.
How, in fact, is it possible to understand the famous “letter from
Rome” which Don Lemoyne drew up on behalf of Don Bosco, without
fully knowing the difficult disciplinary situation in Valdocco at the
time, and which in the same years produced the “circular on
punishments”? Has a letter written in Don Bosco’s own hand,
laboured, full of corrections, additions and postscripts, the same
value as a circular, perhaps even written by a collaborator of his,
and simply signed by Don Bosco? What significance should be given to
work-contracts signed by Don Bosco, if we compare them with earlier
ones or contemporaneous ones drawn up by others in Turin?
To the
philological analysis needs to be added the historical-critical
analysis,
which takes into account both the explicit contents of the sources,
and also what a superficial reading of them does not reveal, but what
they do imply. No text, and even less those of Don Bosco, a
well-known person “incarnated” in history, can be explained
without reference to the time in which it was written, within a
certain context, in reference to certain particular people, for a
certain purpose. As I have said, writings by Don Bosco and about Don
Bosco contain an interpretation of the gospel influenced by the
period, its ideas, mental structures, perspectives, language and
values.
The two preceding operations lead to the third and
more important one: the vital
and updating analysis,
capable of re-expressing, re-thinking, re-presenting the contents of
the sources. In this regard it is necessary to adapt some
hermeneutical criteria, without which the interpretation of Don
Bosco’s expressions, his theoretical and practical positions,
of the practical ways of living a relationship with God and with
society, could indeed prove to be counter-productive. The simple
repetition of Don Bosco’s phrases could in fact lead us to
betray the Salesian identity. In fact, it is a question of texts and
testimonies of a “culture” very much of the past, of a tradition
and of a theology which are certainly no longer ours, and therefore
not immediately intelligible to us.
In the 70s and 80s of the
last century, the Salesian Congregation made a great effort for
renewal, and the renewed Constitutions are the mature fruit of this.
The Salesians produced an historical-spiritual reflection, which in
itself was an interpretative study of Salesian sources, and at the
same time of the "signs of the times." If we run through
the analytical index of these Constitutions we are in for a welcome
surprise: the name of Don Bosco appears about forty times. In the
first seventeen articles it is present a good 13 times; but even
where the name is not explicitly used, the reference to his
thought, to his praxis, to his writings is constant. And just to
think that in the XIX century, the Holy See insisted on there being
no mention in the Constitutions of the name and the writings of the
Founder! The same applies to the other Constitutions, Regulations,
and Plans of Life of the other groups of the Salesian Family.
Forty
years after the Council, it necessarily has to be recognised that
historical research on the life and work the human and spiritual
experience of Don Bosco has made notable progress thanks to studies
which have adopted the changed frames of reference, have taken due
account of the new ways of enquiry and the modern categories of
evaluation, have had recourse to new perspectives, starting from the
analysis of the unpublished documents or new interpretations of
documents already well-known. The new critical hagiography has had at
least two positive effects: above all that of showing us the real
face of Don Bosco and the true greatness of our Father; in the second
place that of taking into account Don Bosco in secular history.
Until
a few decades ago, in fact, secular historical writing displayed
something of an allergy to Don Bosco, and did not devote space
to him, perhaps on account of the sugary tones, the miraculous
sensationalism, which filled the edifying biographies over indulgent
towards the marvellous. Nowadays, on the contrary, Don Bosco is taken
seriously. Naturally the person presented in these cases cannot but
reflect the historical criteria of the various authors, their
mentality, their ideological presuppositions, their aims, the
quantity and the quality of the available sources, the way these are
examined and then variously interpreted, the cultural climate of the
time.
All of this corresponds to the new sensitivity in our
Family which has a greater love for its vocation and mission. As I
indicated earlier, the approach to Don Bosco, using the methods
appropriate to historical research has led us to better
appreciate his greatness, his practical talents, his gifts as an
educator, his spirituality, his work, fully understood only if
deeply rooted in the history of the society in which he lived. We do
not reject a
priori
that which is valid in what we have received concerning Don
Bosco’s image, handed down by generations of Salesians and members
of the Salesian Family. Nowadays we need a re-think and further
reflection which gives us an image of Don Bosco that is relevant,
which speaks to the world of today in a new language. The
validity of the image offered depends, in fact, on the extent to
which it is accepted and shared
7. What image of Don Bosco today
In
the face of this Salesian literature which is necessarily still
evolving, it is clear that nowadays too we have to answer a series of
questions.
Who was Don Bosco? What did he say, do and write?
