Monday, November 11, 2024

Province CYMs Meet

Meeting of Province CYMs


16 coordinators of youth ministry (CYMs) and 3 province YM staff gathered at the Sacred Heart Center in Newton, N.J., from October 23 to 25, for their annual meeting. The event began with a day of reflection led by Fr. Tom Dunne on the theme of hope. The 2d day was dedicated to training, starting with a presentation by Adam Rudin on fostering service-oriented hearts to encourage missionary discipleship and vocational discernment. The day concluded with presentations by CYMs on youth ministry in their local settings. The final day involved discussions on various pastoral needs, including debates and a presentation by Fr. Franco Pinto, vice provincial, on the Salesian mission.

150th Anniversary of Salesian Missionary Activity

Give Thanks, Rethink, Relaunch

Toward the 150th anniversary of the 1st Salesian missionary expedition


(ANS – Rome – November 11, 2024)
 – On November 11 we remember 1875, so many years ago, when the first missionary expedition set out!  The commemoration of this important event opens the celebrations for the 150th anniversary in 2025. The slogan chosen for the occasion helps us enter this anniversary: Give thanks, Rethink, Relaunch.

Give Thanks: We give thanks to God for the gift of missionary vocation which enables the sons of Don Bosco today to reach out to poor and abandoned youths in 137 countries.

Rethink: This is an opportune occasion to rethink and develop a renewed vision on the Salesian missions in the light of new challenges and new perspectives which lead to new missiological reflections.

Relaunch: We have not only a glorious history to remember and be grateful for, but also a great history still to be accomplished! We look to the future with missionary zeal and enthusiasm so that we may reach out to even more poor and abandoned youths.

Celebrations for 150th anniversary will be mainly at the province level: each province is invited to undertake a concrete missionary initiative internally or to strengthen existing initiatives significantly so that they become permanent signs of this celebration.

At the congregational level, the new Rector Major will preside over the missionary send-off on November 11, 2025, in the basilica of Mary Help of Christians in Valdocco. It is a celebration with which the Congregation renews its missionary commitment in front of Mary Help of Christians.

“All the celebrations at different levels have a single goal,” explains Fr. Alfred Maravilla, general councilor for missions, “to keep the missionary spirit and enthusiasm alive in the Congregation, in order to promote greater missionary zeal and generosity among the Salesians and the entire educational-pastoral community. It’s the missionary spirit of the Salesians that revitalizes the Congregation, keeping it vibrant and attractive to new vocations,” he pointed out.

The logo that sums up the theme was produced by Martina Monceková from the Czech Republic. It shows the world globe washed by waves, which symbolize both courage and new challenges, as well as dynamism and recklessness. It’s a growing dynamic which tends more and more toward new missionary horizons. Three red figures refer to the Salesian logo and to the fire of a renewed missionary enthusiasm. In the middle is a ship, a symbol of the first missionary expedition (1875). The picture shows us that the missionary spirit is not an individual fact, but a charismatic element left by Don Bosco to the Congregation and the entire Salesian Family. The shape of the wheel means unity and mutual connection. The logo is complemented by the three key words and the highlighted anniversary number “150.”

The logo may be used, but only in its official version without any alterations. To receive the logo in different languages and formats write to us at: cagliero11@sdb.org 

Sunday, November 10, 2024

Homily for 32d Sunday of Ordinary Time

Homily for the
32d Sunday of Ordinary Time

Nov. 10, 2024
Mark 12: 38-44
Villa Maria, Bronx [with some adapting]
St. Francis Xavier, Bronx
Our Lady of the Assumption, Bronx

“From her poverty, she has contributed all she had, her whole livelihood” (Mark 12: 44).

Last Sunday, Jesus taught us the 2 great commandments, love of God and of neighbor (Mark 12:38-34).  The poor widow who put her 2 little bronze coins—the origin of our saying to “put in your 2-cents worth”—into the temple treasury showed her love for God. 


