St. Dominic Savio
Transcription
St. Dominic Savio
Vol. 12, No. 45 SALESIANS OF DON BOSCO, PROVINCE OF ST. PHILIP THE APOSTLE May 7, 2015 Provincial’s Calendar May 7-8 9 10-12 13-15 16-17 18-20 21-22 23 Veronica Bryant Birthday Celebrations ANS 9 14 16 20 20 21 23 St. Dominic Savio One of the benefits of the current age is that we are blessed with a richer historical understanding of Don Bosco, his times, and life at the Oratory in Valdocco. For us, this deeper and broader familiarity with the historical development of Don Bosco’s charism, mission, and movement offers a more focused perspective on the priorities, inner motivations, life style, and operational processes that are the foundational elements in the way we are Message from called as disciples of Christ in Don Bosco’s spirit. Fr. Provincial It is quite instructive to review the materials preserved in our historical writings and in modern scholarship. It is instructive for us to reflect on both the Life of St. Dominic Savio by St. John Bosco and the more recent writings of Fr. Arthur Lenti or Fr. Teresio Bosco. Certainly the teachings of Fr. Pascual Chavez, Rector Major emeritus, are helpful in this regard. A history as rich as that of St. Dominic Savio could lead us to a variety of understandings on the nature of his holiness, his apostolic ministry, his sacramental piety, his moral convictions, his openness to the spiritual direction given him by St. John Bosco, and his role as a model of holiness for young people of all times. Undoubtedly, we all have our own perspective on the profound meaning that St. Dominic Savio brings to the way we live as disciples of Christ in the spirit of Don Bosco. My understanding of St. Dominic Savio is tightly intertwined with the basic movements within the Church and the Salesian Congregation that are carrying us Office days and short visits to communities Liturgy with Salesian young people at Great Adventure, Jackson, N.J. Visit with the novices in St. Joseph Novitiate, Rosemead, Calif. Visit Salesian community in Surrey, B.C. Visit Salesian community in Edmonton, Alta. Provincial council meeting, New Rochelle, N.Y. Office days and short visits Marian Day for the Salesian Family, Marian Shrine, Stony Point, N.Y. May Fr. James McKenna Fr. Joseph Vien Fr. Abraham Feliciano Bro. Benito Guerrero (SUO) Bro. Marcel Gauthier Bro. Stephen Eguino Fr. Joseph Hannon Pray for the Sick Bro. Jerry Harasym Fr. Armand Quinto Elizabeth Brennan, Fr. Tom Brennan’s mother Alviera Nazzaro, Fr. John Nazzaro’s mother Josephine Reynolds, Fr. Anthony D’Angelo’s sister Remember the Deceased Sister Antoinette Cabrera, FMA PHOTO: The Salesian Family gathered in Washington, D.C., to celebrate the bicentennial of the birth of St. John Bosco. Story on page 5. May 7, 2015 E-Service forward in the current day. It is both instructive and inspiring to reflect on the life and ministry of St. Dominic Savio in the light of these basic principles that have characterized our vocational journey over the last five years. From his earliest years, St. Dominic Savio based his life around a personal intimacy with Jesus and his mother, Mary. When receiving the Eucharist for the first time, Dominic took as his motto for life: “My friends will be Jesus and Mary.” This basic principle led Dominic to live a deeply personal relationship with God and Mary, the mother of God. Dominic lived in intimate union with God throughout his life. Times of prayer and sacraments were not moments of God breaking into his daily life. Rather, they were more explicit expressions of the intimacy that Dominic was living throughout the day. St. Dominic Savio lived his baptismal promises in a very direct and practical manner. He lived as a missionary disciple of Christ who was called to proclaim the Gospel to everyone he met: fellow students, friends in the Immaculate Conception Sodality, adults in the Oratory, teachers, and even St. John Bosco. St. Dominic Savio was a missionary evangelizer in the way he lived (an example of joyful Christian living to his fellow students) and in the way that he assisted Don Bosco in carrying on Christ’s mission in the Oratory (forming the members of the Immaculate Conception Sodality to become missionary disciples in the spirit of Don Bosco). Through their membership in the Immaculate Conception Sodality, the older students in Don Bosco’s Oratory were guided in a formation program that deepened their relationship with Jesus and Mary, called them to service to their fellow students, and nourished a sense of fraternity within that small group. When walking together with his fellow students to and from their academic courses, St. Dominic Savio drew his companions into a small Christian community that was characterized by spiritual accompaniment. St. Dominic Savio not only walked with his companions on the way to 2 school. He led these young men along a journey of faith that drew them to recognize the gifts that God had given them. Together, they discerned how those gifts could lead to a life-long commitment to faith, hope, and charity as disciples of Christ. For us, it is important to note that in 1859, when Don Bosco invited young men from the Oratory to be founding members of his new religious congregation, at least 10 out of the 15 were members of the Immaculate