With what style of life and action did he succeed in expanding his
charitable works? What connection is there between his thought
and his action? Where did his ideas come from; how did they developed
and what was new about them? What understanding did he have of
himself and of his message at the beginning of his work, and what
perception did he gradually acquire as the years passed? What
perception of him, of his work and of his message did his first lay
and ecclesiastical collaborators have, the first Salesians, the FMA,
the Cooperators, the pupils and Past Pupils? How was he understood
and judged by his contemporaries: the Pope, bishops, priests,
religious, political and civil authorities, those wielding economic
and financial power, believers and non-believers, the crowds?
What
was the image of Don Bosco that was constructed and handed down by
“historical tradition,” by the contemporary chroniclers and
biographers, by the witnesses at the processes, by the commemorations
and the apotheoses of the anniversaries and significant dates (1915,
1929, 1934, 1988, 2009)? What interpretations were given to his
historical “mission”? That it was a providential response to the
needs of a Church under persecution? A Catholic response to what the
times demanded? A solution to the “problem of poor and abandoned
boys”, to the social problem, to cooperation among the “classes”?
The promotion of the popular masses, while respecting the established
order? A missionary and civilising activity?
What was special
about Don Bosco? That he was the inventor of a “pedagogy”
suitable for dealing with boys “in danger and dangerous”? That he
was a teacher of spirituality for young people at risk, for the lower
classes, for the developing peoples? That he was the saint of joy, of
human values, of encountering everyone without discrimination? Or
perhaps all this and more besides?
Today this image of Don Bosco
needs to be reconstructed; for a fidelity that is not repetition,
respected for established formulae or personal detachment, it is
necessary to see him in another light. It is not sufficient to limit
ourselves to some spiritual reading or some article by an academic;
it is necessary that we examine Salesianity more deeply, all
together, in order to arrive at a shared view that is learned,
professional, profound, which knows how to give due weight to the
historical, pedagogical, spiritual patrimony inherited from Don
Bosco, that is familiar at some depth with the youth situation, which
has a clear understanding of the characteristics of the Christian in
the society of today and of tomorrow, with the relevant commitments
“according to the needs of the times.” In other words it is a
question of re-examining the institutions and structures of
associations and education, of re-interpreting the Preventive System
in contemporary terms, of presenting to the world and to the Church a
particular style of Salesian educator.
Nowadays, rather than a
crisis of identity it is perhaps a question of a crisis of
credibility. We seem to be held under the tyranny of the statu
quo,
an unconscious rather than intentional resistance. While convinced of
the truth of the theological values with which our Christian and
consecrated life is imbued, we experience the difficulty of
reaching the hearts of those to whom we are sent, for whom we ought
to be signs of hope; we are shaken by the irrelevance of the faith
for them as they build their lives; we are aware that we are not in
touch with their world, of a remoteness, not to say exclusion, from
their plans; we see that our signs, gestures, languages do not appear
to have any impact on their lives.
Perhaps there is a lack of
clarity about the role we have in the mission to which we dedicate
ourselves; some perhaps are not convinced that our mission is useful;
perhaps they are unable to find work which matches their aspirations,
because we don’t know how to bring about renewal; perhaps they feel
imprisoned by emergency situations which are more and more pressing;
perhaps there is more lack of esteem ad
intra
than ad
extra.
History can come to our aid in the process of bringing the charism up
to date; I limit myself to indicating just some aspects, in
particular giving more attention to the first.
7.1.
Evolution
of the works and those for whom they are intended.
For Don Bosco the opening of new works was determined by the demands
of the situation. The poor cultural preparation of the boys led at
Valdocco to the opening of an elementary school on Sundays, and then
in the evening and then on a daily basis, especially for those who
could not attend the public school; then other schools, various
work-shops, and in this way to the complex of the “house attached”
at the Oratory of St. Francis of Sales. This first work, from being
simply a place for the boys to gather together on feast days for
catechism and for games, becomes a place of all-round formation; for
a certain number of boys without visible means of support it becomes
a home, a place to live. To the playground and the church in which a
programme had developed with the possibility of the sacraments, of
elementary religious instruction, of recreation, of interesting
activities, of religious and civil celebration, of gifts, other
structures were added to offer the opportunity of learning a
trade, and so avoiding having to go into factories in the city, too
often immoral and dangerous for boys already burdened with a previous
difficult past. Then later other Salesian houses were founded, other
colleges – boarding schools, other junior seminaries entrusted to
the Salesian Society which had just begun.
