by Fr. Morand Wirth, SDB
The Salesian Family
ordinarily celebrates May 6 as the feastday of St. Dominic
Savio, adolescent. Since May 6 falls on Sunday this year, the feastday’s
omitted.
Each year I try
to present something a little different for the province newsletter on our
Salesian saints and blesseds. Usually that means copying and editing something
published elsewhere. This post is an example of that.
The
steady energy of this saintly young lad was obvious. At a tender age he
willingly undertook difficult tasks like assisting at Mass early in the
mornings in the middle of the winter, long hikes to and from school, or silent
acceptance of undeserved reproach. At Valdocco his strength of mind found many
opportunities for expression. Without faltering he endured “the rather hard
life at the Oratory, not only the scarcity of food but also the hardships of a
winter without heat.” In spite of his own great courtesy and amiability, he
sometimes had to put up with “insolence and threats and even insults” from his
companions. He would blush deeply yet remain calm and forgive quickly. His
courage in suffering, so evident during his last illness, made him, according
to Don Bosco, “a model of sanctity.”
This
strength of character was not just passive. It manifested itself in the exact
performance of all his duties and, when necessary, in actions which greatly
impressed all who witnessed and recorded them. We have already mentioned the
brave intervention when he stopped a duel with stones between two students, at
the risk of getting hurt himself, or his remark to a soldier who refused to
kneel when the Blessed Sacrament was passing by, an act that could have been
considered very provocative, or when he reproached Don Bosco himself with
regard to a misdeed that ought to have been punished.
Dominic
had enormous will power. Don Bosco says that he had found in him “a great human
strength supported by grace.” This strength of will was directed toward a great
ideal: “to become a saint,” a strong expression which well illustrates his
attitude.
Having
learned from Don Bosco that penance was necessary for a boy who wanted “to
preserve his innocence,” he voluntarily practiced all kinds of mortifications
with regard to food, rest, conversation, and strict control over his senses to
the point of “suffering bad headaches.” Eventually his director had to
intervene in order to moderate this thirst for penance and to help him regain
his usual cheerfulness that he had been about to lose. Dominic valued his
advice highly.
This
devotee of the crucified Christ left behind him a memory of a smiling lad, kind
and serene, with an unalterable purpose behind his smile.
From Don Bosco and the
Salesians, trans. David de Burgh, SDB
(New Rochelle: Don Bosco Publications, 1982), pp. 65-66.
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