Conception Society who had been formed as followers of Christ by the spiritual animator of that sodality, St. Dominic Savio. Fr. Pascual Chavez noted on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the founding of the Salesian Congregation that when comparing the names of the Immaculate Conception Sodality members with the founding group of our congregation we are led to the conviction that “the ‘Sodality’ had been the ‘proving ground’ for the Congregation that Don Bosco was preparing to found. It was the small field in which the first seeks of the Salesian harvest began to sprout” (AGC #404, p. 39). St. Dominic Savio is certainly the patron saint of the young. However, he is also a model for all of us who are called to serve the young in the spirit of Don Bosco: intimate with the Lord and Mary, his mother; missionary disciples in Christ; spiritual accompaniment along the path of life. If we want our province and the Salesian Congregation to grow, we can do no better than to look to the example of St. Dominic Savio for an indication to a hopeful way to the future of Don Bosco’s mission and family in the Eastern U.S. and Canada. Thomas A. Dunne, SDB Provincial Published weekly by the Salesians of Don Bosco for the territory of Canada and the Eastern U.S.A. Copyright © 2015 Salesian Society, Inc. - Province of St. Philip the Apostle 148 E. Main Street, PO Box 639, New Rochelle, NY 10802-0639 USA Very Fr. Thomas Dunne, SDB, Provincial Editor: Fr. Michael Mendl, SDB - [email protected] Publisher: Fr. Dennis Donovan, SDB When reading on a computer, iPad or other device, click on photos or links to be transferred to other media. SALESIANS OF DON BOSCO May 7, 2015 E-Service 3 PROVINCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS The Salesians of Don Bosco in the St. Philip the Apostle Province and the Archdiocese of Washington jointly announce the appointment of Fr. Michael Conway, S.D.B., as the President of Don Bosco Cristo Rey High School and Corporate Work Study Program in Takoma Park, Maryland. Fr. Conway will succeed Fr. Steven Shafran, S.D.B., in this leadership position. Fr. Conway’s appointment as President will begin on July 1, 2015. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Most Reverend Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, has definitively received Fr. Omar Oswaldo Guillen into the presbyterate of the archdiocese of Chicago by a decree of incardination issued on May 5, 2015, in accordance with canon 267 §1 of the Code of Canon Law. With gratitude for his contributions to our province for ten years, we wish Fr. Guillen fruitful ministry as a diocesan priest. We assure him of our continued prayers. JERUSALEM — Bros. Paul Chu (top photo) and Dieunel Victor (lower) were instituted as acolytes on the feast of St. Dominic Savio, May 6, with ten other Salesian seminarians in Jerusalem. Fr. Munir El Rai, provincial of the Middle East, presided. NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. — New from Salesian Missions! Fr. Mark Hyde shares powerful personal accounts from young men helped by one of the missions in Kenya: Bosco Boys Nairobi. May 7, 2015 E-Service TORONTO — Twenty-nine pilgrims, led by Fr. Mike Pace, enriched their spiritual and cultural life by visiting Marian shrines in Europe in April. The pilgrimage ended in Turin where, in addition to the Basilica of Mary Help of Christians and the Sanctuary of the Consolata, the participants viewed the Holy Shroud recently put on display. Submitted by Fr. Romeo Trottier, SDB. ORANGE, N.J. — On the Memorial of St. Joseph the Worker, Fr. Tom Dunne presided at Mass with the initial formation community of Don Bosco Residence. During the liturgy, Fr. Tom instituted Bro. Wilgintz Polynice in the ministry of acolyte. Photo sent by Fr. Domminic Tran, SDB. YAPACANI, BOLIVIA — Salesian Lay Missioners Connor Bergeron, left, and Adam Pizzaia, right, have been serving at the Salesian mission in Yapacani. When Fr. Angel Fernandez, center, visited nearby Santa Cruz last month, they took advantage of the chance to go to the huge youth rally there and managed to get their photo taken with Don Bosco’s successor. They were thrilled, to say the least! See http://adampizzaia.blogspot.com/2015/04/a-trip-tosanta-cruz.html for more details. Photo from Adam Pizzaia’s blog. 4 May 7, 2015 E-Service 5 Salesian Family celebrates Don Bosco's bicentennial in D.C. WASHINGTON, D.C. — Hundreds of members of the Salesian Family gathered to celebrate the 200th birthday of St. John Bosco on Sunday, May 3, at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington. They included Salesians, Salesian Sisters, the D.C. Salesian Cooperator community, Don Bosco Cristo Rey students, faculty, staff, and families, and many more who love the founder of the Salesian Family and his spirituality. Traveling from Honduras, Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga was the main celebrant and homilist. Three students from DBCR served the Mass. Photos by Veronica Bryant. May 7, 2015 E-Service 6 Cooperator centers enjoy impressive growth The Association of Salesian Cooperators WASHINGTON, D.C. — Seven new members were inducted into a newly established Cooperator center at Don Bosco Cristo Rey High School on May 2. From left to right, provincial