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St. Giovanni Melchior Bosco
(Or St. John Bosco; Don Bosco.)
Founder of the Salesian Society. Born of poor parents in a little cabin at Becchi, a hill-side hamlet near Castelnuovo, Piedmont, Italy, 16 August, 1815; died 31 January 1888; declared Venerable by Pius X, 21 July, 1907.
When he was little more than two years old his father died, leaving the support of three boys to the mother, Margaret Bosco. John's early years were spent as a shepherd and he received his first instruction at the hands of the parish priest. He possessed a ready wit, a retentive memory, and as years passed his appetite for study grew stronger. Owing to the poverty of the home, however, he was often obliged to turn from his books to the field, but the desire of what he had to give up never left him. In 1835 he entered the seminary at Chieri and after six years of study was ordained priest on the eve of Trinity Sunday by Archbishop Franzoni of Turin.
Leaving the seminary, Don Bosco went to Turin where he entered zealously upon
his priestly labours. It was here that an incident occurred which opened up to
him the real field of effort of his afterlife. One of his duties was to
accompany Don Cafasso upon his visits to the prisons of the city, and the
condition of the children confined in these places, abandoned to the most evil
influences, and with little before them but the gallows, made such a indelible
impression upon his mind that he resolved to devote his life to the rescue of
these unfortunate outcasts. On the eighth of December, 1841, the feast of the
Immaculate Conception, while Don Bosco was vesting for Mass, the sacristan drove
from the Church a ragged urchin because he refused to serve Mass. Don Bosco
heard his cries and recalled him, and in the friendship which sprang up between
the priest and Bartolomeo Garelli was sown the first seed of the Oratory
, so
called, no doubt, after the example of St. Philip Neri and because prayer was
its prominent feature. Don Bosco entered eagerly upon the task of instructing
this first pupil of the streets; companions soon joined Bartolomeo, all drawn by
a kindness they had never known, and in February, 1842, the Oratory numbered
twenty boys, in March of the same year, thirty, and in March, 1846, four hundred.
As the number of boys increased, the question of a suitable meeting-place presented itself. In good weather walks were taken on Sundays and holidays to spots in the country about Turin where lunch was eaten, and realizing the charm which music held for the untamed spirits of his disciples Don Bosco organized a band for which some old brass instruments were procured. In the autumn of 1844 he was appointed assistant chaplain to the Rifugio, where Don Borel entered enthusiastically into his work. With the approval of Archbishop Franzoni, two rooms were secured adjoining the Rifugio and converted into a chapel, which was dedicated to St. Francis de Sales. The members of the Oratory now gathered at the Rifugio, and numbers of boys from the surrounding district applied for admission. It was about this time (1845) that Don Bosco began his night schools and with the closing of the factories the boys flocked to his rooms where he and Don Borel instructed them in rudimentary branches.
The success of the Oratory at the Rifugio was not of long duration. To his
great distress Don Bosco was obliged to give up his rooms and from this on he
was subjected to petty annoyances and obstacles which, at times, seemed to spell
the ruin of his undertaking. His perseverance in the face of all difficulties
led many to the conclusion that he was insane, and an attempt was even made to
confine him in an asylum. Complaints were lodged against him, declaring his
community to be a nuisance, owing to the character of the boys he befriended.
From the Rifugio the Oratory was moved to St. Martin's, to St. Peter's
Churchyard, to three rooms in Via Cottolengo, where the night schools were
resumed, to an open field, and finally to a rough shed upon the site of which
grew up an Oratory that counted seven hundred members. Don Bosco took lodgings
nearby, where he was joined by his mother. Mama Margaret
, as Don Bosco's
mother came to be known, gave the last ten years of her life in devoted service
to the little inmates of this first Salesian home. When she joined her son at
the Oratory the outlook was not bright. But sacrificing what small means she had,
even to parting with her home, its furnishings, and her jewelry, she brought all
the solicitude and love of a mother to these children of the streets. The
evening classes increased and gradually dormitories were provided for many who
desired to live at the Oratory. Thus was founded the first Salesian Home which
now houses about one thousand boys.
The municipal authorities by this time had come to recognize the importance of the work which Don Bosco was doing, and he began with much success a fund for the erection of technical schools and workshops. These were all completed without serious difficulty. In 1868 to meet the needs of the Valdocco quarter of Turin, Don Bosco resolved to build a church. Accordingly a plan was drawn in the form of a cross covering an area of 1,500 sq. yards. He experienced considerable difficulty in raising the necessary money, but the charity of some friends finally enabled him to complete it at a cost of more than a million francs (about 200,000). The church was consecrated 9 June, 1868, and placed under the patronage of Our Lady, Help of Christians. In the same year in which Don Bosco began the erection of the church fifty priests and teachers who had been assisting him formed a society under a common rule which Pius IX, provisionally in 1869, and finally in 1874, approved.
