(ANS – Caracas – March 2) – Giuseppe Berno was born on Feb. 14, 1911, in Riese (today
known as Riese Pio X, in honor of its most illustrious citizen, Giuseppe Sarto,
Pius X, who was Pope from 1903 to 1914). Mama Antonia Berno chose the bambino’s
name: “He will be called Bepi, like the Pope, because I want my son to
be a priest, like him.”
And in fact, Giuseppe became a Salesian priest and has
lived to celebrate 107 birthdays, by more than 3 years the oldest Salesian in
the Congregation.
The Fr. Giuseppe entered the Salesians
at Legnano and went on to Trent for his first years of formation and
preparation for the novitiate. He made his first religious profession in Este
on Sept. 1, 1929. In that same year, just 18 years old, he asked to leave as a
missionary for Venezuela, a country that would become his second homeland.
Bro. Giuseppe, who had become “José,” made his perpetual vows on September 11, 1932, and was ordained a priest on Oct. 30, 1938, feast of Christ the King, at La Vega (Caracas) by Apb. Luigi Centoz, the country's apostolic nuncio.
Bro. Giuseppe, who had become “José,” made his perpetual vows on September 11, 1932, and was ordained a priest on Oct. 30, 1938, feast of Christ the King, at La Vega (Caracas) by Apb. Luigi Centoz, the country's apostolic nuncio.
In 1961, already aged 50, Fr. José
was invited by the then-vicar apostolic of the Amazon and Upper Orinoco, Bp.
Segundo Garcia, to work as a missionary in those lands. He accepted immediately
and unconditionally. He spent the first 7 years in Puerto Ayacucho, the episcopal
see and capital of the Venezuelan Amazon. Then, together with Fr. Cocco and Fr.
Bonvecchio, he journeyed into the virgin forest of the Venezuelan Amazon and
stayed there uninterruptedly for 20 years!
Fr. José was called to travel into
the hostile forest, its overflowing rivers and the thousands and thousands of
natural channels of water. Everything was done to everyone, as Saint Paul said,
to try to attract some to the Gospel.
He became famous for his maps of the
Upper Orinoco, his study of native languages, and his interpretation of the
signs and sounds of those cultures during those 20 years. In 1987, at the age
of 76, he returned to Puerto Ayacucho, and from 1990 to 2009 was parochial
vicar. Nearing 100 years of age, he was transferred to Caracas in 2009.
His life is a testimony of fidelity
and generous dedication to the service of God and men for 88 years as a Salesian and a missionary
in Venezuela, and 79 years as a priest.
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