John
Bosco was born on the 16th of August 1815, in Becchi, a hamlet belonging
to the municipality of Castelnuovo d'Asti (today Castelnuovo Don Bosco).
He came from a family of poor farmers. He lost his father, Francesco,
at the age of two. His mother Margherita raised him with tenderness
and energy. She taught him to cultivate the soil and to see God behind
the beauty of the heavens, the abundance of the harvest, the rain
which showered the vines. Mamma Margherita, in the church, learned
to pray, and she taught her children to do the same. For John, to
pray meant to speak with God on his knees on the kitchen pavement,
to think of him while seated on the grass, gazing at the heavens.
From his mother, John learned to see God also in other faces, those
of the poor or those of the miserable ones who came knocking at the
door of the house during winter, and to whom Margherita gave hot soup,
mended shoes. As a boy, John lived on a farm with his family doing
the only thing they knew how, farming. Poverty and a lack of formal
education in the home did not stop the growth of John Bosco as a person.
His mother was for real, realizing the importance of God in life.
Getting
a formal education was a constant struggle for John. The family finances
being what they were, his brothers felt that he was wasting time,
energy, and money and that it would be better for all if he stopped
going to school and worked on the farm, earning money.
At the age of nine, Don Bosco had the first, great dream which marked
his entire life. He saw a multitude of very poor boys who play and
blaspheme. A Man of majestic appearance told him: With meekness and
charity you will conquer these your friends; and a Lady just as majestic
added: Make yourself humble, strong and robust. At the right time
you will understand everything.
The years which followed were given direction by that dream. Son and
mother saw in it the indication of a way of life. John tried immediately
to do good for boys. When the visiting performers trumpet announced
a local feast in the nearby hills, John went and sat in the front
row to watch them. He studied the jugglers, tricks and the acrobats
secrets. One Sunday evening, John gave his first performance in front
of the kids from the neighbouring houses. He performed balancing miracles
with pots and pans on the tip of his nose. Then he jumped up on a
rope strung between two trees, and walked on it applauded by the young
spectators. Before the grandiose conclusion, he repeated for them
the sermon he heard at the morning Mass, and invited all to pray.
The games and the Word of God began transforming his little friends,
who willingly prayed in his company.
Little John understood that to do good for so many boys he needed
to study and become a priest. But his brother Anthony, already 18
and an unlettered peasant, did not want to hear of this... He threw
away his books and belted him.
On a cold morning of February 1827, John left his home and went to
look for work as a farm-servant. He was only 12 but life at home was
unbearable on account of the continuous quarrels with Anthony. He
worked on the Moglia farm, near Moncucco, during three years. He led
the cattle to pasture, milked the cows, put fresh hay in the manger,
plowed the fields with the oxen. During the long nights of winter
time and during summer, sitting under the trees while the cows stripped
their leaves, he went back to his books and studies.
Anthony married three years later. John returned home and resumed
his schooling, first at Castelnuovo and then at Chieri. To provide
for his needs he learnt different trades: tailor, blacksmith, barman,
and he even coached students after classes.
He was intelligent and brilliant, and the best students of the school
flocked around him. He founded what was known as the Happy Club.
At 20 years of age, John Bosco took the most important decision of
his life: he entered the Seminary. There followed six years of intense
studies after which he was ordained priest.
On June 5, 1841, the archbishop of Turin ordained John Bosco a priest.
Now Don Bosco (in Italy the family name of the priest is preceded
by Don) was finally able to dedicate himself full time to the abandoned
boys he had seen in his dreams. He went to look for them in the streets
of Turin. On those first Sundays - says young Michael Rua, one of
the first boys he met in those first months, Don Bosco went through
the city to become aware of the moral conditions of the young. He
was shocked. The outskirts of the city were zones of turmoil and revolution,
places of desolation. Unemployed, sad and ready to do anything adolescents
caused problems on the streets. Don Bosco could see them betting on
street corners, their faces hard and determined, as if to get their
way at any cost. Near the city public market (Turin had a population
of 117.000 inhabitants at that time) he discovered a real market of
young workers. The part near Porta Palazzo, he wrote years later swarmed
with peddlers, shoe polishers, stable-boys, vendors of any kind, errand
boys: all poor people who barely eked out a living day after day.
These boys who roamed the streets of Turin were the wicked effect
of an event that was throwing the world into confusion: the industrial
revolution. This started in England but it soon crossed the English
Channel and made its way to the South. It would bring a sense of well-being
unheard of in previous centuries, but it would be at a very high human
cost: the labour question and the gathering of great number of families
below the poverty line in the slums of the cities, coming in from
the countryside in search of a better life.