councilors James and Paula Dolan and Ana Alvarado were present for the Mass of induction. Fr. Steve Shafran, director and president of Don Bosco Cristo Rey, presided. CHAMPAIGN, ILL — Fr. Joseph Santa Bibiana and Sr. Loretta DeDomenicis have been preparing candidates for two years to form a new center of Salesian Cooperators in Champaign. Fourteen candidates, shown above, will be inducted on May 13 at Holy Cross Church. Photo by Sr. Loretta DeDomenicis, FMA. SAN SALVADOR — Members of the Cooperator provincial councils from Canada and the U.S.A. will gather in San Salvador, El Salvador, for the second annual regional congress. The congress will be the setting for the election of new leadership for the region. May 7, 2015 E-Service Sr. Antoinette Cabrera, FMA Used her skills as a seamstress to assist the those she served 7 Cardinal Rodriguez visits immigration detention center in Texas by the Salesian Sisters Sr. Antoinette Cabrera died on May 6 at Chilton Medical Center in Pompton Plains, N.J. Sr. Antoinette was born on May 29, 1933, at Puebla, Mexico, and was a Salesian sister for 61 years. She taught in FMA schools in Texas, Florida, New York, Massachusetts, and New Jersey, including 30 years at Mary Help of Christians Academy in North Haledon. Sr. Antoinette’s long life was filled with concern for the spiritual and intellectual growth of her pupils. Students, parents, and faculty loved and respected her. She gave of herself generously to the ministries entrusted to her notwithstanding her poor health. Sr. Antoinette was also an excellent seamstress and used her skills to prepare beautiful costumes for magnificent theatrical performances and to assist the girls in preparing for fashion shows, proms, and formal occasions. She will be remembered as a caring, prayerful and loving person, always acting with great interest in each student and with an ardent desire that they make choices of good character. The wake will take place on: Friday, May 8, from 2:00-8:00 p.m. at St. Joseph Provincial Center, 655 Belmont Avenue, Haledon, N.J. Saturday, May 9, from 9:00-11:30 a.m. at Mary Help of Christians Academy, 659 Belmont Avenue, North Haledon, N.J. The Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Saturday, May 9, at 11:30 a.m. at Mary Help of Christians Academy, followed by interment and repast in the high school cafeteria. SAN ANTONIO (ANS) – Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, SDB, archbishop of Tegucigalpa, met with hundreds of Mexican and Central American immigrants held in a detention center in Texas. According to Fides, the Honduran prelate was accompanied by Archbishop Gustavo Garcia Siller of San Antonio. Following his visit, Cardinal Rodriguez held a press conference in which he described the situations that push people to make the dangerous trek across the border. In the region, in fact, “there are situations of violence and poverty that have led to a mass exodus of these people,” explained the cardinal, who is also president of Caritas International. He also told the press that his visit will also serve to report the situation to the Holy Father. Cardinal Rodriguez, who is also a member of the council of cardinals that advises Pope Francis, spoke with minors who are held in the detention center. Last year, the U.S. experienced a sharp increase in children and teenagers traveling to the border unaccompanied by adults. E-Service May 7, 2015 8 Madonna among the cherry trees M. MENDL STONY POINT, N.Y. — Confessors are needed for the sacrament of Reconciliation at the Marian Shrine on May 23. Times are 11:00 a.m. till noon, for the pilgrimage day in honor of Mary Help of Christians; at 7:15 p.m. till 8:15, for the gathering of the Salesian Youth Movement. Priests who can help, please contact Tanya Acosta at [email protected] or Fr. Tim Zak at [email protected]. http://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/music-frees-el-salvadors-children-countrys-violence-n352901 WASHINGTON, D.C. — Fr. Pepe Morataya, SDB brought the Don Bosco Youth Symphony and Chorus from San Salvador to perform for packed audiences at the Kennedy Center and the World Bank in Washington, D.C. May 7, 2015 E-Service 9 Salesian Family on the scene in Nepal After the earthquake the Salesian Family attends to otherwise abandoned victims condensed from ANS reports KATMANDU (ANS) – In Nepal the commitment of the Salesian Family toward the population affected by the earthquake continues through the provision of various forms of relief. The whole Salesian Family around the world has responded to another natural disaster with promptness and generosity through the missions offices in Turin, Bonn, Madrid, New Delhi and New Rochelle, as well as various foundations and Salesian NGOs of Austria, Ireland, the United Kingdom, Hong Kong, Korea, Italy, Germany, Australia. All have participated in the first shipments of aid and will continue for as long as necessary. The Don Bosco Relief Team is in full swing in ten villages spread over 4 of the 29 districts of Nepal affected by the April 25 earthquake. During the first six days of the emergency, the DBRT distributed five-day supplies of food and tarps to more than 2,350 families. The DBRT is addressing post-earthquake problems by providing shelter and food for the injured and