Mixed in together at
the first oratory were former reformatory boys, young immigrants, and
in general boys without any strong links to their own parishes. Then
a little higher up the scale, accepted in the oratory and the hostel
there were students and artisans far from "home," who went
into the city to learn a trade, or to do their studies, which
prepared them for employment. To a certain number of boys belonging
to this category, or those with particular difficulties, or else with
greater economic means, the possibility was given of learning a trade
in organised workshops, or of doing their studies in schools and
colleges. This group normally included two different social
categories: the "poor working class " and the "middle
class." Then particular needs led to the setting up of schools:
elementary, technical, grammar, vocational training, agricultural,
day, colleges also for the upper-middle class, where it was a
question of providing an alternative to similar lay or protestant
establishments, or to ensuring a fully Catholic education according
to the preventive system.
Don Bosco considered that the option
for the poorest was compatible with the large-scale provision of
schools and colleges for the "middle classes". He did not
reject anyone, but he preferred to give his attention to the middle
and the working class, as being the ones most in need of help and
assistance. However, the way the process of paying “fees” worked
out, did not leave much room for the extremely poor or the moderately
poor, except in the case of limited groups of youngsters supported by
public or private charity. Then a separate category consisted in
those young people, among the most poor and most at risk to be found
in mission lands, lacking the light of faith. Naturally missionary
activity does not stop at the young, but tries to involve everyone in
the vicinity, nor is it limited just to straightforward pastoral
action, but extends to all aspects of civil, cultural and social
life, according to what Don Bosco himself said in a letter of
November 1886: bringing " religion and civilisation to those
peoples and nations which so far are without them”. Without taking
account of class, special consideration is also given to boys who
show an inclination towards the ecclesiastical or religious state;
this is the most precious gift that can be given to the Church and to
civil society.
Finally account has to be taken of the large
areas of marginalisation of " poor and abandoned youth " in
situations which are particularly serious, sometimes tragic, which
remain outside Don Bosco activities: the emerging group of young
people more and more engaged in new industrial activities who needed
to be assisted, protected, formed socially and in the context of
trade unions; the world of real juvenile delinquency existing in
Turin; works for the care of minors already or on the way to becoming
delinquents, with some of whom moreover he was to some extent in
contact; the immense continent of poverty and indigence, not only in
the city but also, and often worse, in the countryside; the vast
world of illiteracy and of progress through arts and trades; the
world of unemployment and of emigration; and again the world of
mental and physical handicap.
Now this page of history obliges
us to reflect from the current
perspective.
Who nowadays are the ones for whom our works are primarily intended?
Which works suit their needs? Has the disappearance in the renewed
Salesian Constitutions of the list of typical Salesian works which
had the oratories in the first place, perhaps contributed to the
reduction in the number of our classic oratories, even replaced
by high schools and universities ?
7.2.
Abandoned
youth.
As I said at the beginning, the historical importance of Don Bosco
needs to be investigated, in addition to the works, and some
relatively original ways of doing things, his intellectual and
emotive perception of the universal, theological and social
significance of the problem of « abandoned youth», and his great
ability in communicating this perception to large numbers of
collaborators, benefactors and admirers.
Let us ask ourselves
then: are we his faithful disciples today? Are we, like Don Bosco,
still experiencing that inner conflict between the ideal and
its fulfilment, between an intuition and putting it into practice in
the social circumstances in which he found himself working?
7.3.
Response
to the needs of the young.
Considering the fact that Don Bosco’s activities in assisting and
educating the young developed on the practical level with a certain
degree of “opportunism”, it also needs to be said that his
"response" to problems was not based on a particular
“plan” put into operation on the basis of a preconceived overall
view of the social and religious situation in the 1800s. Coming up
against particular problems he responded in an equally immediate and
localised way, until gradually the variety of youth situations led
him to look at the overall " problem of youth " everywhere.
In the heroic life of Don Bosco there were no long-term plans or
strategies worked out at his desk – all of the things quite rightly
nowadays considered indispensible – but effective solutions emerged
to immediate problems, often unforeseen.
What does all this mean
for us today as we are living in a “global village”, where
everything is known in real time, where we have available to us a
whole variety of specialised sciences? How does one pass from a
policy of emergency to a planned policy? On the basis of what precise
criteria can we make our practical decisions within history as it
unfolds, and not from outside? How can we avoid the twofold risk of
losing unity and identity, by wanting to do everything, by abandoning
stable works and moving on to others which are transitory and not
well-thought out, using up resources on short-term projects; and the
risk of giving an absolute value, and making permanent, features
of the Founder which were contingent, finishing by being satisfied
with what we have already had, already known, with a fossilised
tradition, defended, in all good faith, as being fidelity to the
past?