These funds were for the upkeep of God’s temple.  She put in “her whole livelihood,” meaning that she may have gone without food that day, what little she had to live on—like the poor widow of Zarephath, who was generous with the prophet Elijah and so earned God’s protection (1 Kgs 17:10-16).  Both widows have put all their trust in God; their lives are in his hands.

The immediate gospel passage contrasts the widow’s sacrifice with the donations of the rich.  The rich may be generous—which is praiseworthy—but it doesn’t really cost them; they won’t be hungry on that account.

The 1st part of our gospel today offers a further contrast with the poor widow.  We can suppose that no one but Jesus took any notice of her, while the rich—it’s implied—made a show of their generosity.  That showiness is pointed to in that 1st part of the text, the showiness of the scribes who parade their religiosity, their learning, and their dignity (12:38-40) and who sometimes take advantage of the vulnerable.

The scribes were men of learning, especially regarding Torah and Jewish tradition.  In a largely illiterate society, they also served as record keepers.  It’s understandable that people would defer to them.  Tho the Gospels often present them as opponents of Jesus, they weren’t all opposed.  E.g., just last week Jesus praised the scribe who asked him about the greatest commandment and “answered with understanding” (12:34).

But Jesus has no patience for those who seek only their own advantage, like Pope Francis having no patience with clerical careerists, whose thoughts aren’t to serve the people of God but to rise in the church ranks.  We recall the gospel of 3 Sundays back, when James and John asked Jesus to give them the most advantageous positions in his kingdom, and the other 10 apostles were “indignant” with them.  Jesus chewed them all out:  lording it over others is how the pagans act, “but it shall not be so among you.  Rather, whoever wishes to be great among you will be your servant.”  His followers must be like him:  “The Son of Man didn’t come to be served but to serve and to give his life as a ransom for many” (10:35-45).

by James Tissot

In fact, giving her life is what the poor widow has done with her 2 cents:  “she contributed her whole livelihood.”  Beyond the trust she’s placed in God, the text can also mean that “she has given her very life” to God, observes Salesian scripture scholar Fr. Frank Moloney.  He expands on that:  Jesus’ followers were called away from their livelihoods as fishermen, tax collectors, and other occupations not revealed in the Gospels, and from their human associations, and were challenged to give themselves even “unto death for the sake of Jesus and the gospel.”[1]  Jesus told James and John they’d drink the same cup that he’d drink and be baptized with the same baptism—that is, the cup of suffering and death for the sake of the Gospel (10:39).  Now, Fr. Moloney says, “the widow gives her whole life and becomes a model for the disciples of Jesus,”[2] who in the 1st century had to risk their reputations and their lives to follow him and as many Christians do today in countries like Nigeria, India, and China.

Which means the widow is a model for us.  Jesus, of course, isn’t asking us just to put money into a collection.  He wants our lives—given in service to God and our neighbor.  He wants us to give him time in prayer and reading of the Scriptures.  He wants us to find ways to serve, to be helpful, to our parish, to the young, to the elderly, to the sick, to anyone around us who is in some kind of need.  He wants us to bring our Christian life into our public lives; in the words of today’s responsorial psalm, to “secure justice for the oppressed and food for the hungry, to protect strangers” (Ps 146:7,9).  “Strangers” means migrants, refugees, asylum-seekers, as the widow of Zarephath received Elijah, a refugee fleeing for his life from the rulers of Israel; as the Good Samaritan in Jesus’ parable cared for an anonymous victim of a highway robbery; as Jesus himself has given his life to ransom us from our sins and the punishment they merit—except, of course, we’re not strangers to Jesus but his beloved sisters and brothers; as our 2d reading today said, “Christ offered his blood once to take away the sins of many, … to bring salvation to those who eagerly await him” (Heb 9:28).



[1] Francis J. Moloney, S.D.B., The Gospel of Mark: A Commentary (Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson, 2002), p. 247.