the homeless. In the four districts where the Salesian works are located, or close to them, well over 2,000 people were killed and hundreds of houses flattened (details: http:// www.infoans.org/1.asp?sez=1&doc=12570&Lingua=2). The efforts of the DBRT are much appreciated by the villagers, many of whom have so far received no aid from any quarters other than from Don Bosco. During the DBRT’s daily evaluation and planning, many of members have commented on the serenity of the victims in spite of the tragedy and their willingness to share what little they have with others. From dawn until late at night, braving all odds, Salesian sisters have managed to reach several remote villages with material assistance. These are areas not yet reached by official aid agencies, and the population is even now without food. The already poverty-stricken families have now lost the little they had in the earthquake. The sisters’ relief work thus alleviates their sufferings and helps them not to feel abandoned. ANS The girls of the sisters’ hostel in Katmandu are trying to make contact with their families for news, for more information on their present needs, and also hoping being able to reunite with their loved ones as soon as possible. In the next few days, they will undertake more travel to continue the distribution of relief materials. To give an idea of the devastation of the earthquake and the relief supplies offered by the Salesian Family in these days of emergency need, the Salesian Family has released a short clip on Facebook. May 7, 2015 E-Service 10 “A week spent in a Tata Sumo: my experience of the earthquake and its aftermath” KATMANDU (ANS) – Fr. Savio Rai, SDB, a member of the Don Bosco Salesian community in Katmandu, gives a first-person narration of his experience of the earthquake that struck Katmandu on April 25, and its aftermath: “I spent one week in a Tata Sumo Jeep—during the day visiting the villages with relief materials, and during the night sleeping in it as I was afraid to sleep in my room due to mortal fear of another quake.” He writes from Katmandu: Life brings such twists and turns into its rhythm that one has to be always ready for the unexpected. Whoever knew that the 7.9 earthquake would bring such disaster and turn the lives of millions of people upside down! On April 25, Saturday (in Nepal Saturday is the weekend holiday, and Sunday is a working day), after Holy Mass I came back to the house and was trying to prepare myself for the next day’s leadership animation program for the newly elected monitors, captains, and house leaders. Meanwhile Leonard (the plumber) came along with another man to meet me. I do not know why I was feeling very uncomfortable around 11:40 a.m. and wanted to send them away. . . . I told them that we shall go down and have look at Leonard’s new bike. So we hurried down from the top floor to the school gate. No sooner had we reached the gate than the big quake was felt. Initially I thought it was a huge truck passing by, but our guard shouted, “Father! Earthquake!” I just shouted back, “Run,” and I dashed toward the paddy field. But to our surprise, the water tank that was latched with the iron bar collapsed, and water gushed down. At one moment I thought, My God I am going to drown since I do not know how to swim! For a moment I thought I was inside the water tank, which was almost 20 feet deep. Anyway, we ran like drunkards and managed to get hold of the wall, but could not jump over it. . . . The shaking was such that I was thrown down to the field, landing on my knees. I was totally feeling giddy, and I saw the buildings on the hills collapsing like a pack of cards. Thereafter fear crept into me so badly that my head kept paining and spinning. Even the slightest shake of the door or the window gave me a fright. I did not want to ANS enter the house again after seeing the building shake. So I decided to make the Sumo my temporary home. This Jeep became by bedroom, office, parlor, cyber-cafe, recreation room, and all-in-all. Most of the time I did the updates on the school Facebook or wrote reports to the province sitting in the jeep. It was uncomfortable to sleep in it, but I got used to it once I knew there was nowhere else to go. . . . Only after I sat and typed this story, I bade adieu to the cozy Jeep and returned to my room. . . . It was a week with lots of fear, and tension from people, nature, and other elements. It was a week where I had to be cool and calm though tensed within myself as I had to lead the faithful in liturgy, to interact with the people, to say no to the people who just wanted to take things away. But within these moments my Holy Mass, Rosary, and prayers kept me going. I was a happy to be with the people to help them in whatever way I could and also was happy to organize some relief work with my generous staff, alumni, and supportive staff under the guidance of Fr. Jijo John, the coordinator of Nepal Don Bosco Society. It was a moment of fear, but at the same time a moment to be near to the people. It gave joy and peace, and this will be cherished for a long time to come. A week in the Jeep, a week as a Gyspy, a week filled with terror and fear, and above all a week close to the people in need.
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