7.4.
Flexibility
in responding to needs.
From the historical analysis we discover the genius and the
ability of Don Bosco, in pursuing his vocation to “save” the
young, in coordinating educational works aimed at the boys of the
urban working-class populations with a variety of further activities
with other objectives. Around the small Oratory at Valdocco Don Bosco
succeeded in gathering together thousands of boys, in winning over
the agreement and the support of the Church authorities to an ever
greater extent, almost complete. And the closure of some works such
as the Guardian Angels Oratory in Turin, of some isolated
Salesian houses such as Cherasco, Trinità, was not a sign of retreat
but of a reorganisation and a re-launching. Proof of this is the
expansion of his mission with works aimed at the formation of youth:
the founding of the FMA, the missions, the Cooperators, the Salesian
Bulletin. These various initiatives highlight the constant process of
reorganisation, re-launching, and further development.
So now,
is it not clear that in all that we do, what must be considered
important is not only or not mainly the appearance, but the reality
of what is re-launched and developed in a wise reorganisation? Is
there perhaps a risk that often the forced closing of so many of our
works appears to be a simple matter of cutting back, rather
than a decision taken in view of further development?
7.5.
Poverty
of life and tireless work.
In those notes which tradition has called his “Spiritual
Testament,” Don Bosco wrote: “From the time that comfort-seeking
once appears in individuals, in rooms and in houses, the decline of
our Congregation will begin […] When the desire for ease and
comfort grows up among us, our pious Society will have run its
course” (P. Braido (ed.). “Don
Bosco educatore, scritti e testimonianze”,
Rome LAS 1992, pp. 409, 437).
Nowadays, drawing our inspiration
from Don Bosco, do we not have to have the courage to say that when a
religious community becomes absorbed in the TV and in the newspapers
for hours on end it is a sign that at least in that particular place
we have run our course? What can be said when a Salesian centre is
reduced to four small boys with a football and a TV, and cannot find
the time to bring youngsters together to involve them in the work
being done, but can do so in order to go on cultural outings? Perhaps
that work has already run its course too, given that the number of
young people in a local Salesian work is not everything, but that it
does remain the thermometer to indicate the reason for there being a
house in that particular place.
8. Suggestions for putting the Strenna into practice
Starting from the knowledge of the history of Don Bosco, the main focal points and the tasks arising from the Strenna for 2012 could be the following. Each group of the Salesian Family can make further practical applications.
8.1.
Pastoral
charity is
a particular feature of the whole of Don Bosco’s life-story
and is the guiding force of all his many activities. We could say
that it is the concise historical perspective through which to read
his whole life. The Good Shepherd knows his sheep and calls them by
name, he quenches their thirst with clear water and allows them to
graze in green pastures; he becomes the gate through which the sheep
enter the sheepfold, and gives his own life so that the sheep may
have life in abundance. (cf. Jn 10,11 sq.). The greatest power of Don
Bosco's charism is the love drawn directly from the Lord Jesus,
imitating him and remaining in Him. This love consists in “giving
everything.” From this stems his apostolic vow: “I promised God
that until my dying breath I would dedicate myself entirely to my
poor boys.” (BM XVIII, 216; cf. C.
SDB 1).
This is our trade mark and our credibility with the
young!
8.2. In Don Bosco's story we come to know of much
hardship,
self sacrifice, privation, suffering,
and of the many sacrifices he made. The good shepherd lays down his
life for his sheep. Through the needs and requests of young people,
God is asking each member of the Salesian Family to sacrifice him or
herself for them. Living the mission is therefore not a vain activity
for activity's sake, but rather conforming our hearts to the heart of
the Good Shepherd who does not want any of his sheep to be lost. It
is a deeply human and deeply spiritual mission. It is a path of
asceticism, for there is no animating presence among young people
without asceticism and sacrifice. Losing something, or rather, losing
everything to enrich the lives of our young people is what gives
support to our dedication and our commitment.
8.3. Through the minutes of the founding of the Salesian Congregation, and especially through the historical development of the multifaceted work of Don Bosco, we can come to know the purpose of the Salesian Family, as this purpose was detailed little by little. We are called to be apostles of the young, of popular settings, of poor and mission areas. Today more than ever, we commit ourselves to a critical understanding of media culture, and we use the media, in particular new technologies, as potential multipliers of our activity in being close to and supportive of young people. While we are in their midst as educators, we involve them as our first collaborators, as did our Father Don Bosco, and we give them responsibility, help them to take the initiative, enable them to be apostles of their peers. In this way we can open up the great heart of Don Bosco more and more; he wanted to reach and serve young people throughout the world.
