The Salesian Sisters are the living monuments of Don Bosco's gratitude to 'Mary, Help of
Christians' for his vocation to be the bearer of God's love to the indigent and ignored
juveniles. Not long since the birth of his Congregation when the sororial Order took shape
and substance of the same mission, Don Bosco called them the 'Daughters of Mary, Help of
Christians'.
Started an hundred and twenty five years ago from the most unexpected roots, these Sisters
have shown a remarkable resilience and though years have flown by, they have not distanced
nor detached themselves from their lineage. Rather, with an affectionate fidelity to their
authentic charismatic co-foundress Mother Mazzarello, an unlettered and unostentatious
soul, they have reached the threshold of the third millennium with great creative
fecundity in spirit.
Mary Mazzarello, the Co-Foundress and their inspiration in early years, was enthusiastic
but was prematurely burdened with many physical ailments culminating in contracting even
the deadly typhoid fever while attending to a sick relative. Having had anchored herself
on a strong personal love for Jesus Christ and His Blessed Mother, she had already heard
in her teens the call of the Master to follow Him to care for the poor young girls around
her. Her call of close affinity with Christ had a special manifestation in that she shared
her closeness with her companions which evinced as expressions of loving service to the
displaced and distressed young ones around them. Her charisma was similar to that of
another Piomontese, 22 years older than her, John Bosco, the founder, father and teacher
of the Salesians.
John Bosco had lost his father when just a tiny tot of two and a half but under the care
of a brave, loving and sensible mother Margret full of home-spun Christian values and
virtues from an agrarian background, he grew up into a boy healthy in body and
enterprising in mind. Even as early as that tender age of sprightly nine, the divine
design was divulged unto Bosco in a dream - to care for and reform the wayward young ones.
The providential meeting of Mary Mazarello with John Bosco, now a priest and a
full-fledged social worker, in October 1864 was like the confluence of two rivulets to
form a commendable channel of charismatic current, which today we see as the Salesian
Movement. Mary had already been initiated into the Community by her discerning parish
priest, Don Pestarino, who himself would later become a spiritual son and admirer of Don
Bosco. Mary Mazarello knew instinctively that Don Bosco was a kindred spirit and took him
for her model in her mission among the young girls in need.
Don Bosco was hesitant in the beginning to start a woman's wing to work among the
capricious, divested and disturbed young ones but Mary, Help of Christians, herself
intervened in a dream. The Holy Father confirmed, Don Bosco's council approved the
formation and on August 5, 1872, the fresh Salesaian shoot sprouted with the profession of
fifteen highly motivated and deeply committed daughters to keep Our Lord's vast vineyard
clean, healthy and fruitful. Since then the Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians, have
multiplied in geometric proportion as their 20th general chapter in 1996 did demonstrate.
At this general chapter there were delegates from nearly 85 provinces from all over the
world - a convincing testimony to their fidelity through years for over a century and a
quarter!
Rt. Rev. Dr. Joseph Kureethara had absolute faith in his conviction that God has His own
ways of doing things in the fullness of time. An opening to go through the personal notes
of His Excellency on how he longed to have a convent of Salesian Sisters' Congregation to
cope with the tides of time of the Diocese and how His Excellency chanced to initiate
moves to institute one will surely be a real treat.
On April10, 1983, His Excellency was hastening out of the Bishop's House to attend a
function when he noticed a Sister hurrying to Shalom within the compound to address the
girls attending a vocation camp. On seeing the Bishop, the Rev. Sister moved straight up
to him and introduced herself as Sr. Elizabeth Cyril F.M.A., a Salesian. Though a shepherd
of crowded hours and under pressure just then to make haste, His Excellency could not help
but pause right there to borrow some precious moments to convey his long relished reverie
on a Salesian Convent in the Diocese.
Well, that was the time and there was the one brought right before him. " I told her
straight away that I desired to establish a Salesian Convent at Palluruthy near the
Salesian Monastery. Rev. Fr. Varghese Menachery is running the Sneha Bhavan for boys from
around Cochin City. But there is no one to do similar work for the poor girls here",
so run the lines recorded in his diary.
Delighted at the unanticipated turn, Sr. Elizabeth Cyril gave His Excellency the address
of their Mother Provincial in Madras. The very next month the Bishop wrote to Rev. Mother
Philomina Prabalanathan, the Provincial. In November the same year the Provincial and four
Sisters arrived at the Bishop's House accompanied by Rev. Fr. Vargheese Menachery. Elated
at this positive response, the Bishop himself took them to Palluruthy. His Excellency
showed the site he had in mind, a plot of an acre and twenty-three cents at Nadakkal on
the southern side of Binny Company which the Bishop promised then and there as gift to the
Community of Salesian Sisters.
Regarding the site, there is an engaging entry in the personal chronicle of the Bishop. In
His Excellency's own words: "God has His ways of doing things. I had desired so much
to have a cloistered convent in the diocese. I had acquaintance with the Poor Clares of
Alwaye. But I didn't have the courage to invite them. Then I thought I could easily
approach V. Rev. Mother Tequila Famigliety, Mother General of the Bridgittine Sisters in
Rome. On 16th December 1980, she came to visit me together with Sr. Sophy Puthenpurackal.
This is a semi-cloistered Order. So I invited her to see the site near Binny Company at
Palluruthy. She liked the place and promised to take it. I was quite sure that soon I
would have a semi-cloistered convent of the Bridgittine Sisters in Cochin Diocese.
