Young John Bosco was born on 16 August 1815 in the small village townland of
Castelnuovo d’Asti, in Piedmont, popularly called “Becchi”.
While still a child, his father’s death made him feel the sorrow of so many
orphans for whom he would become a loving father. He found, however, in his
mother Margherita an example of Christian life which made a deep impression on
his soul.
When he was nine years old, he had a dream that was prophetic. He seemed to
be in the middle of a crowd of children at play, some of whom were however
cursing. Suddenly, the young John threw himself at these, cursing, hitting and
kicking them to make them be quiet. But a man appeared before him who said:
“Don’t hit them, but with kindness and love you must win over these your
friends. …I shall give you a Teacher under whose guidance you will be able to
become wise, and without whom, all wisdom becomes nonsense”. That person was
Jesus and the Teacher, the Virgin Mary, under whose guidance, he placed his
whole life and whom he honoured with the title “Mary, Help of Christians”.
This led John to want to learn to be an acrobat, a magician, a singer and a
juggler so as to be able to attract companions to him and to keep them far from
sin. “If they are with me,” he used say to his mother “they don’t curse”.
Wishing to become a priest and to dedicate himself entirely to the salvation
of young people, he would work by day, and spend the nights at his books.
Finally at the age of twenty, he was able to enter the Seminary in Chieri and
to be ordained a priest in Turin in 1841, at the age of twenty-six.
In those times, Turin was chock-a-block with poor young people. These were
either orphaned or abandoned, looking for work, and were exposed to many dangers
of both body and soul. Don Bosco started to gather them together on Sundays,
sometimes in a Church, out on a grassy meadow, or yet again in a town square to
get them to play and to instruct them in the Catechism. After five years of
enormous difficulties, he managed to establish and open in the outlying suburb
of Valdocco his first Oratory.
In it, the boys found food and a bed. They would study or learn a trade, but
above all they learned to love the Lord. Saint Dominic Savio was one of them.
Wishing to extend his apostolate also to young girls, he founded with Saint
Maria Domenica Mazzarello, the FMA, the Congregation of the Daughters of Mary
Help of Christians.
The Salesians and the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians have spread
throughout the entire world in the service of young people, of the poor and
suffering, with schools of every type and level, technical and professional
institutes, hospitals, dispensaries, oratories and parishes.
Don Bosco spent all his free time, some of which he snatched from sleep,
writing and popularising simple booklets of Christian teaching for ordinary
people.
As well as being a man of the greatest practical charity, he was among the
greatest mystics. His entire work took its origins from an intimate union with
God. From his youth he had jealously cultivated this and he grew in a faithful
and filial abandonment to the plan which God had laid down for him, guided each
step of the way by the Mother of God, who was his Inspiration and Guide during
his entire working life.
But his perfect union with God was, perhaps as in few Saints, united to the
richest of humanities as to kindness, intelligence and balance. To this was
added the exceptional ability of discernment of the human soul, matured by long
daily hours spent in the confessional, in adoration before the Blessed
Sacrament and in continual contact with young people and with persons of every
age and condition.
Don Bosco formed generations of saints because he reminded his young boys of
the love of God, the reality of death, the judgement of God, of an eternal
Hell, the need of prayer, of fleeing from sin and those occasions which lead to
sin, and of frequenting often the Sacraments.
“My dear boys, I love you with all my heart and it is enough that you are
young that I can love you so much”. He loved in a manner that made each person
feel special.
“You will find writers more talented by far and more learned than I, but
with difficulty, will you ever find anyone who loves you in Jesus Christ more
than I and who wants your true happiness”.
Exhausted finally by unceasing work, he fell seriously ill. It was
especially moving that many young men offered their own life to God in exchange
for his. “…What I have done, I have done for the Lord …More could have been
done …But my children will do that...Our Congregation is guided by God and
protected by Mary Help of Christians”.
One of his last recommendations was, “Tell the boys I am waiting for them in
heaven…”.
He died on 31 January 1888, at the age of 72 years. On 1 April 1934, Pope
Pius XI, who had the good fortune to know him personally, proclaimed him a
Saint. (Source: sdb.org)
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