8.4. Our good intentions cannot remain empty declarations. Our knowledge of Don Bosco needs to be translated into a commitment with and for the young. As with Don Bosco, God awaits us in today's youth! We therefore need to meet them, and stay with them in the places, circumstances and frontiers where they await us. This is why we need to go out to meet them, always taking the first step, walking with them. It is heartening to see how the Salesian Family throughout the world is doing its best for the poorest young people: street children, excluded children, young workers, young soldiers, young apprentices, neglected orphans, exploited children, but a heart that loves is always a heart that asks itself certain questions. It is not sufficient to organise activities, initiatives, institutions for the young; what is needed is an assured presence, contact, a relationship with them: it is a matter of taking up the practice of assisting again, and rediscovering that presence in the playground.
8.5. Even today, Don Bosco asks questions. By getting to know his story we must listen to the questions Don Bosco addresses to us. What more can we do for poor young people? What are the new frontiers in the areas where we are working, in the country in which we are living? Besides the above-mentioned poverty, how many other kinds of poverty weigh down today's young people as they struggle on their way? What are the new frontiers where we must become involved today? We must think about the reality of the family, the educational emergency, the confusion in affective and sexual education, lack of social and political involvement, a retreat into one’s personal private life, spiritual weakness, the unhappiness of so many young people. We hear the cry of young people and offer answers to their deepest and most pressing needs, their practical and spiritual needs.
8.6. From the experience of his personal life, we can know the responses Don Bosco gave to the needs of young people. In this way we can better consider the responses that we have already put in place and which others still need to be created. Of course there are difficulties. We have to “deal with the wolves” who want to devour the flock: indifference, ethical relativism, consumerism that destroy the value of things and experiences, false ideologies. God is calling us, and Don Bosco encourages us, to be good shepherds in the image of the Good Shepherd, so that young people will still find Fathers, Mothers, Friends; and above all can find Life, True Life, the abundant life offered by Jesus!
8.7. The Memoirs of the Oratory of Saint Francis of Sales, written at the explicit request of Pius IX, are an essential point of reference for coming to know Don Bosco's spiritual and pastoral journey. They are written so that we might come to know the prodigious beginnings of the vocation and work of Don Bosco, but especially, so that taking up Don Bosco's motivations and choices, we as individuals, and as each group of the Salesian Family, may continue along the same spiritual and apostolic journey. They were regarded as “memories of the future”. So in the course of this year, let us commit ourselves to getting to know this text, communicating its contents, disseminating it, and especially putting it into the hands of young people: it will become an inspirational book as they make their vocational decisions.
9. Conclusion
As usual I want to conclude this presentation of the Strenna with a very telling anecdote. Before this however, I would like to recall here the “dream at nine years of age.” In fact, it seems to me that this page of autobiography provides a simple, but at the same time, a prophetic presentation of the spirit and the mission of Don Bosco. In it the field of work entrusted to him was described: the young; the aim of his apostolate was pointed out: to make them grow as individuals through education; a method of education which would be effective was offered him: the Preventive System; the context in which all that he did, and today all that we do, was presented: the marvellous plan of God, who, first of all, and more than anything else, loves the young. It is He who enriches them with all kinds of gifts and makes them responsible for their development, so that they can take their rightful place in society. In God’s plan, not only are they assured of success in this life, but of eternal happiness too. Let us therefore listen to Don Bosco, and we will hear the ‘dream of his life’.
«The boy of the dream»
It
was at that age that I had a dream. All my life this remained deeply
impressed on my mind. In this dream I seemed to be near my home in a
fairly large yard. A crowd of children were playing there. Some were
laughing, some were playing games, and quite a few were swearing.
When I heard these evil words, I jumped immediately amongst them and
tried to stop them by using my words and my fists.
At
that moment a dignified man appeared, a nobly dressed adult. He wore
a white cloak, and his face shone so that I could not look directly
at him. He called me by name, told me to take charge of these
children, and added these words: "You will have to win
these friends of yours not by blows but by gentleness and love. Start
right away to teach them the ugliness of sin and the value of
virtue."
Confused
and frightened, I replied that I was a poor, ignorant child. I was
unable to talk to those youngsters about religion. At that moment the
kids stopped their fighting, shouting, and swearing; they gathered
round the man who was speaking.
