Mailnews_old

Views 453 Votes 0 Comment 0
?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print
?

Shortcut

PrevPrev Article

NextNext Article

Larger Font Smaller Font Up Down Go comment Print
austraLasia #1874

Fr Shirieda's moving story of conversion

ROME: 12th June 2007 -- Fr John Bosco Shirieda is reported on www.sdb.org to have died at the age of 75, at the UPS in Rome, on 10th June.  The outline that follows however, is from his own hand, and signed in Tokyo, 1998.  It is a moving story, one which needs to be abbreviated here for obvious reasons.
    "Japan, 15th August 1945, the end of World War II.  I had lost everything: my father, an infantry commander, had died in the camps in China back in 1937. Our home in Kagoshima was burned to the ground under the furious final American bombardments.  At one point I dreamed of following my father in a glorious military career, but this dream was long since dead. I also lost a best friend at Hiroshima.
    The task was to rebuild life modestly, and that had to start with somewhere to live.  There was wood aplenty in Japan after the war - but no nails! One day I tried taking a handful from a Catholic church in Miyakonojo, being built with the help of American soldiers.  On the one hand I disliked stealing.  On the other it was absolutely necessary and then again, to steal from these hated foreigners (and more so from Catholics), who had destroyed my life's dreams seemed almost a good thing.
    So there I was with more nails than I could carry - all going well, when I felt a hand on my shoulder. It was a white man, a priest. I imagined myself, hands and feet bound, shut up in prison. I immediately thought of my mother who had called me 'Masayuki', the 'just one', and who had taught me to be honest. My worst thought was what this theft would mean to her, so I cried out, spontaneously, 'Sir, do what you like with me, but don't tell my mother'!  As a response the man put his hands in the drawer where the nails were, gave me some and sent me off without a word about Christianity. All he said was 'If you need more, come back'!  I went home flabbergasted. That night I saw his face in my dreams teaching me to GIVE - in that post war period when everyone in Japan was taking.
    So the day after I returned to find the priest.  I told him I was putting aside thoughts of being a general in the Imperial Army and instead wanted to learn to be like him. I would never have said I wanted to be a Christian though!  But what I saw in him was a teacher of life.  He was a witness to it.
    I did receive baptism at some point after that, without understanding much at all of the Christian mysteries but for one thing - the Christian is one who looks to God alone who is love as Christ was. He offers his own life for the salvation of others.  That missionary's name was Fr Adino Roncato (from Venice) and I am in debt to that life of grace.
    During a fire in Tokyo (our own technical school) he rushed into the flames to save a friend of mine, and died amongst those flames, embracing the young Japanese he had gone to save. Don Adino was reduced to a handful of ashes.  He used say, when he was alive, 'Masayuki, I would like to become a part of your Japanese soil', and that's what he became, literally. That was when I saw, for the first time, the example of a life consumed for God's love.
    I decided, then, to become a second Don Adino, a Salesian and priest like him. That's why I ended up in Italy, and became his mother's adopted son. Rosa died in my arms 20 years later, on the same day her son had died."
    The story goes on, but to sum it up, Fr Shirieda points out that his brother became a Salesian, and priest, his sister an FMA, and his mother became a Catholic and Salesian Cooperator.
    He puts it all down to the fruitfulness of one who 'did not ask what he could expect from life but what life could expect from him - and gave it'.
    And now Fr Shirieda himself has followed his beloved Don Adino into the loving arms of the Father. He was in Rome from 1974/5 until his death. He was undersecretary of the Pontifical Council for Inter-religious Dialogue for 25 years and a professor at the UPS.

    _________________ 
 AustraLasia is an email service for the Salesian Family of Asia Pacific.  It also functions as an agency for ANS based in Rome.  For queries please contact admin@bosconet.aust.com . Use BoscoWiki to be interactive. RSS feeds - subscribe to www.bosconet.aust.com/RSS/rssala.xm   Avail yourself of the Salesian Digital Library at at http://sdl.sdb.orgTo contact austraLasia by voice on Skype, the Skype name is austraLasia

List of Articles
No. Category Subject Views
1870 Cambodia 1333_Crossing over: preview a WYD initiative from Phnom Penh 465
1869 GIA 1795_Japan launches cosmetic line after Artemides Zatti! 465
1868 Pac. 2044_It never rains - it pours! Happy feast day amidst a small miracle of (vocational) abundance 465
1867 FIN 2293_A Date with Student-Leaders 465
1866 World 2324_Some (very) useful material 465
1865 CIN 2357_School managers Day in Hong Kong 465
1864 FIS 2623_An Easter moment of hope in Pakistan 465
1863 0026_Missing 466
1862 World 0127_BISHOPS DO NOT HAVE MONOPOLY OF EVANGELIZATION 466
1861 RMG 0320_SALESIAN APPOINTED AS COADJUTOR ARCHBISHOP OF BELGRADE 466
1860 GIA 0805_JAPAN MEETING CONCLUDES WITH A TOUR OF TOKYO SALESIAN PLACES 466
1859 KOR 0838_Seoul-based Cooperator Congress a Winner 466
1858 KOR 1206_ Korean 'special school' camps. Korea's entire delinquent cohort knows Don Bosco! 466
1857 FIN 1393_Philippines under attack 466
1856 RMG 2076_Passion, and the spirituality of our charism 466
1855 AUL 2188_WYD08 - Pilgrims arrive at Salesian College Chadstone, Melbourne 466
1854 AUL 2342_Media-savvy SUE Hits its Mark 466
1853 PGS 2606_EAO Provincials meeting in Moresby 466
1852 World 2747_It's Michael Rua's moment 466
1851 FIN 2786_DB’S Visit to the FIN: Reminiscences and Reflections, Why and Wherefore 466
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 ... 177 Next
/ 177