THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Fr.
Angel Fernandez Artime
THE
SDB GOOD SAMARITAN—
A SAINT!
This is a very special
Easter for us. In the Salesian Family, in the Church of Argentina, especially
in the Viedma Diocese, in Italy, in the Reggio Emilia Diocese, and especially
in Boretto, his birthplace, there reigns great enthusiasm: Artemides Zatti will
be declared a saint.
Dear friends of Salesian media and of Don Bosco,
A luminous ray of hope
breaks through the dark thoughts of these days, occasioned by the pandemic and,
above all, by the many wars, in particular the one in Ukraine, for they bring
death, pain, and destruction. We have great news: the Universal Church has
officially recognized the sanctity of a Salesian “from the farthest reaches of
the world”: Artemides Zatti.
Our dear Saint Zatti is a most beautiful figure, whose sanctity was manifested in his daily life, in simplicity, in his humble and cheerful service, in particular, to the sick. He incarnated Don Bosco’s heart and the richness of the Salesian charism. He reflects the most human and loving aspect of the Salesian Family.
He had a gentle heart
that knew suffering. He knew very well what poverty, emigration, frailty, and
sickness were. He also knew doubt through the difficult decisions he had to
make, including the one to “remain with Don Bosco” and live his original
vocation as a Salesian brother to the full, as Don Bosco wanted: as a witness,
near the people, and dedicated to the service of the sick and the poor.
He was the administrator
of St. Joseph’s Hospital in Viedma, extending the circle of his patients to all
the ill of the city, especially the poorest, making his rounds on his
ever-present bicycle. He dealt with money but his life was of the poorest. He
even had to borrow a suit, hat, and suitcase to travel to Italy for the
canonization of Don Bosco.
He was loved and esteemed
by the sick and by the doctors who had very great confidence in him, abandoning
themselves to his influence, which sprang from his holiness: “When I am with
Zatti, I can do nothing else but believe in God,” exclaimed a doctor who was a
self-proclaimed atheist. To Zatti, every patient was Jesus himself. When his
superiors recommended that he not admit more than 30 patients, he was heard to
mumble: “And if the 31st patient would be Jesus himself?”
Artemides’s
witness as a true Good Samaritan every day of his life, merciful as the Father,
was a mission and a style that involved everyone who, in whatever way,
dedicated themselves to the hospital: doctors, nurses, assistants, and caregivers,
the sisters, and the volunteers who gave their precious time to those who were
suffering. He was attentive when listening to the patients, to their stories,
sufferings, and fears. He knew that even when it would be impossible to cure
the illness, one could always give care, console, and let the ill person feel
one’s closeness, which demonstrated concern for the one confronting illness.
In everything and always he was Salesian—a Salesian brother; i.e., not a priest. This lay Salesian vocation is part of the physiognomy that Don Bosco wanted to give to the Salesian Congregation. To the brothers Don Bosco said very clearly, “I need you.”
Pope
Francis himself experienced the efficacious intercession of Artemides Zatti
regarding the lay consecrated vocation when he was the provincial of the
Jesuits in Argentina. He wrote in a letter: “In 1976, while making the
canonical visitation to the missionary Jesuits in northern Argentina, I spent
several days in the archbishop’s house in Salta. At the end of one of the
meals, amid various discussions, Archbishop Perez spoke to me of Bro. Zatti. He
even gave me the opportunity to read a book on his life. The fact that he was a
coadjutor brother in every way struck me. At that moment, I felt that I had to
ask the Lord, through the intercession of Bro. Zatti, to send us coadjutor vocations. I made novenas and asked the
novices to make them also.” Then he continued: “From the time we began our
prayers to Bro. Zatti, 23 young brother Jesuits have persevered. I am convinced
that it was due to his intercession since, taking the number into
consideration, this is unusual for our order. I repeat that I am convinced of
his intercession because I know just how much we had prayed to him to be our
intercessor.”
This
is a splendid and authoritative encouragement also for us to ask for Artemides
Zatti to intercede for us to increase the number of good and holy vocations as
Salesian coadjutor brothers.
In
this year dedicated to St. Francis de Sales, defender and promoter of the
vocation of holiness for all people, Artemides Zatti’s witness reminds us of
what Vatican Council II states: “All the faithful, in every state and
condition, are called by the Lord, each in his own way, to a sanctity whose
perfection is the same as that of the Heavenly Father.” Francis de Sales, Don
Bosco, and Artemides make their daily lives an expression of the love of God,
which is received and returned. Our saints wanted to bring relationship with
God into their daily lives, and daily life into relationship with God. This is
the proposal of “next-door sanctity” or of “middle class sanctity,” about which
Pope Francis speaks with such great affection.
The
figure of Artemides Zatti is a stimulus and an inspiration for us to become
signs and bearers of the love of God for the young and the poor. As I wrote in
the strenna this year, “We, too, need to unfurl the ‘charism of the Visitation’
as our heart’s desire to announce, without waiting for others to come to us,
but by going into those places inhabited by so many and for whom a kind word,
an encounter, and a respectful gaze can open up their horizons to a better
life.” Artemides Zatti was a “man of the Visitation” who carried Jesus in his
heart, recognizing him and serving him joyfully and generously in his ill and
impoverished brothers and sisters.
St.
Artemides Zatti, intercede for us all!
THE DECISIVE
MIRACLE
The final miracle for Bro. Zatti’s canonization
was the miraculous cure of a man stricken with an “ischemic right cerebral
stroke complicated by a voluminous hemorrhagic lesion.” The event under
consideration took place in the Philippines in August 2016. A neurosurgical
examination suggested the need for an operation, which was made impossible due
to the financial situation of the family. Therefore, they decided to bring
their relative home so he might live out his final days with his family. The
dying man received the Anointing of the Sick and called his family and
relatives to his side so he could say his “goodbyes.” Instead, on August 24,
2016, against every expectation, the patient called his relatives to say that
he was fine and wanted to take a bath and begin to eat. He had been brought home to
die, and, after just a few days, he was cured!
This is thanks to the prayers of the man’s
brother—a Salesian brother—who had begun praying for a cure through the
intercession of Bro. Zatti during Vespers in his community on the very day in which
the patient had been brought to the hospital. But not only he—for this Salesian
brother invited his relatives to join together in prayer through the
intercession of Blessed Artemides Zatti.
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