Hardly
knowing what I was saying, I asked, "Who are you, ordering me to
do the impossible?"
"Precisely
because it seems impossible to you, you must make it possible through
obedience and the acquisition of knowledge."
"Where,
by what means, can I acquire knowledge?"
"I
will give you a teacher. Under her guidance you can become wise.
Without her, all wisdom is foolishness."
"But
who are you that speak so?"
"I
am the son of the woman whom your mother has taught you to greet
three times a day."
"My
mother tells me not to mix with people I don't know unless I have her
permission. So tell me your name."
"Ask
my mother what my name is."
At
that moment, I saw a lady of stately appearance standing beside him.
She was wearing a mantle that sparkled all over as though covered
with bright stars. Seeing from my questions and answers that I was
more confused than ever, she beckoned me to approach her. She took me
kindly by the hand and said, "Look." Glancing round, I
realised that the youngsters had all apparently run away. A
large number of goats, dogs, cats, bears, and other animals had taken
their place.
"This
is the field of your work. Make yourself humble, strong, and
energetic. And what you will see happening to these animals in a
moment is what you must do for my children."
I
looked round again, and where before I had seen wild animals, I now
saw gentle lambs. They were all jumping and bleating as if to welcome
that man and lady.
At
that point, still dreaming, I began crying. I begged the lady to
speak so that I could understand her, because I did not know what all
this could mean. She then placed her hand on my head and said, "In
good time you will understand everything."
With
that, a noise woke me up and everything disappeared. I was totally
bewildered. My hands seemed to be sore from the blows I had given,
and my face hurt from those I had received. The memory of the man and
the lady, and the things said and heard, so occupied my mind that I
could not get any more sleep that night.
(Memoirs
of the Oratory of Saint Francis of Sales, critical
edition by
Antonio da Silva Ferreira, LAS Rome 1991).
Don Bosco writes in
the “Memoirs of the Oratory” that this dream “remained
deeply impressed on my mind for the whole of my life,” so
that today we can say that he lived in order to change the dream into
reality.
Well then, what our dear Father took as his plan of
life, making the boys his purpose in life. and devoting all his
energies until his last breath for them, is what we are all being
called to do.
The anecdote which this time I take from history,
illustrates very eloquently Don Bosco’s desire to be
for his boys a sign of love that would never fail. I heard it told
for the first time by a confrere from the Australian Province, Fr
Lawrie Moate, in an introductory address on the occasion of a
celebration of Jubilees of Salesian life, at Lysterfield on 9 July
2011:
“And our music continues”
“Imagine the courtyard of a prison in an 18th century European colony. It is dawn and while the sun begins to fill the eastern sky with golden colours a prisoner is brought out into the yard to be executed. He is a priest, condemned to death for his opposition to the cruelty with which the natives in the colony were being treated. He is standing against a wall and gazes at the firing squad, his fellow countrymen. Before blindfolding him the officer asks him the traditional question about his final wishes. The reply surprises everyone: he asks to be able to play his flute for one last time. The soldiers are put “at ease” while they wait for the prisoner to play. When the notes begin to fill the silent morning air the whole prison is flooded with music which, sweet and enchanting, fills with peace that place a daily witness to violence and sadness. The officer is worried because the longer the music lasts, the more absurd his task seems to be. He therefore orders the soldiers to open fire. The priest dies instantly, but to the amazement of all present the music continues its dance of life; death outfaced.”
Where
does this sweet music of life come from?
In
a society totally committed to silencing Christ’s message, I think
it is our vocation to be among those who continue to make the music
of Life heard. In a world doing everything it can to prevent the
young hearing the insistent invitation of Christ to “come and see,”
it is our privilege to have been drawn to Don Bosco and to have
been encouraged to play the music of the heart, to bear witness
to the transcendent, to exercise a spiritual fatherhood, to
lead youngsters in a direction which corresponds to
their dignity and to their most genuine desires.
This
is the dance of the Spirit! This is God’s music!
My
dear brothers, sisters, all the members of the Salesian Family,
friends of Don Bosco, all young people, I wish you all a happy New
Year for 2012 full of God’s blessings, and with a renewed
commitment to continuing to make the music heard, our music, which
fills the lives of the young with meaning, and makes them discover
the source of joy.
With my best wishes to everyone
and a remembrance in my prayers,
Rome, 31 December 2011.
