THE MESSAGE OF THE RECTOR MAJOR
Cardinal
Angel
Fernandez
Artime, SDB
WHEN AN EDUCATOR TOUCHES HIS
CHILDREN’S HEART—OR THE ART OF BEING LIKE DON BOSCO
The art of being like Don Bosco: “Remember that education
is a matter of the heart, of which God alone is the master, and that we can achieve
nothing unless God teaches us the art and hands us the key” (Biographical Memoirs
16:376).
My dear friends, readers of Salesian media and other friends of Don Bosco’s charism,
I’m writing this
greeting, I’d say, almost as a livestream, before it goes to print. I say this because
I experienced the scene I’m going to tell you about only 4 hours ago.
Salesians greeted the Rector Major
on his arrival at Lubumbashi
I recently arrived
in Lubumbashi, Democratic Republic of Congo. For 10 days prior, I’d already visited
very significant Salesian presences such as the displaced and refugee population
of Palabek, Uganda. These people are living in much more humane conditions today
than when they first came to us, thank God. From Uganda, I went to the region of
Goma in the eastern DRC, a place struggling under a difficult situation. There,
the Salesian presences are full of life. A number of times, I observed that my heart
was “touched”; that is, moved at seeing the good that’s being done and that God’s
presence is so strong there, even in the midst of very great poverty. Still, my
heart was touched with pain and sadness when I met some of the 32,000 people (mostly
the elderly, women, and children) who have been welcomed and taken in on the grounds
of the Salesian presence of Don Bosco-Gangi. I’ll speak about this next time because
I need to let it rest on my heart for a while.
Right now, I
wish to refer only to one beautiful scene I witnessed on the flight that brought
us to Lubumbashi. It was a non-commercial flight in a medium-sized plane. I didn’t
know the flight captain but the local Salesians did. When I greeted him on the plane,
he told me that he’d studied vocational training at our school here in Goma. He
told me that those were years that changed his life, then added something else,
speaking to me and to all of us: “And here’s someone who’s been a ‘father’ for us.”
In African culture, when you say someone is “a father,” you’re paying the greatest
compliment possible. Not infrequently, though, this father is not the biological
father to a son or daughter but the one who has really cared for him, supported
him, and accompanied him.
This captain
is about 45 years old; his son, already a young pilot, was accompanying him on the
flight. To whom was he referring? To one of our Salesian coadjutor brothers, not
a priest but a consecrated layman; that’s how Don Bosco conceived the Salesians.
That Salesian brother, a missionary from Spain, Brother Honorato, has been a missionary
in the Goma area for more than 40 years. Together with the other Salesians, of course,
he did everything possible to make such a vocational training school—as well as
many other things—a reality. He came to know the captain and some of his friends
when they were just kids—hundreds and hundreds of boys. In fact, the captain told
me that 4 of his companions, who were practically street kids in those years, were
able to study mechanics in Don Bosco’s house and today are engineers in charge of
the mechanical and technical maintenance of their company’s small planes.
Well, when I
heard the captain, a former Salesian student, say that Brother Honorato had been
his father, the father of all of them, I was deeply moved. It made me think of Don
Bosco, whom his boys considered their father.
I thought, “How
true it is that education is a thing of the heart.” It just confirmed my conviction
that our presence among boys, girls, and youths is for us almost a “sacrament” thru
which we, too, reach God. That’s why I’ve spoken with such passion and conviction
in recent years to my Salesian confreres and to the Salesian Family about the Salesian
“sacrament of presence.”
Youngsters from the Salesian schools of Goma
I know that in
the Salesian world, in our Family throughout the world, among our brothers and sisters,
there are many fathers and many mothers who, with their presence, affection, and
ability to educate, reach the hearts of young people, who need so much today. Indeed,
I would say more and more that they need these presences that can change a life
for the better.
Greetings from
Africa—and every blessing of the Lord to you, friends of the Salesian charism.
Blessings,
Cardinal Angel
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