Recently the Central Salesian Archives released the files of the Rua rectorate on some 1,750 microfiches. This boon has made archival research in that rectorate possible even for students residing away from the Central Archives.
Recently the Central Salesian Archives released the files of the Rua rectorate on some 1,750 microfiches. This boon has made archival research in that rectorate possible even for students residing away from the Central Archives.
That is part of the well known talk which Don Bosco gave to his boys when they were forced to move from place to place for their Sunday gatherings. That became known as the wandering oratory. This is the story of another transplanting, another wandering.
Over the last number of years “Salesian Spirituality,” first articulated by Francis de Sales and Jane Frances de Chantal, has attracted renewed interest in English-speaking countries. Theirs has been called a “spirituality of the heart,” and their prayer style has been dubbed intuitive, simple, spacious but unified and holistic.
Fr. Michael Mendl, in his research has discovered “a long missing letter” that states Don Bosco’s refusal to send Salesians to New York in 1848. This letter completes Michael Mendl ‘s article in the Journal on founding Salesian work in New York. (Vol. XI, No. I, Spring 2000).
A young Italian immigrant, Angelo Petazzi, watched anxiously as the English steamship, the Werra, approached New York harbor. Clutched in his hand was a letter from the then Salesian superior general, Father Michael Rua, which informed him of the impending arrival of a group of four Salesians in New York. At their head was Father Raphael Piperni.
In Part One of the present installment (Part Four overall), we shall discuss the last two dreams in a similar manner to the first article. Part Two (Five) will deal with the significance of the missionary dreams, with interpretative comments.
Over one hundred years ago, on November 28, 1898, three Salesians arrived in New York to initiate a Salesian apostolate among the Italian immigrants of that metropolis. In March of the previous year four of their confreres had undertaken a similar mission in San Francisco.
During the years following the late nineteenth and early twentieth century the Italian immigrant made his way, educated his children, and contributed his many talents to the great melting pot, not only in New York City, but in the whole of the United States.
In the fall of 1870, for reasons that have never been documented, Don Bosco did not answer Archbishop Joseph Alemany’s invitation to travel the El Camino Real in the land of El Dorado.
Nell’immensa letteratura sul terremoto che colpì la città di San Francisco in California (USA) dal 18 al 20 aprile 1906, non sono ancora state rese note nella loro interezza le dirette testimonianze dei salesiani che colà si trovavano addetti alle Chiese etniche dei SS. Pietro e Paolo, del Corpus Christi (e di San Giuseppe nella vicina città di Oakland).
La risonanza nazionale ed internazionale del nome di don Bosco, la sua fama in alcuni ambienti vaticani, la sua nota sollecitudine per le missioni ad gentes e gli emigrati italiani in America Latina, la «propaganda» dei loro esiti positivi effettuata attraverso il «Bollettino Salesiano», furono all’origine delle richieste che pervennero ai salesiani di Torino di fondare opere negli Stati Uniti.
After providing a brief history of the American towns of Ybor and Tampa and of the local church communities at the end of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth centuries, making use of a great deal of documentation, especially letters, the author describes the pastoral experience of the Salesians in the three parishes assigned to them in 1926, in which there was a considerable number of Italian immigrants. Continue reading “Philip J. Pascucci – A brief account of the parish salesian ministry in Ybor City and West Tampa (Florida-Usa): 1926-1935 in “Ricerche storiche salesiane””
I salesiani polacchi si incontrarono per la prima volta coi loro connazionali dell’altro emisfero in Argentina, ed uno di loro, don Stanislaw Cynalewski (1866-1932), dedicò tutta la vita all’attività fra gli emigranti. Gli altri dello stesso gruppo solo sporadicamente poterono svolgere il loro servizio pastorale nella lingua della madre patria. Un loro maggiore impegno in questo campo incontrava grandi difficoltà da parte delle autorità della Congregazione, dal momento che allora “essere salesiani” equivaleva sovente ad “essere italiani”.
Fr. Paolo Albera concluded his extraordinary visitation of the Americas (September 1900 to March 1903) by spending ten days with the Salesian community in New York, which had been founded barely four years earlier (November 1898). His visit crowned the difficult beginnings of the Salesian mission among the Italian immigrants of the great city and gave the mission an important impulse for expansion and growth. Continue reading “Michael Mendl – Salesian Beginnings in New York. The extraordinary visitation of Father Paolo Albera in march 1903 in “Ricerche storiche salesiane””
Il Rettor Maggiore condivide le sue esperienze di viaggio, celebrando il 50° anniversario della presenza salesiana nello Sri Lanka e il Centenario dell’arrivo dei primi Salesiani in India. Continue reading “Pascual Chavez Villanueva – “«Voi che cercate il Signore, guardate la roccia da cui siete stati tagliati» (Is 51,1). Presentazione della regione Interamerica” in “Atti del Consiglio generale””
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