[2] Ibid.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

Sts. Peter and Paul Church Celebrates Faith and 100th Anniversary

Sts. Peter & Paul Church 
Celebrates Faith and 100th Anniversary

By Fr. Vien Nguyen, SDB 


(ANS – San Francisco – November 6, 2024)
 – The church of Sts. Peter & Paul in San Francisco, a building rich in history and very much part of the national popular culture, has been entrusted to the pastoral care of the Salesians of the San Francisco Province since 1897.  It was the 1st Salesian work in the U.S.

On the Nov. 9-10 weekend, the parish will celebrate the centennial of the church's reconstruction, after it was destroyed in the great earthquake of 1906. After so many years it continues, in its ordinary and extraordinary activities, to be a place where Catholics can find a space for growth in faith and spirituality.

The last week of October at Sts. Peter & Paul Church was filled with joy and blessings! October, a Marian month, concluded with various activities across the community centered on prayer and the Rosary. Halloween offered a beautiful opportunity for connection – bringing together children and parents, students and teachers, and the Salesian community of priests and brothers.

The Salesian Boys & Girls Club and Sts. Peter & Paul Elementary School organized activities, including costume contests, parades, and youth bingo games—all in the joyful spirit of the Salesian Family. Prizes of candies and chocolates sparked excitement among participants, and it was heartwarming to see young children sharing this joyful experience.

The week continued with All Saints Day, beginning with an early morning Mass to welcome parishioners who came to dedicate this holy day to the Lord before they headed to work. The school Mass at 10:00 a.m. was prepared by the Salesian Sisters and young people. During the homily, Fr. Vien Nguyen, SDB, encouraged everyone to appreciate the saints for their example of holy living and to recognize those around them who embody holiness. Hearing the young students describe a “holy person” as good and prayerful and attending church was meaningful for everyone. Fr. Vien reminded the students that they can become saints by practicing kindness, caring for others, and living their faith.

During November, the month of Thanksgiving, the community looks forward to celebrating the 100th anniversary of the parish church on the weekend of November 9-10. On Saturday, the celebration will include a Mass for the renewal of marriage vows followed by a prime rib feast in the auditorium. The parish community eagerly awaits the many joys and blessings of this celebration.

The Sts. Peter & Paul community remains dedicated to creating a welcoming space for young people. The church offers Masses and sacraments to its parishioners and many tourists who visit San Francisco. The Salesian Boys & Girls Club provides a safe environment where youngsters can feel at home and experience God’s presence in everyday life. The school continues its Salesian mission as a home, school, church, and playground—combining strong academics and spiritual growth. In this vibrant community alive with the spirit of St. John Bosco, God’s presence is truly felt.

Homily for Thursday, Week 31 of Ordinary Time

Homily for Thursday
31st Week of Ordinary Time

Nov. 7, 2024
Psalm 105: 2-7
Luke 15: 1-10
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

Jesrapohigh school pep assembly
 licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

I suppose that most of you attended pep rallies during your years as students or teachers.  There probably was a lot of enthusiastic noise and activity.  We’ve at least heard about or seen images of enthusiastic fans of Sinatra, the Beatles, Woodstock, political campaign events, or JPII at a youth rally.  Can’t say that I ever participated in those sorts of events; concelebrating Masses with JPII was quite different from his youth rallies.  When I was a student of theology in Columbus, I went to a Jerry Ford appearance in 1976 on the statehouse grounds.  Our SDB residence was about 4 blocks from the capitol.  You can be sure that a Ford campaign event was nothing like a Trump appearance, not even with Woody Hayes introducing the candidate.  (Even in 1976 we had to pass thru metal detectors to enter the capitol grounds for the event.  This was a year after Squeaky Fromme had tried to shoot the President.  I have no idea how I was able to recall her name.)

