THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Fr. Angel Fernandez Artime
THE HUMAN HEART IS SO CAPABLE OF VERY GREAT THINGS
“‘Salesian’ is synonymous with ‘living for others.’ This is how we know our Salesians here. Thus they are. Thus they live.”
This is the RM’s message for March, which I’ve been delinquent in posting. Nevertheless, it remains timely.
My faithful friends, readers of Salesian media, the means of family
communication and friendship that Don Bosco himself valued so highly, I greet
you with all cordiality.
I come to you on this occasion with my heart impressed by what I was able to experience around the time of the great solemnity of Saint John Bosco on January 31. There were many things that impressed me, but today two testimonies stand out. For the first, I was only a witness of a talk, and for the second just a recipient of a message. Both of them made me feel that the human heart is very capable of great and beautiful things. Let me share them with you.
The former took place on the night of January
29, 2021, in Valdocco, in the basilica of Mary Help of Christians, where I sat
in the pews among the people and participated in the prayer vigils leading up
to the solemnity of our beloved Saint and Father of the Salesian Family. Four
young people who had participated in the Economy of Pope Francis meeting in
Rome, organized by the Holy See, animated that night’s prayer vigil. These are
young entrepreneurs who don’t consider commerce to be a way to get rich at the
cost of impoverishing others, but who engage in business with a sense of
justice and solidarity. Two of these young people gave a witness talk that went
far beyond the details of money management. One of them shared with us, with
deep emotion, that he had lost his father two years ago and how his widowed
mother sought a way to give great meaning to her life in memory of her beloved
husband: she decided to welcome into her home, together with her children, two
immigrant children who are in this country (Italy) alone, without any affective
or family ties. This young man shared with us how deeply impressed he and his
siblings were by the decision and courage of their mother to live the Gospel as
she believes we need to live it today: in a concrete way, a faith that has
faces and names.
The second testimony was that of a young woman entrepreneur who decided to tutor a Senegalese child to help him as he makes his way, grows, works at his education, and prepares himself for life. I was strongly impressed by her because she showed the Gospel come alive, without “artificial sweetness.” Her witness also means that even today we can live like this. Without a doubt so many of you do live like this, each one in his own way, simply and concretely.
One of those “rare messages”
When it comes to speaking of the “concrete,” I
want to offer you another testimony that confirms what is deeply engraved in my
heart. I have said this more than once: in a world like ours, which is
undoubtedly very complex and which is beset by so many dark powers and
realities, we must make known the good that’s done. Don Bosco did this daily,
and I’ll do so here.
Just a few days ago, I received one of those
rare messages that bring with them no complaints and don’t speak ill of anyone
(certainly, you know that complaints are frequent everywhere). Quite the contrary,
this message bore the testimony of a young Argentine woman who has lived for
years in a Salesian environment, which has left its mark on her life for the
better. Reading her message, my heart swelled. I told myself that I had to
share it with you so that you too would hear something good that touches the
heart and doesn’t cause it pain.
This is what the young woman said:
“Dear Fr. Angel: Ever since I found the way to
write to you, I have greatly desired to share some things with you. Here, where
I live, the Salesians are tremendous. They protect us in grief, shelter the
lonely, always find time to listen, and exhort us to believe, to trust, and to
hope against all hope.
“They soothe our souls in bitter moments and
celebrate our joys as if they were their own. Trust me, Father, I'm not making
up stories. My whole life has been ‘lit up’ by the Salesian charism, first, in
a small city (where the first Salesian house in the Americas was opened) and
now, for these past few years in Rosario, a big, beautiful city. Here, in the house
of San José, I work in the school and participate in the parish activities. I
have experienced firsthand what I will now share. Our director, Fr. X, knows
each student by name. He knows how to accompany each one in painful moments.
Many of our children’s lives are marked by stories of painful, difficult
realities: one has leukemia, some have parents who have died, others live in
the midst of domestic violence and many other misfortunes. He knows each of
them and embraces them with his heart and his words. Another Salesian brings
the church alive at each Mass. Then there is Fr. X who, although elderly,
mingles among the children, entertaining them with stories of ‘the old days.’
In another Salesian house, with Fr. X, we search tirelessly for the best method
to teach the first graders to begin to read and write. There are so many names
I could mention.
“On Saturday, I traveled over 900 miles just to
see Padre X, who resides in the Zatti retirement home. I went to see him just
to remind him how much he is loved, to give back a little for all his labors
for us, and to have lunch with him. Moved deeply by this, he understood that
everything had been worth it. So much life put at the service of others!
“‘Salesian’ is synonymous with ‘living for
others.’ This is how we know our Salesians here. Thus they are. Thus they live.
‘We are in the world for others,’ Fr. X constantly repeats to us, paraphrasing
Don Bosco. Yes! That is why there’s something special in the air, something
invisible in the atmosphere, of our school playgrounds. It all has to do with
joy, with hope, and with holiness.
“Happy feast of Don Bosco, dear Rector Major. I
pray for you and in you for every Salesian who makes us feel that Don Bosco is
alive, that he always was, and that he continues to be. Happy feast of Don
Bosco and blessings for all.”
There you have this precious testimony full of
zest and life. I’m keeping her identity anonymous so as not to make her blush,
but there may be people who think I am doing PR when they read this. You know,
my friends, that I am not. Why should I not speak, why should I keep silent
about life-giving news that tells the truth of those who experience deep in
their hearts what they have written to us? In all simplicity, I am saying that
the boys at Valdocco knew this same reality because Don Bosco was alive among
them. How happy it makes me to know that many of our houses today have that
same “Valdocco flavor”!
I wish you all well!
May your hearts also swell and be open to hope.
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