Fr
Pascual Chávez Villanueva
Rector
Major
“I
am the good shepherd:
The
good shepherd lays down his life for his sheep” (Jn 10:11)
Year
one of the three year preparation period for the bicentennial of the
Don Bosco's birth focuses on our getting to know his story. We need
to study him and, through the events of his life, we need to come
to know him as an educator and pastor, founder, guide, legislator. It
is an awareness that leads to love and imitation. This is the theme
of Strenna 2012.
For us members of the Salesian Family,
who turn to Don Bosco as our reference point, he needs to be what St.
Francis of Assisi has been and continues to be for the Franciscans
and St. Ignatius of Loyola for the Jesuits , i.e. the founder, the
spiritual master, model of education and especially initiator of a
movement of worldwide importance, someone who was able to formidably
bring young people's needs, circumstances, future to the attention of
the Church and society. But how can we do this without turning to
history, which is not the custodian of a lost past, but a living
memory within us which challenges us in terms of relevance?
Our
approach to Don Bosco, done with appropriate methods of historical
research, has led us to better understand and assess his human and
Christian greatness, his practical brilliance, his skills as an
educator, his spirituality, his work, fully understood only if deeply
rooted in the history of the society in which he lived. At the same
time through a knowledge of his journey through history we have
always been aware of God's providential intervention in his life. In
this historical study there is no a
priori
rejection of the valid and respectable image that generations of the
Salesians, Salesian Sisters, Salesian Cooperators and members of the
Salesian Family have had of the Don Bosco they knew and loved, but
there is and must be a presentation and reworking of an image of Don
Bosco for today, one that can speak to today's world, makes use of a
renewed language.
The image of Don Bosco and his activity should
be seriously reconstructed, beginning from our cultural horizons: the
complexity of life today, globalisation and the difficulties of the
apostolate, the decline in vocations, the “questioning” of
consecrated life. Radical, or epochal changes as my predecessor, Fr
Egidio Viganò called them, force us to rethink and revise the image
in another light, in view of a fidelity that is not mere repetition
of formulas or formal allegiance to tradition.
The
historical significance of Don Bosco also has to be rediscovered,
beyond his “works” and certain relatively original pedagogical
elements, especially in his practical and affective perception of the
universal, theological and social problem of ''neglected' youth, and
his great ability to communicate this to large crowds of co-workers,
benefactors and admirers.
Let
us ask ourselves:
Are we faithful followers of Don Bosco today? Do we still experience
the tension that he experienced between the ideal and its
realisation, between intuition and its embodiment in the social
fabric in which he operated?
To be faithful to Don Bosco
means knowing his history and the history of his times, making his
inspiration our own, taking up his motivations and choices.
To
be faithful to Don Bosco and his mission is to cultivate in ourselves
a strong and abiding love for young people, especially the poorest.
This love leads us to respond to their most pressing and
deepest needs. Like Don Bosco, we feel touched by their difficult
situations: poverty, child labour, sexual exploitation, lack of
education and vocational training, integration into the world of
work, lack of self-confidence, fear of the future, loss of meaning in
life.
We try to be with them, in affection and through selfless
love, holding sway discretely, offering sound proposals for them to
follow as they make their choices in life and experience
happiness and seek their future. In everything, we become their
companions on the journey and competent guides.
In particular,
referring to the youth of today, we seek to understand their new way
of being. Many of them are 'digital natives' looking for experiences
of social mobility, the possibility of intellectual development,
elements of economic progress, forms of instant communication,
opportunities to be pro-active via new technologies. Here too we want
to share their lives and their interests. Guided by the creative
spirit of Don Bosco, as educators and 'digital immigrants', we stay
close to them, trying to help them overcome the generation gap with
their parents or the adult world.
We take care of them
throughout their journey of growth and as they mature, giving them
our time and our energy and staying with them as they grow through
childhood to become young adults.
We take care of them when
difficult situations like war, hunger, lack of future opportunities,
lead them to abandon home and family and face life alone.
We
take care of them when they are looking out anxiously for their first
job and setting about fitting into society, sometimes without any
hope or prospect of success.
We take care of them when they are
building up their world of affection, their family, accompanying them
especially when they become engaged and in the early years of their
marriage (see GC26, 98.99.104).
We are particularly keen
to fill the deepest void of their hearts, helping them seek meaning
in their lives and above all offering a way for growth in knowledge
and friendship with the Lord Jesus, in the experience of a living
Church, in real commitment to experiencing their lives as
vocation.
Beginning from our knowledge of the history of Don
Bosco, our major points of reference and our tasks stemming from
Strenna 2012 are as follows.
