St. John Bosco, more commonly known as ‘Don Bosco’, is remembered as a man who dedicated his life to the service of abandoned young people. He was born in a village called ‘Becchi’ in Italy in 1815. When he was only two years of age he lost his father and was brought up by his mother, Mamma Margaret. He challenged the way young people were treated in the desperate poverty that existed at that time in the city of Turin, Italy. He was driven by first-hand experience of the effects of dreadful poverty and hunger on the young people he came across, he was determined to change their condition. Others were inspired to follow him in responding to the needs of the young. He founded a Religious Order in the Catholic Church, called the Salesians. This order, though established in the poverty of a city, we consider it to be one of the most prosperous in the world today. Poverty, hardship and hunger are nothing new, not least for young people. However, most of Europe has improved beyond all recognition since the Industrial Revolution. St John Bosco would be pleased at the progress that has been made. But as we approach the new millennium, there are still so many young people in poverty, both material and spiritual, even in Europe but especially in other parts of the world – those largely untouched by the progress we know in our continent. It is the privilege of the Salesians founded by Don Bosco to continue his work for young people who are poor, wherever they may be.

Everyone needs a dream, a vision to inspire them. Don Bosco, when he was very young, had a dream. A Man and a Lady, both of great majesty instructed him to prepare himself for a great battle. The battle appeared to be on behalf of a multitude of poor, unruly and neglected children. He was told in this dream that he had the traits and skills to conquer the unruliness of these children, and make them his friends. This powerful dream continued to be a guiding force throughout his adolescence. It inspired him to become a priest. This involved six years of intense studying. In 1841, just short of his 26th birthday, he was ordained a priest. In Italy, priests are called Don followed by their family name, so John Bosco became Don Bosco as we refer to him today.

Upon becoming a priest, Don Bosco realised how he needed to live out his vocation. The Industrial Revolution was spreading into Northern Italy, there was a great deal of poverty, desolation, turmoil and revolution on the streets of the city. Young people had been abandoned and lived in hopelessness. He was shocked at the conditions they endured and the things they did to enable them to eat, and to survive. This was the cost of the Industrial ‘improvement’ that would bring us all the high standards some of us have enjoyed. The cost of this progress in human terms was unbearable. Don Bosco, the young priest, became completely focused on his vocation when he entered the prisons. He wrote: “To see so many children, from 12 to 18 years of age, all healthy, strong, intelligent, lacking spiritual and material food, was something that horrified me.” In the face of such a situation he made his decision: “I must, by any available means, prevent children ending up here.” Don Bosco now saw how his dream and the guidance it gave were needed. He knew that a new approach was required. He needed to show that there were better ways for these healthy intelligent young people to lead their lives.

Don Bosco was more than just a dreamer. He knew that education was the key to helping these young people. He sought to teach them (many could only learn after their day’s work and not all wanted to), and to get fairer treatment for them with their employers. He looked to help other young people who still slept under bridges and on the streets. Even when they stole from him, as some did, he never gave up hope. He never lost his confidence in youth. Don Bosco started technical schools to educate the young people in skilled jobs like printing, bookbinding and mechanics. In those days, these were the skills that would guarantee better conditions and a better future for them. He started the Salesian Missions in South America. He published numerous works to enlighten and guide the young and others. And he continued his work on his system of education, a style which was immediately recognised as an ideal way to improve educational standards and to get the best from the young.

Don Bosco was an educational practitioner rather than an educational theorist. He wrote very little about his educational principles and it is impossible to understand his approach to education without reference to the story of his life. His early childhood experiences were influential upon the development of his work and he actively incorporated the lessons of his own life experiences into his pedagogy. Don Bosco’s capability to attract numerous boys and adult helpers was connected to his “Preventive System of Education”. He believed education to be a “matter of the heart,” and said that the boys must not only be loved, but know that they are loved. His Preventive System had three constitutive components: reason, religion, and kindness. Music and games also went into the mix that would bring joy and cheer to life for all.

Don Bosco never worked alone. He inspired a whole lot of people around him to work for the salvation of the miserably poor young people he saw in and around Turin. The Salesian family is nothing but a movement of people from all walks of life wanting to do good to the young with the charism of Don Bosco. Even some local politicians helped him out while some others hindered his efforts.

In 1859, Don Bosco selected an experienced priest Don Alasonatti, 15 seminarians and 1 high school boy and formed them into the “Society of St. Francis de Sales.” This was the nucleus of the Salesians, the religious order that would carry on his work. The Salesian Congregation was composed of priests, seminarians and lay brothers.

Next, he worked with Don Pestarino, Mary Mazzarello and a group of girls in the hill town of Mornese. In 1871, he founded a group of religious sisters to offer for girls what the Salesians were offering for boys. They were called the “Daughters of Mary Help of Christians.” In 1874, he founded yet another group: the “Salesian Cooperators.” These were mostly lay people who would work for young people like the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians and the Salesians, but would not join the religious order.

It is not surprising then that Don Bosco’s work, spirit and spirituality quickly spread throughout Italy, then Europe and South America, soon after his death. The number of Salesian priests and brothers at that time were merely 773. Today there are about 16,000 Salesian priests and brothers (SDB), 18,000 sisters (FMA), and tens of thousands of lay people working in every continent and in most countries of the world to continue the spirit and mission of Don Bosco amongst the young.

After a life of achieving so much for young people, Don Bosco died on the 31st of January 1888 at the age of 73. When others talked to him of his fantastic achievements, he would always interrupt and say ‘I have done nothing by myself. It is Our Lady who has done everything.’ Today the Salesians of Don Bosco continue this great work operating on the principles Don Bosco left us. Don Bosco was Beatified on June 2, 1929 in Rome by Pope Pius XI and was Canonized on April 1, 1934 in Rome by the same Pope. His feast day is celebrated on January 31.