Salesian
Lay Missioners
The Salesian Lay Missioners (SLMs) is a Catholic association
of men and women, seeking to answer God’s missionary call
in their own lives by dedicating themselves to works of education,
evangelization and human development among poor youth.
SLMs share in the tradition, prayer, work, family spirit, community
life and educational method of the Salesians of Don Bosco, while
living in community with Salesians and other missioners. SLMs
work in various projects to provide an educational experience
for young people and are committed to be, above all, Christian
witnesses.
BEGINNINGS
In November, 1981,
Fr. Dominic DeBlase, SDB, then Provincial of the New Rochelle
Province, began the process of establishing a lay volunteer
program to provide generous young people the opportunity to
collaborate with Salesians both in the home and foreign missions.
He sent Fr. A.J. Louis to the Fourth Annual Conference of the
International Liaison of Lay Volunteers in Mission to investigate
what other groups were doing and to learn from their experience
in establishing a lay volunteer program. After learning of the
strengths and weaknesses of other programs, the obstacles they
met and overcame, as well as the success stories of other groups,
Fr. Louis began the work of establishing what we now call the
Salesian Lay Missioners.
Before
recruiting the first lay volunteers, Fr. Louis visited Salesian
houses in Africa and South America, to see first hand some possible
mission sites where he could send the missioners. Then the difficult
work of convincing Provincials of other provinces, as well as
Directors of local communities that would receive the volunteers,
began. It was important that a firm foundation was established
so that the expectations of the volunteers and the receiving
communities would be met.
SALESIANS
WORLDWIDE COMMIT TO LAY INVOLVEMENT
Having found support for the proposed program
in missions lands, Fr. Louis next spoke with members of the
Salesian General council. While supportive of the concept, the
members were cautious in declaring support for the program,
advising a watch and see position before being willing to issue
guidelines for provinces to follow. However, Fr. Vigano, the
Superior General, wrote to Fr. DeBlase encouraging him to be
fully supportive of the program.
Further support of the Lay Missioners program came with the
publication of Fr. Vigano’s treatises: “The Lay
Element in the Salesian Community” (1980) and, “The
Advancement of the Lay Person in the Salesian Family.”
(1986)With the publication of these documents, it was clear
that the Salesian congregation was to commit itself to more
inclusive ministry with the laity serving as an integral element
of any Salesian work.
The
Salesian Family Strenna of 1986 further reinforced the direction
the congregation was moving when all Salesians were encouraged
“To foster the Vocation of Lay Persons to Work Among the
Young according to the Spirit of Don Bosco.”
FIRST MISSIONERS COMMISSIONED
After months of preparation
the first missioners
were commissioned for service in 1982. During the first
six years, nineteen lay missioners served in Santo Domingo,
Bolivia, Columbia, and Peru.
In 1987, Bro. John Cussen, SDB became the Director of the Salesian
Lay Missioners Program. Under his leadership, the orientation/formation
program expanded. The extended preparation of the missioners
before going on mission helped them in their transition into
a new country and culture. During 1988, seven Lay Missioners
replaced or joined others already working in Columbia, Bolivia,
and Santo Domingo. The next year, two missioners were missioned
to Proyecto Salesiano Tijuana to assist the members of the Guadalajara
Province in Mexico in their work with the young people in the
shanty towns of Tijuana.
Fr. Jerry Sesto, SDB and Fr. Richard McCormick, SDB began directing
the program in 1989. They found that more and more enthusiastic
young men and women were expressing an interest in serving in
the missions. Under their leadership, the screening process
for lay missioners was more formalized and streamlined, making
it a true vocational discernment process.
In
the following years, Lay Missioners joined Salesian Communities
in Chile, Ecuador, Bolivia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea,
Japan, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, and St. Petersburg, Russia. Additionally,
the program accepted lay missioners from other countries to
work in the United States. Missioners from Mexico, Lithuania,
the Czech Republic, and Slovenia began service in New York,
New Jersey, Massachusetts, Florida, and Alabama.