Character and Growth of the Oratory
Any attempt to explain the popularity of the Oratory among the classes to
which Don Bosco devoted his life would fail without an appreciation of his spirit
which was its life. For his earliest intercourse with poor boys he had never
failed to see under the dirt, the rags, and the uncouthness the spark which a
little kindness and encouragement would fan into a flame. In his vision or dream
which he is said to have had in his early boyhood, wherein it was disclosed to
him what his life work would be, a voice said to him: Not with blows, but with
charity and gentleness must you draw these friends to the path of virtue.
And
whether this be accounted as nothing more than a dream, that was in reality the
spirit with which he animated his Oratory. In the earlier days when the number
of his little disciples was slender he drew them about him by means of small
presents and attractions, and by pleasant walks to favorite spots in the
environs of Turin. These excursions occurring on Sunday, Don Bosco would say
Mass in the village church and give a short instruction on the Gospel; breakfast
would then be eaten, followed by games; and in the afternoon Vespers would be
chanted, a lesson in Catechism given, and the Rosary recited. It was a familiar
sight to see him in the field surrounded by kneeling boys preparing for
confession.
Don Bosco's method of study knew nothing of punishment. Observance of rules
was obtained by instilling a true sense of duty, by removing assiduously all
occasions for disobedience, and by allowing no effort towards virtue, how
trivial soever it might be, to pass unappreciated. He held that the teacher
should be father, adviser, and friend, and he was the first to adopt the
preventive method. Of punishment he said: As far as possible avoid punishing …
try to gain love before inspiring fear.
And in 1887 he wrote: I do not
remember to have used formal punishment; and with God's grace I have always
obtained, and from apparently hopeless children, not alone what duty exacted,
but what my wish simply expressed.
In one of his books he has discussed the
causes of weakness of character, and derives them largely from a misdirected
kindness in the rearing of children. Parents make a parade of precocious talents:
the child understands quickly, and his sensitiveness enraptures all who meet him,
but the parents have only succeeded in producing an affectionate, perfected,
intelligent animal. The chief object should be to form the will and to temper
the character. In all his pupils Don Bosco tried to cultivate a taste for music,
believing it to be a powerful and refining influence. Instruction
, he said,
is but an accessory, like a game; knowledge never makes a man because it does
not directly touch the heart. It gives more power in the exercise of good or
evil; but alone it is an indifferent weapon, wanting guidance.
He always
studied, too, the aptitudes and vocations of his pupils, and to an almost
supernatural quickness and clearness of insight into the hearts of children must
be ascribed to no small part of his success. In his rules he wrote: Frequent
Confession, frequent Communion, daily Mass: these are the pillars which should
sustain the whole edifice of education.
Don Bosco was an indefatigable
confessor, devoting days to the work among his children. He recognized that
gentleness and persuasion alone were not enough to bring to the task of
education. He thoroughly believed in play as a means of arousing childish
curiosity - more than this, he places it among his first recommendations, and
for the rest he adopted St. Philip Neri's words: Do as you wish, I do not care
so long as you do not sin.
Statistics
At the time of Don Bosco's death in 1888 there were 250 houses of the Salesian Society in all parts of the world, containing 130,000 children, and from which there annually went out 18,000 finished apprentices. In the motherhouse Don Bosco had selected the brightest of his pupils, taught them Italian, Latin, French, and mathematics, and this band formed a teaching corps for the new homes which quickly grew up in other places. Up to 1888 over six thousand priests had gone forth from Don Bosco's institutions, 1,200 of whom had remained in the society. The schools begin with the child in his first instruction and lead, for those who choose it, to seminaries for the priesthood. The society also conducts Sunday schools, evening schools for adult workmen, schools for those who enter the priesthood late in life, technical schools, and printing establishments for the diffusion of good reading in different languages. Its members also have charge of hospitals and asylums, nurse the sick, and do prison work, especially in rural districts. The society has houses in the following countries: Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, England, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Palestine, and Algiers; in Central America, Mexico, in South America, Patagonia, Terra del Fuego, Ecuador, Brazil, Paraguay, The Argentine Republic, Bolivia, Uruguay, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, and Colombia. In the United States the Salesians have four churches: Sts. Peter and Paul and Corpus Christi in San Francisco, California; St. Josephs in Oakland, California; and the Transfiguration in New York City. Very Rev. Michael Borghino, Provincial for America, resides in San Francisco.
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