"But to my great disappointment I received a letter from Mother Tekla informing me
that her General Council did not approve of a second House in Cochin. Their first House at
Kalamassery now comes within the Corporation of Cochin. I felt disappointed and wrote to
Mother Tekla on January 7, 1982, thus - 'Thank you for not coming to Cochin diocese; God
will give me something better'. Later on I met Mother Tekla in Rome and she repeated the
sentence that I had written. By that time the Carmelite Cloistered Sisters from Thiruvalla
had already started building their convent at Eramalloor. So I told Mother Tekla that God
had given me a fully cloistered Convent instead of a semi - cloistered one!"
Thus the property at Palluruthy was free to be donated to the Salesian Sisters and the
Provincial Council at Madras approved His Excellency's request on 9th November 1983. The
Golden Jubilee of the Canonization of St. John Bosco befell in 1984 and so the Salesians
too desired this foundation in Cochin to cherish as a special gift of St. John Bosco. Sr.
Philomina wrote in January 1984 to confirm that she received a positive response from
their Generalate in Rome and thereupon made arrangements with Fr. Vargheese Menachery to
purchase a strip of land adjacent to the plot assigned by the Diocese.
Formal request to the Provincial for the institution of a House of the Salesian Sisters at
Palluruthy was dispatched on 22nd February, 1984 and a speedy approval was returned to the
Diocese on the first of the following month. Further steps moved fast and the gift deed of
the property was registered and the agreement between Bishop of Cochin and the Provincial
was signed on June 18, 1984. Soon the construction of the compound wall commenced and it
was completed in August the same year. An adjacent property with a house was also bought
by the Community.
His Excellency fell ill on 26th August 1984 and was taken to Kottiyam hospital on
September six but remained indisposed from that October onwards. In the meantime the
Community moved to Palluruthy on September 25 and occupied a house on the adjacent plot
they had bought. Though the Bishop was taken again to Kottiyam he came back to the
Bishop's House on the 14th November, 1985. While at Kottiyam hospital, the Salesian
Sisters reached him to receive his blessings which His Excellency had to bestow on them
reclining on bed.
The foundation was to be laid on 19th December, 1984 but His Excellecny's condition
continued to be indisposed. Still the Sisters wanted Bishop Dr. Joseph Kureethara himself
to bless the stone. His Excellency was carried by two priests to the car and again taken
out by them from the car onto a chair. Thus reaching the site where the foundation stone
was to be laid, the Bishop blessed the stone and the Mother Provincial laid it. When the
construction of the Convent building was completed in 1988, the solemn blessing of the
House was performed by His Excellency Dr. Joseph Kureethara on 28th November that year at
which the Mother General Marinella Castagno was also present.
On 2nd June, 1987, ten girls were accepted into the convent in the presence of the Bishop
of Cochin, the District Collector Mr. Venu Gopal IAS., some Salesian Fathers and several
people, both public and private, of the locality. These girls between the ages five and
fifteen were destitutes brought to the Re-settlement, belonging to Cochin Corporation by
the police and thus the Home came to be known as "Prathyaasa Bhavan". The
inmates who had an aptitude to study were sent to educational institutions and those who
were unable to proceed with their academic pursuit were given the option to learn trades
like Dress Making, Machine Embroidery and Type Writing.
Over an hundred girls have already been admitted to the Bahaven in these past years and at
present there are 49. Those who have completed the S.S.L.C. are given option and
opportunity to continue their academic course or a professional one according to their
aptitude and inclination. These dear unfortunate ones are provided recreational, cultural
and vocational education, special tuition classes, singing and dancing lessons - all
contributing to proper formation of personality and an all round wholesome growth. Indeed
they find in Prathyaasa Bhavan a family atmosphere which they have been denied and thus
have missed out in their lives earlier.
In 1987 the Salesian Sisters started a secretarial course with a few girls, which still
continues. They also had a P.D.C. and B.Com. Parallel College for girls which was closed
when St. Joseph's College started functioning at Thoppumpady. At present they have
N.C.V.T. Secretarial Course, K.G.T.E. and Machine Embroidery Classes.
On 26th January, 1991 their chapel was raised to a sub-station in the parish of St. Thomas
More, Palluruthy by His Excellency Rt. Rev. Dr. Joseph Kureethara to enable the Catholics
around to attend Sunday and daily Masses. They started conducting catechism classes for
Children from class I - XII. Besides to the blooming buds of the parish of St. Thomas
More, the Sisters give instrction in catechism at Madura Company surroundings and near by
parishes as and when the needs arise. They take part in the family apostolate through the
family units of respective prishes.
A kindergarten school started at the request of the local people in June 1992 has now
reached a strength of 350 pupils and the level of Standard VI and is awaiting the approval
by the Indian Council of School Education. There is also a successful unit of the Women's
Integral Development Society for small-scale savings under the Social Service Society of
Cochin Diocese.
Auxilium Centre aims at creating integrally formed, self-reliant, morally upright,
socially committed women who will live with their God-given dignity as women and as
Christians and agents of social change in their own surroundings through their educative
and friendly presence using reason and loving kindness of the method of St. John Bosco,
their founder and St. Mary Mazzarello, their co-foundress. They hope to be effective
messengers of God's love to the young people of the area. They are grateful to their
pastor and Bishop for all his paternal loving care and concern for them.
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