Jan 31 – St John Bosco (1815-1888)
Summary: St John Bosco, priest, educator. Born in Piedmont (Italy) in 1815; grew up in extreme poverty and, after ordination, devoted his life to educating young people, especially the poor. Founded the Salesians, men and women who continue this work with youth throughout the world. He was noted, like the order’s patron, St Francis de Sales, for his cheerfulness and trust in the providence of God. He died at Turin on this day in 1888

Patrick Duffy traces his story.
Early life
Born at Becchi, Castelnuovo d’Asti, in Piedmont, Italy, John’s peasant father died when he was only two. His devout and common sense mother Margaret reared him in poverty and provided him with a good education. She later lived and worked with her son when he was a priest. On 16th November 2006 the Congregation for Saints’ Causes recognised her heroic virtues and her reputation for holiness.

Workshops and Sunday outings with young people
Ordained priest in 1841, he soon had hundreds of boys and youths attending his chapel and evening classes. He set up a boarding house for apprentices and then had workshops for teaching, tailoring and shoe making.
The charism of goodness
Don Bosco, as he became known, said he did not remember having formally to punish any boy. He sought always to make things attractive, and because of this his methods were preventive as distinct from repressive.

During a cholera epidemic in Turin in 1854 in which thousands died, he formed his boys into teams to carry the sick to hospital and the dead to mortuaries. He urged his boys to trust in God and wash their hands in vinegar. Not one of them died and he got the reputation of being a miracle-worker.
Salesians
This led to the foundation in 1854 of a community of religious, whom he called Salesians in admiration of the spirit of St Francis de Sales.
He also founded a congregation for girls with a peasant woman, Mary Mazzarello (1837-81) from near Genoa, she also became a saint. The Salesians spread all over Europe and America. The congregation now numbers over 16,000 in 139 countries.
A great “social saint”
When he died in 1888, the entire population of Turin lined the streets for his funeral. He was canonised by Pope Pius XI in 1934. He has become recognised, like Mother Teresa of Calcutta, as one of the great “social saints”.
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Memorable Proverbs for today
Young people need more supportive models to imitate
than critics who only sap their energy, optimism and hope,
if they are to build tomorrow’s better world.
~ Brendan Ryan ~
also
One of the deep secrets of life is that
all that is really worth doing is what we do for others
~ Lewis Carroll ~
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