In the meantime, Don Bosco had finished his postgraduate course of sacerdotal studies and was full-time employed in the work of the oratory (Youth Club). Soon he started offering shelter to destitute children who had nowhere to go. Thus in 1846 in his Sunday Oratory, there were over 600 boys while some 20 youngsters lodged with him. Don Bosco’s Mother “Mamma Margaret”, as the boys would affectionately call her, offered to
come to Turin and help him.
The young priest's ideal began to expand with rooms, no matter how small, at his disposal. He organized daily evening classes for arithmetic, drawing, geography and grammar. It was also at this time that this thorough-going teacher, finding it difficult to procure textbooks really suited to his boys commenced writing his own. The first was a History of the Church, and the second was The Metric Decimal System Simplified. They were followed by aHistory of Italy, a prayer book for young people, and others many of which went through many editions and attained enormous circulations.
As the number of boys in the oratory increased, Don Bosco started buying up more and more land around the tiny original building all with donations from his numerous benefactors in Italy and abroad. During 1847 a new oratory was founded by Don Bosco in another part of Turin. Two Years later it became necessary to open a third oratory to look after the swarm of boys who flocked to the two oratories. Although enlarged and reconstructed more than once the first building became quite inadequate. In 1856 it was demolished and an entirely new structure took its place. In 1853 two smallworkshops had been opened; one a shoemaker’s, the other a tailor’s for teaching the unemployed youngsters of the oratorya trade in order to provide them with the means of earning anhonest livelihood. A workshop for teaching carpentry was soon followed by others for book binding and cabinet making. Lastly, a modest printing press was founded which has since developedinto the great publishing house known all over the world by the name “SocietaEditriceInternazionale.”
All this while, from his “old boys” Don Bosco had been building up a society of men who would help him to develop his workand would carry it on when he died. In December 1859 theseyoung men were formed into a simple society for this purpose.
In May 1862, 22 of them took their vows of poverty, chastity and obedience thus forming a true religious congregation. In 1869this community was officially recognized by the Catholic Church and took the name of “Salesians” after St. Francis of Sales.
Don Bosco also founded a Congregation of religious nuns known as the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians to educate girls with the same methods as the Salesians used to educate the boys. Now, what is the method that Don Bosco and his Salesians used in order to educate boys? Don Bosco called it the ‘Preventive System’ and based it on REASON, RELIGION and KINDNESS.
The educator was to spend himself in the service of his pupils. He was to be reasonable in the demands he made on them, he was to teach them a deep love for truth and virtue and in all his dealings he was to be patient and kind with them. Don Bosco told his disciples that education was to be based on love and selfless service for his pupils' physical, mental, emotional, moral and spiritual growth. His title book The Preventive System in The Training of Youth forestalled by half a century the educational methods that were to be acclaimed as opening a new era whenmore fashionable educationalists “invented” them.
In 1875, he opened a branch in Patagonia, South America. By1876 there were 10 branches of the society, one of them in Nice, the first in the French territory, which was followed by a college in Marseilles in 1878. Soon the French foundation numbered as core and spread to Belgium. Together with the spread of Salesian Schools came also an increase in the number of Salesians. In 1880they numbered over 900.
Praises and triumphs greeted Don Bosco in the last years of his life. The government of Italy recognized him as an outstanding public benefactor, educationists sought his advice and profited from the system practiced in his school. Church authorities, including popes, regarded his work as providential, rightly fitting to the times' needs. A third branch of Don Bosco’s work grew under the name of the Salesian Co-operators. These were ordinary people in the world who helped Don Bosco’s work by means of Prayer and cooperation.
He lived to be 73. Not a great age: no, but his work was done. Soindefatigably had he worked that it was firmly established that he could no longer stand; his right hand was paralyzed. “Do you know where I could buy a new pair of bellows” he asked pointing to his lungs “for these won’t work much longer.” Hundreds of people, not counting his own spiritual family, were anxiously waiting for news from the sick room of the Oratory when he died. It was quarter to five in the morning of 31st January 1888. Don Bosco was declared a Saint of the Catholic Church on 1st April 1934.
Let us sum up the work of the farm boy of Becchi. The society he founded now numbers nearly 19000 members working in134 countries through 2,000 institutions. In India alone, there are 2000 Salesians serving the educational needs throughout the country. The Daughters of Mary Help of Christians have a membership of 19,000 and they work in 100 countries through1,500 institutions. The children educated by the Salesians and the Daughters of Mary Help of Christians are a legion. Countless young men and women, well established in society living useful to themselves and to their fellow beings offer ceaseless thanks toDon Bosco for having saved them from lives of crime and misery.
That is all, but then, that is all he wanted : to guide the young along the path of virtue and goodness.