Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Toward the bicentennial: three stages in knowing Don Bosco

The following comes from the Salesian News Agency:


Just a few days before the beginning of three years of preparation for the Bicentenary of the birth of Don Bosco, ANS asked Don Francesco Motto, Director of the Salesian Historical Institute, to suggest how we can learn more about this saint from Turin.
Understanding Don Bosco is a subject dear to the heart of the Rector Major, Don Pascual Chávez. Taken up in the first theme of the 26th General Chapter – Return to Don Bosco – it was put forward again to Salesians in his letter of 31 January 2011, in which he outlined the journey of preparation for 2015: a knowledge of Don Bosco’s life story, his educational method and his spirituality.
Don Motto’s suggestions – available in the Service section of ANS – are not limited to the mere knowledge of the historical data and, as outlined by the the Rector Major, include consideration of the educational and spiritual context.
The Salesian historian starts from the simple question: ‘Which Don Bosco?’ - "given that there are dozens of images of Don Bosco in books, reviews, journals, videos, film and fiction." He quotes the remark of Don Chávez’s in the Strenna for 2012: "Our approach to Don Bosco, using appropriate methods of historical research, has led us to better understand and assess his human and Christian greatness, his practical brilliance, his skills as an educator, his spirituality and his work, which are fully understood only if deeply rooted in the history of the society in which he lived."
For Don Motto there are three stages in getting to know Don Bosco better:
  Go back to genuine and certain sources, "meaning authentic texts from Don Bosco, his writings, edited by him or by his sons, on-line or on paper";
  Go further into the sources – even those which are most certain and valid – going beyond "a superficial and simplistic reading. It is necessary to understand the ideas and mental constructs of Don Bosco, his own values and those he adopted, his style of written and spoken language, his method of drafting and re-drafting... A theological reading of the sources can be enhanced by a social, economic, or political reading. The supernatural must take account of natural factors. Don Bosco is not an ‘island’ in the sea of his times."
Read the themes of the historical Don Bosco, whether religious, moral, dogmatic, political, cultural, economic..., in the light of analogous problems and recent events, so that they can be useful to us today.

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