But
Don Bosco met the most dramatic situation when he entered the prisons.
he wrote: "To see so many boys, from 12 to 18 years of age, all
healthy, strong, intelligent, insect bitten, lacking spiritual and
material food, was something that horrified me. In the face of such
a situation he made his decision: I must by any available means prevent
boys ending up here." There were 16 parishes in Turin. The parish
priests were aware of the problem of the young but they were expecting
them to go to the sacristies and to the Churches for the required
catechism classes. They did not realize that because of population
growth and migration to the city this way of doing things was inefficient.
It was necessary to try new ways, to invent new schemes, to try another
form of apostolate, meeting the boys in shops, offices, market places.
Many young priests tried this. Don Bosco met the first boy on December
8, 1841. He took care of him. Three days later there were nine, three
months later twenty five and in summer eighty. They were pavers, stone-cutters,
masons, plasterers who came from far away places, he recalled in his
brief Memoirs.
Thus was born the youth centre (which he called oratorio). This was
not simply a charitable institution, and its activities were not limited
to Sundays. For Don Bosco the oratorio became his permanent occupation
and he looked for jobs for the ones who were unemployed. He tried
to obtain a fairer treatment for those who had jobs, he taught those
willing to study after their days work.
But some of his boys did not have sleeping quarters and slept under
bridges or in bleak public dormitories. Twice he tried to provide
lodgings in his house. The first time they stole the blankets; the
second they even emptied the hay-loft. After the youngster from Valsesia,
another six boys arrived that same year. In the first months money
became a dramatic problem for Don Bosco. It would remain a problem
throughout his life. His first benefactor was not a countess but his
mother. Margaret (Mamma Margherita), a 59 year old poor peasant, had
left her house at Becchi to become mother to these poor boys. To be
able to put something on the table, for them to eat, she sold her
wedding ring, her earrings and her necklace, things which she had
kept jealously until then. The boys sheltered by Don Bosco numbered
36 in 1852, 115 in 1854, 470 in 1860 and 600 in 1861, 800 being the
maximum some time later.
Some of these boys decided to do what Don Bosco was doing, that is,
to spend their lives in the service of abandoned boys. And this was
the origin of the Salesian Congregation. Among the first members we
find Michael Rua, John Cagliero (who later became a Cardinal), John
Baptist Francesia.
In the archives of the Salesian Congregation some extraordinary documents,
are to be found, such as: a contract of apprenticeship on ordinary
paper, dated November 1851; another one on stamped paper costing 40
cents, dated February 8, 1852; there are others with later dates.
These are among the first contracts of apprenticeship to be found
in Turin. All of them are signed by the employer, the apprentice and
Don Bosco.
In those contracts Don Bosco touched on many sore spots. Some employers
made servants and scullery-boys of the apprentices. Don Bosco obliged
them to employ them only in their acknowledged trade. Employers used
to beat the boys. Don Bosco required of them that corrections be made
only through words. He cared for their health, he demanded that they
be given rest on feast days, that they be given their annual holidays.
But in spite of all the efforts and contracts, the situation of the
apprentices of the time remained very difficult.
n a short time, other priests joined him in his work and by 1852 they
were caring for over 600 boys. John dealt with them by "using
a minimum of restraint and discipline, lots of love, keeping careful
watch over their development and encouraging them personally and through
religion."
In autumn 1853 Don Bosco came to a decision. He begun shoemaking and
tailoring shops in the Oratory at Valdocco. The shoemaking shop was
located in a very narrow place near the bell-tower of the first church
he had just finished building. There Don Bosco sat at a cobblers bench
and in front of four little boys he pounded away at a leather sole.
Then he taught them how to manage an awl and pack-thread.
John's preaching and writing, as well as the charitable support of
wealthy and powerful patrons allowed for expansion of his work. The
need for dependable assistants led to the founding of the society
of St. Francis de Sales in 1859, and it continues to work today.
In the following years, Don Bosco, working almost to exhaustion, accomplished
many imposing works. Besides the Salesians, he founded the Daughters
of Mary Help of Christians and the Salesian Cooperators. He built
the Sanctuary of Mary Help of Christians at Valdocco and founded 59
Salesian houses in six nations. He started the Salesian Missions in
Latin America sending there Salesian priests, brothers and sisters.
He published a series of popular books for ordinary Christians and
for boys. He invented a System of Education founded on three values:
Reason, Religion and Loving kindness. Very soon people saw in it an
ideal system to educate the young. When somebody would tell Don Bosco
the list of the works he performed, he would interrupt the person
and immediately say: I have done nothing by myself. It is the Virgin
Mary who has done everything. She had traced out his road in the famous
dream he had when he was nine.
Don Bosco died on January 31, 1888, at dawn. To the Salesians who
were keeping vigil around his bed he said in a whisper these last
words: "Love each other as brothers. Do good to all and evil
to none... Tell my boys that I wait for them all in Paradise. "