Salesian schools
Salesian schools is a generic term apeducational institutions run by the Roman Catholic Salesian Congregation of Saint John Bosco (or Don Bosco), and those that use his methods. Salesian schools are dedicated to young people in an educational and formative environment. According to promoters, a Salesian school is a house, church, playground, and school where students find a new way of life, and prepare for their future as good citizens of their country, while being faithful to their own religion.
The Preventive System
The figure at the center of a Salesian school is Saint John Bosco or Don Bosco, who is also known as "Father, teacher, and friend of the youth." Don Bosco was a 19th-century visionary from Italy who created a system of education for boys and girls from marginalized areas of society. For Don Bosco, "Prevention" meant helping a youth before he or she gets into trouble. The Salesian school system can be applied to remote villages of Congo with farm boys, or in the busiest avenues of New York City with urban youth. Don Bosco's system has three aspects: loving kindness; reason, and religion. These three aspects have been the object of studies by scholars throughout the 20th century.
Salesian schools strive for strict discipline and order, while avoiding any kind of physical punishment, however, in his book The Devil's Advocate - Child abuse and the men in black, author and former Salesian pupil Graham Wilmer MBE, describes the levels of violence he and other pupils suffered at the hands of Salesian priests in Salesian schools In the British Salesian Province.[1] In Latin America, the Salesians have been a key factor in the formation of national curricula, while helping provide street children with an education. Salesian schools create an environment where children want to belong to. The Salesian school system involves the family, as the system holds that family and background are as important as a student's performance in school. Salesian schools give a lot of importance to Parents Associations and other groups where parents are invited to participated.
Culture
Operating in 124 countries, the Salesian system could be viewed as a kind of "globalized" education, imposing the same concepts. Although culture was very important to Don Bosco, he respected local and national identities. What can be considered global is the system itself with Don Bosco at its center, however, every Salesian school keeps its own cultural identity. For these reasons, Salesian schools have been welcomed in 124 countries, even in non-Christian nations. There are Salesian schools in countries such as Pakistan, India, Papua New Guinea, and Cambodia, where Islam,(Hinduism) and Buddhism are dominant. Those countries not only recognized the value and quality of a Salesian education, but many of them invited the Salesians to settle in their countries to educate their youth.
Past Pupils
The Don Bosco Past Pupils alumni association demonstrate what Salesian schools mean to their former students. When Don Bosco was alive, his former pupils honored him with gratitude, and many wanted to give something in exchange. A large number became very important benefactors of the Salesian's work around the globe, while others joined in efforts to benefit new generations.
See also
Salesian School (disambiguation) for list of schools.