The responsorial psalm today suggests a pep rally:  “Let hearts rejoice who search for the Lord” (105:3).  The psalmist recalls “the wondrous deeds that the Lord has wrought, his portents, and the judgments he has uttered” (v. 5)—remembering Israel’s delivery from Egypt.  Later generations of Jews might also recall delivery from exile in Babylon.

We recall and celebrate Christ’s delivering us from our sins.  It’s not so much that we’ve searched for God and found him as that he’s searched for and found us, as Jesus teaches in today’s 2 parables (Luke 15:1-10).  St. Paul rejoiced that he’d finally come to “know the supreme good of Christ Jesus my Lord” (Phil 3:8).  Like him, we rejoice and sing the praise of the God because he found us, wandering sheep, lost drachmas.  (A drachma was equivalent to a denarius—not chump change.)  We “look to the Lord in his strength” (105:4).

Even more, God rejoices to have found us and rescued us—from the wilderness of our sins, from some dark, dusty corner of our souls.  He forgives us.  We seek, then, “to serve him constantly” (105:4) as we “recall the judgments he has uttered” (v. 5), especially the judgment that our sins are forgiven and he calls us his friends (John 15:13-15).  He invites us to “sing his praise, proclaim all his wondrous deeds” (105:2), and express our gratitude in an eternal pep rally.

The Gate to Heaven
(Andrea di Bonaiuto)

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

School Support for Refugee Children in Lebanon

School Support for Refugee Children in Lebanon


(ANS – Beirut, Lebanon – November 6, 2024)
 – In 2024, Lebanon was showing timid signs of reviving its economy after the previous 4 years of severe economic crisis, which had brought disastrous consequences for human rights and forced more than 80% of the population into poverty. On October 1, however, the escalation of the war in the Middle East also involved Lebanon. The intensification of violence generated an unprecedented humanitarian emergency, with thousands of deaths and injuries and about 1.2 million people having to leave their homes in a hurry to seek a safe haven.

Hundreds of homes and public infrastructure have been destroyed, further aggravating the suffering of the civilian population. War and the closure of all schools continue to threaten the lives and futures of millions of children.

Marginalized communities, including refugees, have suffered heavily from the consequences of the economic crisis in recent years, and now their lives are turned upside down again by yet another conflict. In recent years, it is estimated that about 1.8 million Iraqis and 1.5 million Syrians have left their homes and their country, seeking refuge in neighboring countries, including Lebanon. A very limited number of displaced people require refugee status; many consider Lebanon only a place of transit, since the country has never signed the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees, nor its 1967 protocol.

In this tragic situation, the Salesians, who have been in the country since 1952, have asked for help to support the activities of their Angels of Peace school, attended by 250 Iraqi and Syrian refugee children between the ages of 6 and 15. All schools in the country have been closed for security reasons, including the Salesian school located on the outskirts of Beirut, where most of the refugee and asylum seeker community lives. For now teachers are able to reach it and use the equipment and stable internet connection to manage distance classes with students.

Since 2015, the Angels of Peace school has been providing education to refugee children, as well as a psycho-social support program carried out by psychotherapists and speech therapists, to try to work on the difficulties arising from being victims of war and displacement.

Refugee children in Lebanon face several obstacles to accessing education. Until 2023, they could attend school only in the afternoon, exposed to risks and dangers: this has caused an increase in school dropouts. After the teachers’ strikes against the strong devaluation of their salaries, the afternoon shifts were suspended.

Refugee children are de facto excluded from the formal school system. The school of the Angels of Peace is the only possibility for them  to access quality education. The Salesians intend to carry out their activities, and in this tragic moment they need help to cover the costs of buying computers, tablets, and internet connection for those refugee families who do not have them. Their goal, in fact, is to continue to guarantee lessons to 250 vulnerable children, for whom the link, including digital, with school means not only preserving the path of study and the possibilities of the future, but also having moments of sharing with their classmates and having a minimum of respite from the constant fear of war.

