The Salesian Presence in the World’s Largest Islamic Country
(ANS – Jakarta, Indonesia – Sept. 4, 2024) – As the first stage of his 45th apostolic journey, the longest of his pontificate, Pope Francis chose Indonesia: a country where the Salesians have been present for 34 years and have various works and numerous apostolates at the service of young people – and, as Don Bosco wanted, especially the poorest and neediest.
Indonesia
is a Southeast Asian country located between the Indian and Pacific Oceans. It
is the largest archipelago state in the world, consisting of over 17,000
islands, many of which are uninhabited, while the largest islands – Java, Borneo,
Papua, Sumatra, and Sulawesi (Celebes) – are home to most of the population.
Indonesia
is an ethnically diverse country, with about 1,300 distinct native ethnic
groups. The government officially recognizes only 6 religious denominations:
Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism. Out of
a total of about 275,000,000 inhabitants, 86.7% of the population is Muslim
(which makes it the country with the largest number of Muslims in the world)
and 10.7% are Christians (7.6% Protestants, 3.12% Catholics). In absolute
terms, there are about 8.3 million Catholics spread across 39 dioceses.
The
Salesians arrived in Jakarta, the capital, in 1985. They lived in a small
rented house that was right in front of a mosque. Fr. José Carbonell Llopes was
the first director of that house. At the time, the Salesian presence in
Indonesia was not aimed at a specific work, but was mainly a basis for the
entry of Salesian missionaries into East Timor, which was still under the
control of the Indonesian government.
But
when the Salesians settled there, many requests for intervention began to
arrive. The nearby Strada Technical Institute run by the Jesuits asked the
Salesians to celebrate Mass once a month and to administer confession to
Catholic students. This was how Salesian vocations in the country began to
grow.
For
almost 15 years, the attention of the Salesian works and their development
remained focused on East Timor. It was not until 1999, when the Indonesian army
left East Timor, that the Salesians began to develop a Salesian pastoral work
in Indonesia and indeed, after having been for years a provincial delegation in
the Indonesian-East Timor Vice Province, in 2018 it was established as an
Autonomous Salesian Vice-Province of Indonesia (INA), dedicated to St.
Louis Versiglia.
Today
the INA Vice Province comprises 8 Salesian houses, scattered over 3 islands:
Blitar, Purwodadi, Surabaya, Tigaraksa, and 2 centers in Jakarta, all on the
island of Java; then the house of Sumba, on the island of the same name;
finally, Labuan Bajo, on the island of Flores, with a predominantly Catholic
population, opened in 2022 at the behest of the rector major, Fr. Angel Fernandez
Artime.
On
a personal level, INA today is animated by 59 Salesians and has sent several of
its men as missionaries to such countries as Ecuador, Brazil, Mongolia, the
Netherlands, Paraguay, and Papua New Guinea.
One
of the distinctive features of the Salesian mission in Indonesia is vocational formation.
The Salesian centers offer courses in English, computer science, motor vehicle
maintenance, mechanics, carpentry, welding, management of electrical systems,
and other technical courses aimed at helping young people find decent access to
the world of work. And these centers have also developed good collaboration
with local industries and companies.
The
Salesians are known for their work at the service of young people and for the
Preventive System they offer in schools, in vocational training centers, in
convents, and in all their activities. “Wherever we go, we meet many young
people, abandoned and poor,” Salesian Fr. Andre Delimarta told the Salesian
Bulletin at the time of his service (today he is a missionary in Malaysia).
“These young people are in great need of not only educational and spiritual
assistance, but also economic assistance. Many of them come from poor families,
from farmers whose livelihood depends on the random conditions of nature. For
example, Sumba students pay for school attendance with seeds or animals: goats,
pigs, or chickens.”
The
presence of the Salesians in Indonesia, which arose in a multi-religious
environment and as a Christian minority, is itself a full manifestation of the purpose
of their presence: the good of young people, whatever religion they profess.
The
future of the Salesians in Indonesia appears bright today: they are appreciated
by the people and the local Church, their work is often required not only for
technical formation, but also for youth ministry in parishes, to preach
retreats for young people, organize activities and seminars, not to mention the
many bishops who wait for the Salesians to go to help the young people of their
dioceses prepare for the future.
Nor
should we forget, among the encouraging factors, the low average age of
Indonesian Salesians, and the presence of the Salesian Family, which is slowly
growing and which in any case already sees Salesian Cooperators, Daughters of
Mary Help of Christians, hundreds of past pupils from different vocational training
centers, and some members of the Association of Mary Help of Christians.
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