Kontakty Polaków z księdzem Janem Bosko

dc.contributor.authorSzczerba, Kazimierz
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-07T09:06:00Z
dc.date.available2026-01-07T09:06:00Z
dc.date.issued1988
dc.description.abstractIt is officially assumed that the Salesian Society, founded by St. John Bosco, opened its first house in Poland in 1898, at Oświęcim. Several years before, in 1892, Father Bronislaw Markiewicz had been sent to Poland from Turin, but he later broke contact with the Salesians and established his own congregation. Yet even before the Salesians came to Poland there had been links between Poles and Don Bosco. It is these early links that are the subject of this article. How did people in Poland learn about Don Bosco? The news was transmitted orally or through correspondence with the Saint; there also were biographies of Don Bosco published in Poland still in his lifetime. Much information about his activities appeared in the Salesian Bulletin, sent out to the Society’s benefactors, members of the family of Salesian Cooperators. As we can learn from the extant letters, which are the main source for this analysis, there were many Salesian Cooperators among Poles, probably even a few thousand. Further information about Don Bosco’s educational work was brought by returning pupils to whom he had given shelter in his schools. According to tradition, they came from among Polish emigrants who had to leave Poland after the anti-Russian rising of 1863. Also other young Poles who were looking for a better life abroad sometimes found their way to Don Bosco’s hospice. A few tried to embrace the religious life with the Salesians, but they later left the Society. Urged by numerous requests, Don Bosco even considered opening hospices in Poland, but he was unable to do so for lack of personnel. We know four priests of Polish nationality who had close links with Don Bosco. One later became a secular priest, another set up his own congregation. The remaining two are the pride of Polish Salesians. Prince August Czartoryski, who died prematurely, is a candidate for beatification. The self-sacrificing life of Father Wiktor Grabelski prepared the ground for new vocations which marked the beginning of Polish Salesians’ expansive growth in their own country.
dc.identifier.citationSeminare, 1987-1988, Tom 9, s. 111-137.
dc.identifier.issn1232-8766
dc.identifier.urihttps://theo-logos.pl/handle/123456789/40352
dc.language.isopol
dc.publisherWyższe Seminaria Duchowne Towarzystwa Salezjańskiego
dc.rightsCC-BY-ND - Uznanie autorstwa - Bez utworów zależnych
dc.subjectPolacy
dc.subjectJan Bosko
dc.subjectsalezjanie
dc.subjectkorespondencja
dc.subjectkorespondencja Polaków z Janem Bosko
dc.subjectkontakty Jana Bosko z Polakami
dc.subjectsalezjanie polscy
dc.subjectZgromadzenie Salezjańskie
dc.subjectkapłani
dc.subjectDon Bosco
dc.subjectPoles
dc.subjectJohn Bosco
dc.subjectSalesians
dc.subjectcorrespondence
dc.subjectcorrespondence of Poles with John Bosco
dc.subjectJohn Bosco’s contacts with Poles
dc.subjectPolish Salesians
dc.subjectSalesian Congregation
dc.subjectpriests
dc.titleKontakty Polaków z księdzem Janem Bosko
dc.title.alternativePolish Contacts With Don Bosco
dc.typeArticle

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