For more information, visit: www.missionidonbosco.org (Turin).

Akash Bashir's Cause Certified in Rome

Diocesan Inquiry into the Cause 
of the Servant of God Akash Bashir 
Certified in Rome


(ANS – Vatican City – November 6, 2024)
 – On November 5, a communiqué was sent to the postulator general for the Causes of Saints of the Salesian Family, Fr. Pierluigi Cameroni, that the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, in its ordinary meeting of October 24 gave legal validity to the diocesan inquiry for the cause of beatification and canonization of the Servant of God Akash Bashir (b. at Risalpur, Pakistan, June 22, 1994 – d. at Lahore, March 15, 2015), layman and past pupil of Don Bosco. This follows the verification carried out on the formal aspects of the procedural documents and the consistency of the evidentiary apparatus: number and quality of witnesses, documents collected.

The postulator general stresses that “this is a great achievement, the result of the work done with passion and competence by the members of the diocesan tribunal and by those who have contributed, in particular by the historical commission and the vice postulator Fr. Gabriel Cruz SDB.” The postulator general will now ask the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints to appoint a rapporteur to guide the preparation of the Positio super martyrio of the Servant of God. It will be drawn up by Dr. Matteo Penati, collaborator of the postulation. The diocesan inquiry was held at the diocesan chancery in Lahore, Pakistan, from March 15, 2022, to March 15, 2024.

Akash Bashir was born to a lower-class family and studied at the Don Bosco Technical Institute in Lahore. He led a life like any other young man’s and had dreams for his future. He lived with his family, he had friends both at school and at work, he liked to play sports, and prayer was part of his life. He had committed himself to living as an “a good Christian and upright citizen,” as Don Bosco wanted, and had become a security volunteer in his parish church, at a time when the situation in Pakistan was worrisome, with the risk of encountering suicide bombers who targeted religious sites.

One Sunday morning, March 15 2015, a suicide bomber attempted to enter the church of St. John in Youhanabad, a Christian district of Lahore, which at that time had over 800 faithful participating in Mass. When he realized the situation, Akash did not hesitate to sacrifice himself, grappling the bomber to keep him from causing a massacre in the church.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Homily for Tuesday, Week 31 of Ordinary Time

Homily for Tuesday
31st Week of Ordinary Time

Nov. 5, 2024
Phil 2: 5-11
Christian Brothers, St. Joseph’s Residence, N.R.

Salesian sisters singing at Mass of Religious Profession
St. Anthony's Church, Hawthorne, N.J., Aug. 5, 2022

About 2 weeks ago, the bishop of Jefferson City got some attention by publishing a list of hymns and individual composers not to be used in the diocese.  The hymns were deemed deficient doctrinally, e.g., in Eucharistic theology or ecclesiology, and the composers are accused of offenses against human dignity.  The bishop was actually the 1st to implement guidelines from the USCCB’s doctrine committee published 4 years ago.

Why?  Because music is an effective teaching tool.  Consider the place of patriotic hymns, campaign songs, and folk music in stirring national, political, or social movements.  Sacred music also teaches and moves, as Protestants like Isaac Watts and Charles Wesley knew very well, not to mention St. Ambrose and St. Thomas.  Consider hymns like “Faith of Our Fathers,” “Amazing Grace,” “Silent Night,” “Here I Am, Lord,” and even “This Little Light of Mine.”

Writing to his disciples at Philippi, Paul turns to what scholars think was an early liturgical hymn celebrating Christ’s exaltation and pointing to reasons for his glorification:  sharing the human experience of suffering and death in humble, faithful obedience to God his Father.

That hymn, Paul says, shows us how to act as disciples, what kind of attitude must motivate us:  be humble like Jesus, be obedient like Jesus, and you’ll be exalted like Jesus.

