Fr. Fabio Attard on TV2000
“Don Bosco’s charism cultivates attitudes of listening to
young people and being close to them.”
(ANS – Rome - November 5, 2025) – Fr. Fabio Attard, rector major of the Salesians, was a guest on Tuesday, November 4, on the television program Chiesa Viva (Living Church) broadcast by the Italian Catholic channel TV2000. Joined by other guests, he spoke to the general public about the mission of the Salesians and the relevance of Don Bosco’s charism today.
To address the main theme—the Salesian educational and
formative mission in the world—Fr. Attard began with Don Bosco himself: a boy
born into a poor family who greatly desired an education, which he could obtain
only as an older teenager by supporting his own studies and working in the
evenings, in Chieri far from home. “His life was marked by sacrifice for the
value of education,” observed the rector major.
He then highlighted another distinctive aspect: unlike many
who, after escaping poverty, wish never to look back, Don Bosco chose to
dedicate his life to young people who, like him, risked being left without
education. For that reason, he moved to Turin, in the 19th-century undergoing
rapid industrial growth.
To the many young men who, like him, had left the
countryside in search of better opportunities, “Don Bosco gradually made a
truly integral proposal,” one that responded to “the human need to meet others,
to feel accompanied and loved, but within an experience that opened to both
educational and spiritual dimensions.”
Today, however, the reality in many contexts differs from
Don Bosco’s time, and the Salesians have adapted. Thus, Don Bosco’s 11th successor,
clarified: “Don Bosco’s charism is not built around things to do, but on
attitudes to cultivate: listening to young people and being close to them. And
if there has ever been a time in history dominated by loneliness, abandonment,
and the lack of meaningful adult role models, it is precisely the time we are
living in today!”
“We do not make a photocopy of what Don Bosco did,” Fr.
Attard continued. “Rather, we grasp his spirit of going out to meet young
people and offering them human spaces of contact—different in form, but the
same in the heart of the young people who are searching today.”
Commenting on the words of Pope Leo XIV about education,
spoken a few days earlier during Mass with the students of the pontifical
universities (October 27, opening the Jubilee of the Educational World), the rector
major summarized that, in essence, the Salesian educational charism is all
about “meeting persons who cannot stand up alone, standing beside them, taking
interest, looking them in the face, to discover where they can and must arrive.”
The current reality of Western, technologically advanced
societies is highly developed but often poor in relationships. In response to
these challenges, the rector major emphasized the importance of people who make
themselves “beggars for others—those who are searching and need help.”
“In a culture like ours, it may seem that young people are
distant—but I don’t know who is distant from whom: young people from us, or we
from them,” Fr. Attard continued. “But one thing is certain: young people are
searching, and it is up to us adults to perceive that search, interpret it, and
place ourselves as their servants, beginning a relationship.”
Fr. Alejandro Leon, speaking from Buenos Aires, recalled the
international dimension of the Salesian mission and focused attention on both
the 150th anniversary of the First Salesian Missionary Expedition and the
geographic and human peripheries where Don Bosco’s sons still work today.
In the final part of the program, Fr. Attard spoke about the
new challenges facing the Salesians. Once again, the rector major returned to
the foundations of the mission to look at the present and the future. He
recalled the centrality of religious consecration: “We are educators and
pastors because we are consecrated. Community life is not merely functional—it
is a contagious experience that continues Don Bosco’s own. Therefore, the
aspect of consecration drives us further—to complete self-giving, universal
fraternity, and accompanying young people in their search for meaning…. And
our very witness communicates this, even before our words do.”
Finally, referring to the main challenges identified by the Salesians’
29th General Chapter, Fr. Attard pointed to the need to deepen Salesian
identity, ensuring that at the heart of pastoral processes “there is not
functionalism, but always the person.”

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