The invisible other Don Boscos

Readers of the Salesian Bulletin already know about the intercontinental journey that Don Bosco’s Casket went on a few years ago. The mortal remains of our saint reached dozens and dozens of countries around the world and lingered in a thousand cities and towns, welcomed everywhere with admiration and sympathy. I do not know which saint’s body has travelled so far and which Italian corpse has been received so enthusiastically beyond the borders of its own country. Perhaps none.

While this ‘journey’ is already known history, the intercontinental of the ACSSA (Association of Salesian History Scholars) from November 2018 to March 2019 is certainly not. It was to coordinate a series of four Study Seminars promoted by the same Association in Bratislava (Slovakia), Bangkok (Thailand), Nairobi (Kenya), Buenos Aires (Argentina). The fifth was held in Hyderabad (India) in June 2018.

Well: on these trips I did not see the Salesian houses, colleges, schools, parishes, missions as I have done on other occasions and as anyone who travels a bit anywhere from the north to the south, from the east to the west of the world can do; instead I encountered a story of Don Bosco, all yet to be written.

The other Don Boscos

The theme of the Study Seminars was in fact to present figures of deceased Salesians and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians who, over a short or long period of their lives, had stood out as particularly significant and relevant, and above all had left their mark after their death. Some of them, then, were authentic “innovators” of the Salesian charism, capable of inculturating it in the most varied ways, obviously in absolute fidelity to Don Bosco and his spirit.

The result was a gallery of a hundred or so men and women of the 20th century, all different from each other, who knew how to make themselves “other Don Boscos”: that is, to open their eyes to their land of birth or mission, to become aware of the material, cultural and spiritual needs of the young people living there, especially the poorest, and to “invent” the best way of satisfying them.

Bishops, priests, nuns, lay Salesians, members of the Salesian Family: all figures, men and women, who without being saints – in our research we excluded saints and those already on their way to the altars – have fully realised Don Bosco’s educational mission in different spheres and roles: as educators and priests, as professors and teachers, animators of oratories and youth centres, founders and directors of educational works, formators of vocations and new religious institutes, as writers and musicians, architects and builders of churches and colleges, artists of wood and painting, missionaries ad gentes, witnesses of the faith in prison, simple Salesians and simple Daughters of Mary Help of Christians. Among them, not a few have often lived a life of hard sacrifices, overcoming obstacles of all kinds, learning very difficult languages, often risking death for lack of acceptable sanitary conditions, impossible climatic conditions, hostile and persecutory political regimes, even actual attacks. The latest of these happened just as I was leaving for Nairobi: Spanish Salesian, Fr Cesare Fernández, murdered in cold blood on 15 February 2018 at the border between Togo and Burkina Faso. One of the most recent Salesians ‘martyrs’, we could call him, knowing the individual as I did.

A story to learn about

La Boca, neighbourhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina; first mission among emigrants

What can we say then? That this too is the unknown history of Don Bosco, or, if you like, of the Sons and Daughters of the saint? If the saint’s casket has been received, as we were saying, with so much respect and esteem by public authorities and the simple population even in non-Christian countries, it means that his Sons and Daughters have not only sung his praises – this too has certainly been done, since Don Bosco’s image can be found just about everywhere – but have also realised his dreams: to make God’s love for young people known, to bring the good news of the Gospel everywhere, to the end of the world (in Tierra del Fuego!).

Those who, like me and my colleagues from ACSSA, were able in February and March 2018 to listen to experiences of Salesian life lived in the 20th century in some fifty countries on four continents, can only affirm, as Don Bosco often did when looking at the impressive development of the congregation before his eyes: ‘Here is the finger of God’.  If the finger of God has been in Salesian works and foundations, it has also been in the men and women who have consecrated their entire lives to the evangelical ideal realised in the manner of Don Bosco.

Are these presented to us as “next door saints”? Some certainly, even considering their personal limitations, their characters, their whims, and, why not, their sins (which only God knows). All, however, were endowed with immense faith, great hope, strong charity and generosity, much love for Don Bosco and souls. Some of them – think of the pioneer missionaries in Patagonia – one might be tempted to call real “madmen”, madmen for God and for souls of course.

The concrete results of this story are there for all to see, but the names of many have remained almost ‘invisible’ until now. We can get to know them by reading “Volti di uno stesso carisma: Salesiani e Figlie di Maria Ausiliatrice nel XX secolo” (Faces of the same charism: Salesians and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in the 20th century), a multilingual book, published by Editrice LAS, in the”Associazione Cultori Storia Salesiana – Studi” series (not yet available in English).

If evil leaves its mark, so does good. ‘Bonum est diffusivum sui‘ wrote St Thomas Aquinas centuries ago. The Salesians and Salesian women presented at our seminars are proof of this; alongside them or following them, others have done the same, until today.

Let us briefly introduce these new faces of Don Bosco.

