DON
BOSCO: EDUCATOR OF YOUTH
Don Bosco
was born in the hamlet of Becchi, not far from Turin in northern Italy,
on 16th August 1815.
His father died before he reached two years of age, and his
mother Margaret, a saintly woman, gave him a healthy religious
upbringing.
Like St. Joseph in the Gospels, God
spoke to John Bosco in his dreams, and in this way revealed to him many
future events.
Already at the age of nine, John Bosco
had the first of these man prophetic visions of “dreams” as he preferred
to call them.
In this vision, a lady told him that he
would be called to bring the Gospel to young people.
While still a teenager, John would
often gather a group of boy together, and entertain them. He had a gift for conjuring and
this he coupled with religious instruction, using stories from the lives
of the saints of from the Bible, and finishing up with a hymn of decade
of the Rosary.
The Oratory
After some initial difficulties he
managed to undertake studies for the priesthood and was ordained on June
5th, 1841.
Several months later his first “dream” became a reality. On the feast of the Immaculate
Conception, December 8, 1841 Don (“Father”) Bosco was vesting for Mass,
when the sacristan noticed a boy nearby and asked him to server the
Mass. The boy replied
ashamed, “I cannot.” The
sacristan insisted and when the boy again refused, gave out to him and
chased him away. But Don
Bosco called the boy back, asking him to stay for Mass.
Afterwards Don Bosco talked to the boy
and learned that he was an orphan and although already sixteen, could
neither read nor write nor had he made his First Communion. He didn’t go to instructions
because he was too big for children’s classes.
“If I give you instruction alone, would
you come?” Don Bosco asked.
“Oh yes,” the boy answered.
“Well, when shall we begin?”
“At once,” was the reply.
After first saying the a “Hail Mary”
for help, Don Bosco gave the lad instruction for half an hour, beginning
with the Sing of the cross.
He then gave him a medal of Our Lady and asked him to come back
on the following Sunday.
That Sunday the boy brought other boys
with him and soon the famous “Oratory” had become a reality in
Turin.
Don Bosco Spent his Sundays from dawn
till nightfall with his boys, teaching them, playing them, saying Mass
for them, hearing their confession and taking them on walks through the
countryside. The group
would meet in a field of church, but eventually Don Bosco was given an
old barn. Slowly, by
stages, this grew into the immense Salesian Mother House, the world
famous Oratory of Turin.
But Don Bosco had a lot of work to do
before his would come about.
After a while many of the boys started
to come not only on Sundays and Feast Days, but also during the week in
the evenings after school or work.
Don Bosco realized that the boys needed more than one day a week
with him, and began to allow them to stay in his house during the
week. He set up a school
for them while his own mother became a mother to them. Together they trained the boys
in good habits and frequent use of the sacraments and gave them an
education.
Two Congregations
As some of the boys started to join the
seminaries and become priests, Don Bosco’s reputation as an educator of
youth grew. Requests
started to come for him to set up hi “oratory” in other places. He soon came to realize that he
needed to set up a religious order.
He began to prepare the best and most
reliable of his young assistants and with ecclesiastical approval, the
Salesian Society came into existence.
Today it is the third largest
congregation for men in the Catholic Church.
By 1874 Don Bosco had obtained final
approval for both the Salesian Society and an order of nuns, the
Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians.
The nuns were to do for girls what the
Salesian Society was doing for boys.
There were many obstacles put in Don
Bosco’s way in this work, but he managed to overcome them with the
support of the different Popes whom he was always close to.
John Bosco the
teacher
Don Bosco was a gifted educator of
youth. A wonderful example
of this was when he sought and eventually obtained permission from the
Minister of Home Affairs to take out for a day in the country the youth
in a detention center.
Under his care, the young people
flocked out of the gates of their institution. They had a glorious day in the
country and all returned to their place of detention in the evening,
grateful to Don Bosco and with generous resolutions to make up for the
past.
Special place for Our
Lady
Our Lady had appeared to Don Bosco in
his first “dream” at age nine and sent him his first pupil on the feast
of her Immaculate Conception.
Don Bosco constantly turned to her for
help and guidance. He
taught all his boys a deep and tender devotion to Our Lady and to invoke
her, especially under the title Help of Christians.
This led him eventually to build the
greatest church of the Salesian Society, the famous Basilica of Mary
Help of Christians in Turin.
Prophecy
Don Bosco had an extraordinary gift of
prophecy and foretold many things about the future of his Salesian
Society. He also foretold
public events, papal election, the rapid recovery of many who were ill
and the imminent death of several great figures. In fact for many years not on
pupil of the Oratory died without his foretelling it quite a long time
before.
Among Don Bosco’s many prophetic
visions, some were spreading the Gospel in mission lands. Gradually this began to happen,
and the Congregation started to spread its work to mission territories,
fulfilling Don Bosco’s prophecies one by one.
Salesian
Cooperators.
In his later years Don Bosco was sought
after wherever he went.
People of all ranks and classes came to him for advice or help,
including many Cardinals and Ministers of State. On the other hand, many priests
and lay people had helped Don Bosco with his work over the years. This eventually led to the
foundation of the their main branch of Don Bosco’s work, the Association
of Salesian Cooperators.
The Popes of the time not only gave it their approval and
blessing, but even placed themselves at the head of the list of
members. Soon the
Association had spread all over the world.
Don Bosco’s health collapse in 1887 and
he died on December 21, 1888.
He was beatified on June 9, 1929 and canonized on Easter Sunday,
April 1, 1834. In 1946 he
was proclaimed patron of Catholic publishers by Pope Pius
XII.
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