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John
Cagliero was the first missionary that Don Bosco sent to
Patagonia
…but let’s take a step
back…
Cagliero
was born in Castelnuovo d’Asti on January 11, 1838.
He was received by Don Bosco in the Oratory in 1851.
He became a Salesian on May 14, 1862.
A month later he was ordained a priest in
Turin
and appointed spiritual
director of the Oratory. He
soon showed an exceptional talent for music which was the delight of the
Oratory. Even such composers
as Giuseppe Verdi and Lorenzi Perosi praised his art.
Cagliero
obtained his doctorate in theology at the
University
of
Turin
in 1873; the following year
Don Bosco appointed him spiritual director of the Daughters of Mary,
Help of Christians. Cagliero
is best remembered as an intrepid missioner.
In 1875 he led the first group of Salesian missionaries to
Argentina
, where they carried out
their ministry to the Italian immigrants of
Buenos Aires
.
Soon, however, Fr Cagliero penetrated the interior of Patagonia
and
Tierra del Fuego
.
Then he opened a trade school at Almagro and another at Villa
Colon, Uruguay. He was
recalled to
Turin
in 1877 to become spiritual
director of the Congregation, an office he fulfilled until 1884, when
Pope Leo XIII nominated him vicar apostolic of northern and central
Patagonia
.
He was the first Salesian bishop and was consecrated in the
Basilica of Mary, Help of Christians in
Turin
on December 7, 1884, in the
presence of Don Bosco. Immediately
afterward he returned to South America and was welcomed by Fr Joseph
Fagnano, with whom he explored
Tierra del Fuego
, meeting up with the various
Indian tribes. In 1887 he
crossed the Andes to inaugurate the first Salesian house in
Chile
, at
Concepcion
.
In December of that year he returned to
Turin
to assist Don Bosco on his
deathbed.
After
Don Bosco’s death Bishop Cagliero returned to
Argentina
.
Years later, in 1908, he founded
Patagonia
’s first hospital at Viedma.
Pope St Pius X appointed him minister plenipotentiary of
Costa Rica
and apostolic delegate to
the countries of
Central America
.
In 1915 Pope Benedict XV nominated him cardinal and assigned him
to the Sacred Congregations of Religious, Propagation of the Faith and
Sacred Rites. In 1920 he was
named bishop of Frascati.
He
died in
Rome
in 1926.
In June 1964 his remains were brought back to
Argentina
and solemnly laid to rest in
the cathedral of Viedma, his first Episcopal residence.
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