THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Fr. Angel Fernandez Artime
AFTER THE PANDEMIC
The pandemic has changed the way in which we relate with the world, others, and ourselves. We need to rebuild and to begin again in greater solidarity and with greater awareness so as to rebound from a silent calamity marked by pain, confinement, struggle, and fear. What would Don Bosco do if he were alive today?
Dear
Friends, readers of Salesian media,
Let
me begin my letter today with a short wisdom story:
A tightrope walker stretched out
his rope at quite a height over a bustling marketplace. Some jugglers put on
their act before his, but when their show lasted longer than expected, the
square was enveloped in darkness. The tightrope walker would have to put on his
show using reflected light.
In the subdued light of the twilight
hour, the tightrope artist did not realize that a little boy had tranquilly
followed him up the ladder. When he took his first steps on the rope, he realized
the boy was behind him.
“What are you doing up here?” he
asked the boy.
“I want to walk the rope with
you.”
“Aren’t you afraid?”
“As long as I am with you, no.”
The spectators held their breath
as the tightrope walker placed the little boy on his shoulders and, in order to
distract his attention from the dizzying height and darkness, said to him, “Look at how beautiful the stars are up there!
Keep your eyes fixed on those stars.”
As long as the boy kept his eyes
fixed on the brilliant splendor of the twinkling stars, his thoughts did not go
to the danger of the hesitant steps along that thin rope or to the huge drop
beneath, but he allowed himself to be carried the entire length of the square.
Don Bosco would have been the first to “climb up to the rope” with his children and youths. He would have been the first to be present to them and make use of all his abilities, creativity, and skills in his preventive fashion to move the young to hope. He would have believed in them, offering them the chance to be leaders and speaking to each of them about the joy in living and in growing in harmony, forming them to make a courageous commitment for the sake of others, especially of those most in need.
This is hope for our day: the opportunity to
grow and to learn together as a team, comprised of students, families,
educators, and specialists. We must value what we have gained from this crisis:
a healthier environment, slower mode of life, being together as a family, and
the many creative and innovative initiatives—virtual ones, e.g.—on the part of so many educators so they could respond rapidly and
efficaciously to the needs of their students.
Things are different now, and so are
we. Nothing is as it was before: life, relationships, space, and time. We do
not wish to return to where we were but we want to change for the better, to
renew, to create, and to believe in ourselves, in our resources, and in education
as a key factor in change.
We need creativity in order to
devise new paradigms and new responses—the boldness of a life which is the
bearer of something truly new. We need a vision of a new life which will become
reality because the task is arduous and will take a long time. We do not need
things that are improvised on the spur of the moment, but we need the security found
in our witness and in the joy of our hope—in what makes us who we are. More
than ever, our presence and our witness are necessary. And more than ever
before, the young cannot be left to their own devices. This was never true, but
in an evermore imperative way it is not true now; for the young await us with
open arms so they may live their lives again with the strength of a love that
is capable of overcoming everything. It is only love that conquers all. We need
to dream anew the dream of the young.
I hope that we have learned to be
more aware of the connections among all humans, more determined to educate all our
children and youths well, fully aware of the power of human gentleness, and
more focused on working with families and other organizations so that we may
educate to the future.
In our Salesian Preventive System,
this means:
Total, cordial welcome. The conversations that Don Bosco
had with the young reveal his capacity to give a complete and cordial welcome
to them, something that is a fundamental element of our Salesian educational
relationship. Through his informal, situational, and friendly model of
communication, Don Bosco reached their hearts, overcoming all barriers of
“social distancing. ” [“See to it that all with whom you come in contact become
your friends” (The Biographical Memoirs of St. John Bosco. vol.
X, p. 445.)] In this way, all will feel welcomed and loved (every boy felt that
he was Don Bosco’s “favorite”). Where human development is concerned, what
matters is that the individual be the actor in his own life and history.
Empathic harmony and openness. To his Salesians, Don Bosco always recommended being close to the young at all times, a closeness rich with attention and gentleness.
Knowledge of the young person and his
abilities. In Don
Bosco’s pedagogical system, young persons are always able to find within themselves
those personal resources which, once put into play together with God’s grace,
will bring them to propose and to reach new goals for their own improvement and
self-mastery.
Educational and pastoral experience
of daily life. Educational
accompaniment is realized in daily life: on the playground, e.g., for it is
that informal space par excellence wherein
the educator can get to know and accompany the young. The extraordinary takes
place in the ordinary: during the moments of daily life, the educator and the
student are committed to each other in frequent conversations, in sharing work
and leisure in a relationship of getting to know each other, and often also one
of deep friendship, which prepares the way to trust, dedication, and docility
(“Make yourself loved and not feared”).
Educational environment and family
style. Seeking to
imitate what he experienced in his own family, Don Bosco wanted to transplant
this family spirit to daily life at Valdocco. This sharing of life between the
educators and the young had to be like that between parents and their children.
Use of technology that cannot substitute human teachers:
education will remain (and ought to remain) an activity of high-intensity human
interaction. In the future, the principal challenge, therefore, will be to find
the right balance in using technological tools while continuing to invest and
believe in the human factor.
Prevention as our method. The concept of “prevention” as
spoken of by Don Bosco is not “welfare” nor is it purely “protective” by
nature; it aims, instead, to empower others so they may overcome negative
factors capable of destroying the person.
In the case of COVID-19, new educational
strategies are necessary so as to sensitize and prepare the students—our adult citizens
of tomorrow—to seek out solutions that will take into account respect for life,
sustainable development, and ethical commitment.
Personal accompaniment as spiritual direction: sanctity.
Don Bosco the educator did not limit himself to the human level but went beyond
to the spiritual one. His goal is total happiness (Paradise). It is for this
end that he will “go to the point of foolhardiness,” walking the ever-risky and
difficult tightrope. On Don Bosco’s shoulders, we, too, can go forward to the
future fearlessly—keeping our eyes fixed firmly on the Stars of Heaven.
Affectionately,
Fr. Angel
No comments:
Post a Comment