Pastoral
charity
characterises Don Bosco's entire story and is what animates his many
works. We could say that it is the concise historical perspective
through which to read his entire existence. The Good Shepherd knows
his sheep and calls them by name, he quenches their thirst with clear
water and allows them to graze in green pastures; he becomes the gate
through which the sheep enter the sheepfold, and gives his own life
so that the sheep may have life in abundance. The greatest power of
Don Bosco's charism is the love drawn directly from the Lord Jesus,
imitating him and remaining in Him. This love consists in giving
everything. From this stems his apostolic vow: “I have promised God
to spend myself until my dying breath for my poor youngsters”. This
is our brand and our credibility with the young!
In Don
Bosco's story we come to know of much hardship, privation, suffering,
and of the many sacrifices he made. The good shepherd lays down his
life for his sheep. Through the needs and requests of young people,
God is asking each member of the Salesian Family to sacrifice him or
herself for them. Living the mission is therefore not a vain activity
for activity's sake, but rather conforming our hearts to the heart of
the Good Shepherd who does not want any of his sheep to be lost. It
is a deeply human and deeply spiritual mission. It is a path of
asceticism, for there is no animating presence among young people
without asceticism and sacrifice. Losing something, or rather, losing
everything to enrich the lives of our young people is what supports
our dedication and our commitment.
Through the minutes of
the founding of the Salesian Congregation, and especially through
historical development of the multifaceted work of Don Bosco, we can
get to know the purpose of the Salesian Family, as this purpose was
detailed little by little. We are called to be apostles of the young,
of popular settings, of poor and mission areas. Today more than
ever we commit ourselves to a critical understanding of media
culture, and we use the media, in particular new technologies, as
potential multipliers of our activity in being close to and
supportive of young people. While we are in their midst as educators,
we involve them as our first collaborators, as did our Father, and we
give them responsibility, help them to take initiative, enable them
to be apostles of their peers. In this way we can extend the great
heart of Don Bosco; he wanted to reach and serve young people
throughout the world.
Our good intentions cannot remain
empty declarations. Like Don Bosco, God waits for us in today's
youth! We therefore need to meet them, and stay with them in the
places, circumstances and frontiers where they await us. This is why
we need to go out to meet them, take the first step, walk with them.
It is heartening to see how the Salesian Family throughout the world
is doing its best for the poorest young people: street children,
excluded children, young workers, young soldiers, young apprentices,
neglected orphans, exploited children, but a heart that loves is
always a heart that asks itself certain questions. Even today, or
perhaps today more than ever, Don Bosco asks questions. By getting to
know his story we must listen to the questions Don Bosco addresses to
us. What more can we do for poor young people? What are the new
frontiers where we work, in our country? Have we the ears to hear the
cries of young people today? Besides the above-mentioned poverty, how
many other kinds of poverty weigh on today's young people as they
struggle on their way? What are the new frontiers we must get
involved in today? Think about the reality of the family, the
educational emergency, the confusion in affective and sexual
education, lack of social and political involvement, the ebbing tide
of privacy of personal life, spiritual weakness, the misery of so
many young people. We hear the cry of young people and offer answers
to their deepest most pressing needs, their practical and spiritual
needs.
From his personal life's experience we can know the
responses Don Bosco gave to the needs of young people. In this way we
can better consider the responses that we have already put in place
and what others still need to be created. Of course there are
difficulties. We have to deal with the wolves who want to devour the
flock: indifference, ethical relativism, consumerism that destroys
the value of things and experiences, false ideologies. God is calling
us and Don Bosco encourages us to be good shepherds in the image of
the Good Shepherd, so that young people will still find Fathers,
Mothers, Friends and above all can find Life. Moreover, true Life,
the abundant life offered by Jesus!
The Memoirs
of the Oratory of St. Francis de Sales,
written by Don Bosco at the explicit request of Pope Pius IX, are a
point of reference for coming to know Don Bosco's spiritual and
pastoral journey. They are written so that we might come to know the
prodigious beginnings of the vocation and work of Don Bosco, but
especially so that taking up Don Bosco's motivations and choices, we
as individuals, and as each group of the Salesian Family, might
follow the same spiritual and apostolic journey. They were regarded
as “memories of the future”. So in the course of this year let us
commit ourselves to getting to know this text, communicating its
contents, disseminating it, and especially putting it into the hands
of young people: it will become an inspirational book for their
vocational choices.
Fr
Pascual Chávez V, SDB
Rector
Major