THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Cardinal Angel Fernandez Artime, SDB
BETWEEN ADMIRATION AND PAIN
The Rector Major gives a Good Nite to Salesians
at Haverstraw, N.Y., in 2015,
assisted by Fr. Tim Ploch
I cordially greet all Don Bosco’s
friends who come to Salesian media
with interest. Don Bosco founded and loved very much the Salesian Bulletin
so that he could make known what was happening in the Salesian houses around
the world and the good that was being done in them.
Today, I greet you for the last
time in this fashion. As of August 16, the day on which we commemorate Don
Bosco’s birth (August 16, 1815), my service as Rector Major of the Salesians of
Don Bosco ends. There’s always a reason to give thanks, always. Thank you!
Thank you—to God, above all, to the Congregation and Salesian Family, to so
many dear people, and to so many friends of Don Bosco’s charism, many of them
benefactors.
I also want my greeting to transmit
and connect with something I experienced recently. Therein lies the title of
this greeting: “Between Admiration and Pain!”, because I’m going to refer to
the joy that filled my heart in the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
specifically in the region of Goma, nowadays beaten by and immersed in warfare,
and the joy and testimony that I received yesterday. I’ll explain.
Three weeks ago I visited the
Palabek refugee camp in Uganda. Fortunately, thanks to Salesian work and other
help in these years, it has ceased to be a Sudanese refugee camp and has become
a place where tens of thousands of people have settled and found new life.
Crossing through Rwanda, I
arrived at the Congo border in the region of Goma. It’s a beautiful land,
beautiful and rich in nature—which is the very reason it’s coveted in such a
way that weapons “speak.” Sadly, due to armed conflicts, in that region there
are more than a million displaced people who’ve had to leave their homes and their
land. We Salesians also had to leave our presence of Sha-Shah because it
was occupied militarily.
Youngsters at the Salesian center in Goma
These million displaced persons
have come to Goma. In one of its neighborhoods, Ngangi, there’s the Salesian
presence named “Don Bosco.” My joy was immense when I saw the good that’s
done there. Hundreds of boys and girls have their home there. Several
dozen teenagers have been brought off the streets and are living in Don Bosco’s
house. Right there is the home for 82 babies—even newborns—and small
children who’ve lost their parents or have been “abandoned” because the adults
have no way to take care of their own children due to the war. There, in
that other Valdocco, one of the many Valdoccos in the world, a community of 3
nuns from El Salvador, together with a group of ladies, takes care of those
babies and little ones. All of them are supported by the Salesian house with the
help that comes, thanks to the generosity of benefactors and of
Providence, When I visited them, the sisters had dressed everyone for the
party, even the babies sleeping in their cribs. How can we not feel our
hearts full of joy in the face of this reality of goodness, despite the pain that
abandonment and war produce?
But my heart was stricken when
I met several hundred people who came to greet me during my visit. They’re
among the 32,000 displaced people who’ve left their homes and land because of
bombs and have come seeking refuge. They’ve found it on the playing fields
and grounds of the Don Bosco house in Gangi. They have nothing. They
live on a few square meters of land under tarps or cloth. This is their
reality. Together we look for ways to find food every day.
But, do
you know what impressed me the most? When I was with these hundreds of
people, who are mostly elderly or mothers with children (most men haven’t ben able
to come because of the armed conflict), they hadn’t lost their dignity,
their joy, or their smile. I was amazed even while my heart grieved in
the face of so much suffering and poverty, even though we’re doing our bit in
the name of the Lord.
I felt even greater joy
yesterday when I heard a life testimony that made me think of adolescents and
young people in our places, and of the very many parents who perhaps read my
messages and feel that their children are unmotivated, or bored with
life, or hardly have passion for anything. Among the guests these
days at Sacred Heart, the Salesian generalate in Rome, we had a visit from an
extraordinary pianist who has traveled the world giving concerts and who has
been part of great philharmonic orchestras. She’s a former student of the
Salesians who looked up to a certain Salesian, who has since passed away, as a
great reference point and role model. She wanted to offer us a concert in
the atrium of the Sacred Heart Church as a tribute to Mary Help of Christians,
whom she loves very much, in gratitude for her life up to now. I share
this because our dear friend, who was accompanied by her daughter, gave us a
wonderful concert, of exceptional quality—and she’s 81 years old! At
that age, perhaps an age far past when some of the elders in our families say
they no longer feel like planning or doing anything that involves effort, our
dear friend, who practices her piano exercises daily, moved her hands with
wonderful agility and was immersed in the beauty of the music and its execution. Time
stopped for her in that hour. In her simple way, good music, a generous
smile at the end of her performance, and the offering of some orchids to the
Virgin Help of Christians was all we needed on that wonderful morning. My
Salesian heart couldn’t help but think of those boys and girls and young people
who perhaps haven’t had or no longer have anything to motivate them in their
lives. She, our concert pianist friend, 81 years old, lives with a lot of
peace and, as she told me, continues to offer the gift that God gave her. Every
day she finds more reasons for it: another life lesson and another testimony
that doesn’t leave the heart indifferent.
That’s why, my friends, I thank
you, thank you from the bottom of my heart for all the good we’re doing
together. No matter how little it is, it helps to make our world a little
more human and more beautiful. May the good Lord bless you.
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