“When we forget our origins—the struggles, sacrifices, and vision of those who came before us—we risk losing our identity and mission.”
Introduction: Remembering Our Roots
The Role of Leadership in Preserving Charism
Imagine Don Bosco’s early
Oratory scene—a prototype of pedagogy and community.
Leadership is not merely about administration. It is, at its
heart, about safeguarding the spirit and ensuring that institutions remain
faithful to their original fire. This insight was powerfully reinforced with
the recent appointment of Fr. Mauro Mantovani as the Rector of the
Salesian Community at the Holy See (July 12, 2025). In his installation
message, Fr. Fabio Attard emphasized three essential marks of leadership
that apply equally across our province and works:
- Christocentrism:
     A Salesian community must shine with the light of Christ. We are not
     social workers or educators first—we are disciples. When Christ is at the
     center, our mission finds its true energy and direction.
- Relationship
     with Jesus: If our roots are not deep in personal prayer and love for
     Jesus, our works may become efficient but hollow. Without Jesus, our
     Preventive System loses its soul.
- Community
     as Family: In a world marked by fragmentation and loneliness, young
     people are not seeking perfection or performance—they are hungry for
     authenticity, for belonging. A Salesian home must be just that: a home.
These principles are not exclusive to Rome. They are just as
urgent in our houses in Kolkata, Krishnagar, Siliguri, Bangladesh, Nepal and
beyond. Whether a Rector with decades of service or a young priest entering
leadership, we are all called to be animators of communion, upholding
Don Bosco’s legacy and translating it into new contexts. Salesian leaders are called to
build “bridges of fraternity and service” by upholding Don Bosco’s
charism and responding creatively to emerging challenges.
Collaboration with the Laity: A Synodal Imperative
Today, that same vision is bearing fruit through vibrant lay
movements and structures within the Salesian Family:
- Salesian
     Co-operators carry the spirit of the Preventive System into homes,
     workplaces, and parishes. Their daily witness makes Don Bosco’s dream
     tangible.
- Past
     Pupils are the living fruits of Salesian education, now making a
     difference in society—as professionals, politicians, parents, and priests.
- Associations
     like ADMA, Savio Clubs, SYM, and Vincent de Paul
     groups are cultivating faith, service, and joy among the youth,
     creating new spaces of encounter with Jesus.
- Parish
     Pastoral Councils and Economic Commissions ensure shared
     governance and accountability, embodying the principle of subsidiarity and
     empowering the baptized laity to exercise their full dignity and
     responsibility.
The Centenary Challenge: Renewing Our Mission
Some urgent questions confront us:
- Are
     we faithfully transmitting Don Bosco’s charism to the next generation?
     Charism is not inherited automatically. It must be reinterpreted and
     re-owned by every new era. Are our schools, parishes, youth centres, and
     formation houses alive with Salesian passion and pedagogy?
- Are
     our structures and ministries still serving the poorest and most
     marginalized youth? Don Bosco’s preferential option was always for the
     abandoned and vulnerable. Have we become too institutional, too
     comfortable, too self-preserving? Where is the slum child, the tribal
     girl, the dropout boy, in our pastoral planning?
- How
     can we strengthen lay formation and leadership in our works? Formation
     is not just for novices and seminarians. Laypeople also need spaces for
     theological, spiritual, and leadership training—spaces that honour their
     vocation and equip them to co-lead the mission.
The Spirituality of Walking Together
“Synodality” is not just a new buzzword. It is a
spirituality—a way of being Church. Pope Francis describes it as “journeying
together: laity, pastors, the Bishop of Rome” embracing shared mission and
discernment. For the Salesian Family, this means rediscovering our
identity as a people on the move—pilgrims and companions on a shared
mission. GC29 embodied this through its structured working process—listening,
discerning, proposing—across six commissions with intercultural participation.
Synodality demands listening—not only to the Holy Spirit but
to each other. It requires letting go of clericalism and embracing shared
discernment. It opens up space for voices from the margins: women, youth, lay
leaders, persons with disabilities, and those from diverse cultures and faiths.
The Salesian way has always been communal and
incarnational. From the Oratory of Valdocco to the schools of Siliguri,
Nepal, Bangladesh, Krishnagar, hill institutions,  to the shelters in Kolkata, our strength has
come from family spirit, from being among the people—not above
them.
Conclusion: A Future Built on Fraternity and Fidelity
As a Salesian Family—religious and lay, from youth
councils to parish assemblies, from formation houses to mission fields—we
recommit to the synodal journey. We plant ourselves firmly on the foundations
laid in Turin—and at the oratory in Valdocco—but look ahead into the promise.
The Jubilee Year 2025 is not the end of a journey—it is a
new beginning. As we walk this synodal path—with the Salesian Family, with
young people, with the Church universal—let us carry with us the memory of our
founders, the courage of our predecessors, and the joy of the Gospel.
May Don Bosco, Mary Help of Christians, and all
Salesian saints accompany us. May our unity, our shared mission, and our
synodal way renew Don Bosco’s dream, transforming lives for generations to
come.
"The Salesian Family does not walk alone. Together, in communion with the Church, we walk the path of renewal, fraternity, and mission—faithful to the dream that once began in a humble oratory in Turin, now blossoming across the world."
Bibliography 
- Alencherry,
     Francis. Homily on Exodus 1:8 (July 14, 2025). Salesian Province of
     Kolkata, July 14, 2025.
- Attard,
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     Community, July 12, 2025.
- Bozzolo, Andrea, and Eunan McDonnell. "The
     Synodal Method in the General Chapter," Salesian Bulletin
     (Turin), March 4, 2025.
- Salesian
     Congregation. GC29: Working Document. South Asia Province. 2024.
- Salesian
     Congregation. "Chapter Members Working on the Three Core Themes of
     GC29." Salesian Bulletin, March 7, 2025.
- Salesian
     Congregation. "GC29: Walking Together with Unity and a Synodal
     Method." ANS – Turin, March 3, 2025.
- Vatican
     Council II. Lumen Gentium and Apostolicam Actuositatem.
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     https://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/messages/lent/documents/20250206‑messaggio‑quaresima2025.html
- Vatican II. Gaudium
     et Spes. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1965.
- Vatican II. Gravissimum
     Educationis. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 1965.
 
 
 
 
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