Friday, November 1, 2024

Message of the Rector Major's Vicar

THE MESSAGE OF THE VICAR

Fr. Stefano Martoglio, SDB 

THE ROSE PATH

“How lucky Don Bosco is! His path is forever strewn with roses! He hasn’t a worry in the world. No troubles at all!” But they couldn’t see the thorns that were piercing my poor legs.” Nevertheless, I kept going. Every life is interwoven with thorns and roses as in Don Bosco’s famous “Dream of the Roses and Thorns.”[1] Hope is the force that keeps us going despite the thorns.

An abundance of roses
in the yard of a home outside Denver, 2013

Dear readers, friends of the Salesian Family, and benefactors who help with Don Bosco’s work in all situations and contexts, I’m sending you a thought via the various Salesian media. I’ve chosen to reflect a little longer, as we did last month, on the topic of hope. I do so not only for the sake of continuity, but mainly because it’s a topic that begs to be addressed because we all need it so much. It’s an acceptance of God’s gentleness in our lives. But when we speak about hope, let’s remember, first of all, that it’s a component of profound humanity and a clear criterion for interpreting life in every religion.

Korean philosopher Byung-Chul Han points out that hope has a lot to do with transcendence and faith, love and eternal life. He underlines in his writings that while we are working, producing, and consuming, there’s no form of openness to the transcendent and no hope when living in this way.

We live in a time deprived of the dimension of celebration, even though we’re surrounded by things that dazzle us. A time without celebration is a time without hope. The society of consumption and performance that we live in is in danger of making us incapable of happiness, of rejoicing over the reality of our lives (even the most difficult situation always shows glimmers of light!).

Hope makes us believers in the future because the place where we experience hope most intensely is in the Transcendent. Czech writer and politician Vaclav Havel, president of Czechoslovakia in the era of “The Velvet Revolution,” which many of us remember, defines “hope” as a state of mind, a dimension of the soul.

Hope is an orientation of the heart that transcends the world of experience in the here and now; it’s a mooring somewhere else beyond the horizon. The roots of hope lie somewhere within the Transcendent. That’s why having hope and being satisfied because things are going well aren’t one and the same thing.

When we speak about the future, we understand it in relation to what will happen tomorrow, next month, or two years from now. The future is what we can plan, predict, control, and make optimal. Hope is the construction of a future that connects us to that future that never ends – to the Transcendent, to the Divine dimension. Cultivating hope is good for our hearts because it puts energy into our efforts to construct our way to Heaven.

The word most uttered by Don Bosco

Fr. Albert Caviglia wrote, “Leafing through the pages that record Don Bosco’s words and speeches, one finds that “Paradise” was the word he used to employ in every circumstance as the most compelling argument for every activity for good and for every forbearance in adversity.”

“A piece of Heaven fixes everything!” Don Bosco repeated in the midst of difficulties. Even in modern schools of management, they teach that a positive vision of the future turns into a life force.

When he was old and bent over and would walk across the courtyard in strides as long as an ant’s, those who were passing by would greet him without much thought, “Where are we going, Don Bosco?” The saint would reply, with a smile, “To Paradise.”

How much Don Bosco insisted on this: Paradise! He raised his young people to keep the vision of Paradise in their hearts and before their eyes. We can be Christians, even convinced Christians, but not believe in Paradise.

Don Bosco teaches us to unite our here present with the hereafter. And he does so through the virtue of hope.

Let’s carry this in our hearts and open our hearts to the charity and the humanity that incarnate our deep beliefs.

When you receive this brief message in November, live this hope together with our saints and with your beloved deceased, like of group of mountain climbers tethered together by a rope that has its origins in our everyday lives and is anchored, at its end, in the Infinite.

Like Don Bosco, let’s live as though we see the invisible, nourished by the hope that is the Provident Presence of God. Only those who are very grounded, practical, and solid, as Don Bosco was, are able to live by fixing their gaze on the invisible.

The anchor of hope figures prominently
in the SDB coat of arms