1 Antonio COJAZZI, Fr. 1880-1953 brilliant educator Educators in the field EU
2 Domenico MORETTI, Fr. 1900-1989 experience in Salesian oratories with the poorest young people Educators in the field EU
3 Samuele VOSTI, Fr. 1874-1939 creator and promoter of a renewed festive oratory in Valdocco Educators in the field EU
4 Karl ZIEGLER, Fr. 1914-1990 nature lover and scout Educators in the field EU
5 Alfonsina FINCO, Sr. 1869-1934 dedication to abandoned children Educators in the field EU
6 Margherita MARIANI, Sr. 1858-1939 Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in Rome Educators in the field EU
7 Sisto COLOMBO, Fr. 1878-1938 man of culture and mystical soul Educators in the field EU
8 Franc WALLAND, Fr. 1887-1975 theologian and provincial Educators in the field EU
9 Maria ZUCCHI, Sr. 1875-1949 made Salesian mark on the Don Bosco Institute in Messina Educators in the field EU
10 Clotilde MORANO, Sr. 1885-1963 the teaching of women’s physical education Educators in the field EU
11 Annetta URI, Sr. 1903-1989 from the desk to building sites: the courage to build the future of the school Educators in the field EU
12 Frances PEDRICK, Sr. 1887-1981 the first Daughter of Mary Help of Christians to graduate from Oxford University Educators in the field EU
13 Giuseppe CACCIA, Bro. 1881-1963 a life dedicated to Salesian publishing Educators in the field EU
14 Rufillo UGUCCIONI, Fr. 1891-1966 writer for children, evangeliser and disseminator of Salesian values Educators in the field EU
15 Flora FORNARA, Sr. 1902-1971 a life for educational theatre Educators in the field EU
16 Gaspar MESTRE, Bro. 1888-1962 the Salesian school of carving, sculpture and decoration in Sarriá (Barcelona) Educators in the field EU
17 Wictor GRABELSKI, Fr. 1857-1902 a forerunner of Salesian work in Poland Educators in the field EU
18 Antoni HLOND, Fr. 1884-1963 musician, composer, founder of a school for organists Initiators EU
19 Carlo TORELLO, Fr. 1886-1967 popular devotion and civic memory in Latina Initiators EU
20 Jan KAJZER Bro. 1892-1976 engineer co-author of the Polish “art deco” style and moderniser of the Salesian vocational school in Oświęcim Initiators EU
21 Antonio CAVOLI, Fr. 1888-1972 founder of religious congregation in Japan inspired by the Salesian charism Initiators EU
22 Iside MALGRATI, Sr. 1904-1992 innovative Salesian in printing, school and vocational training Initiators EU
23 Anna JUZEK, Sr. 1879-1957 contribution to the establishment of the works of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in Poland Initiators EU
24 Mária ČERNÁ, Sr. 1928-2011 basis for the rebirth of the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in Slovakia Initiators EU
25 Antonio SALA, Fr. 1836-1895 economer at Valdocco and earliest Economer General Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
26 Francesco SCALONI, Fr. 1861-1926 an extraordinary figure of a Salesian superior Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
27 Luigi TERRONE, Fr. 1875-1968 novice master and rector Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
28 Marcelino OLAECHEA, Bishop 1889-1972 promoter of housing for workers Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
29 Stefano TROCHTA, Cardinal 1905-1974 martyr under Nazis and Communists Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
30 Alba DEAMBROSIS, Sr. 1887-1964 builder of female Salesian work in the German-speaking area Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
31 Virginia FERRARO ORTÍ, Sr. 1894-1963 from trade unionist to Salesian superior Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles EU
32 Raffaele PIPERNI, Fr. 1842-1930 parish priest, ‘mediator’ in the integration of Italian immigrants into the San Francisco mainstream Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
33 Remigio RIZZARDI, Fr. 1863-1912 the father of beekeeping in Colombia Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
34 Carlos PANE, Fr. 1856-1923 pioneer of the Salesian presence in Spain and Peru Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
35 Florencio José MARTÍNEZ EMBODAS, Fr. 1894-1971 a Salesian way of building Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
36 Martina PETRINI PRADO, Sr. 1874-1965 Daughters of Mary Help of Christians; origins in fast-developing Uruguay Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
37 Anna María COPPA, Sr. 1891-1973 foundress and face of the first Catholic school in Ecuador Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
38 Rose MOORE, Sr. 1911-1996 pioneer in the rehabilitation of blind Thai youth Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
39 Mirta MONDIN, Sr. 1922-1977 the origins of the first Catholic girls’ school in Gwangju (Korea) Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
40 Terezija MEDVEŠEK, Sr. 1906-2001 valiant missionary in North-East India Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
41 Nancy PEREIRA, Sr. 1923-2010 tireless dedication to the poor Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
42 Jeanne VINCENT, Sr. 1915-1997 one of the first missionaries in Port-Gentil, Gabon Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
43 Maria Gertrudes DA ROCHA, Sr. 1933-2017 missionary and economer in Mozambique Pioneers in mission AM, AS, AF
44 Pietro GIACOMINI, Bishop 1904-1982 obedience blossoms Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles AM, AS, AF
45 José Luis CARREÑO ECHANDIA, Fr. 1905-1986 a multifaceted missionary with a preferential option for the poor Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles AM, AS, AF
46 Catherine MANIA, Sr. 1903-1983 first provincial in North-East India Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles AM, AS, AF
47 William Richard AINSWORTH, Fr. 1908-2005 an essay on modern Salesian leadership Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles AM, AS, AF
48 Blandine ROCHE, Sr. 1906-1999 the Salesian presence in the difficult years of post-independence Tunisia Salesians of Don Bosco and Daughters of Mary Help of Christians in leadership roles AM, AS, AF