[1554]
I have been very busy: this is the reason for my delay in writing. We are sending you a report of our expedition. Your Excellency will do what he pleases with it: if you think we would do well to choose L’Unita Cattolica to print it, it seems to me this will help make our Work better known and make it easier to spread knowledge of the Association of the Good Shepherd. I hope you will consider choosing our beloved Fr Stanislao as editor. This young missionary with a facility and aptness of expression combines spirit and apostolic application, and is highly aware of the sublime nature of his ministry. So it is up to you, Your Excellency, to make whatever modifications you see fit.
[1555]
Good Fr Stanislao has spoken too highly of the part which, through the grace of God, I have played in the Work; I am blushing, because I know some of my own failings; woe betide me if everyone should get to know them! What is positively certain is that if Your Excellency’s great heart had not prompted you to make yourself head of the Work, neither the little Seminary in Verona nor the Work of the Good shepherd would exist, nor would this expedition have been made. After your Excellency took a hand in it, our African work received every blessing. All the crosses which it has encountered and will encounter are a sign of the grace of God with which he marks his works; they are a feature of his blessing on its instruments, and I am moved by this to thank the hand that mortifies and enlivens them while he puts the work itself and those who manage it to the test. May your kindness to us continue, please pray and have prayers said for us. We received your venerable letter of 20th December last with supreme pleasure.
[1556]
I am quite pleased that we have arranged a rental of about 200 florins with Conte Campagna. Before agreeing the rent for the Maronites’ Convent I looked at many houses: two to three hundred gold napoleons a year were mentioned. I had to settle on this convent because of the church there, the great courtyard, and what is most important, the possibility of establishing the absolute division between the two Institutes, which is necessary to guarantee that our good name in the eyes of the public. Although the Viceroy of Egypt is laden with debts and has not paid his employees for more than a year, we shall nonetheless study a way of getting the use of some of his houses free, and so be able to save on rent. The present moment for a great many reasons is not at all appropriate. The Pasha is spoken of badly everywhere here, and there is a general discontent among his subjects and among the Europeans.
[1557]
He spent millions and millions of pounds sterling to buy the right of succession to the throne of Egypt for his family and successors from the Sultan. It has fallen on the Egyptians to have to pay everything: trade has come to a standstill, cotton is at its lowest price because of the American war; in short, the Pasha who as the major trader has suffered the greatest loss, has retired, he keeps the Europeans and those who eat beside him as far away as possible, and gives less and less freely than before. Praised be the Lord! I have determined to obtain both housing and food free, and I am busily pursuing this end. We pray, we recite Novenas; if it isn’t today, it will be tomorrow, in the coming year, or in the coming next five years, that we will reach our goal. Pray for this goal, and we will obtain the grace.
[1558]
I consider that it would be good if Your Most Reverend Excellency and Fr Dalbosco (very well known to the Cologne Association) were to get in touch with that committee; indeed, it is essential. But I do not think it appropriate that you ask for subsidies for the little Seminary in Verona, because your request will certainly be refused, since the Association’s purpose is not this, but to teach Africans on the coasts of Africa. When I went to Cologne last year, I asked if the Association had contributed to the foundation of the planned Seminary. I was told no, which is why I conceived founding the Association ad hoc, which we then named “of the Good Shepherd”. When the Cologne Association has become stronger, then we will make it make some exceptions, as I did, when it made the exception of donating money for the journey. Everything depends on the successful functioning of the Egyptian Institutes which will cause resources in Cologne to increase. Furthermore, you may be sure that the work of the Good Shepherd will take root. Before the Bishops can give an answer it is necessary to see whether the work can put down roots in the diocese; usually it takes a year. The great difficulty is at the beginning.
[1559]
The Society for the Schools of the East, the Cologne Association and the Propagation of the Faith to begin with have done almost nothing. We trust in God and in the blessing issued by his Vicar, and you will see that everything will succeed. I hope that it will not be long before I can also give you news of the Association of the Good Shepherd in many European and American dioceses. In time, when the first Bulletin of the Annals appears, you will see that the spirit will be aroused. It is true that times are difficult and that human society is confused and overwhelmed; but it is also true that manus Dei non est abbreviata, and that while hell is striving to destroy, the hand of the Almighty succeeds in building. We must break the devil’s horns, and grace will not be lacking.
[1560]
Fr Dalbosco writes to me of the African girl in Novara: African girls educated in convents and who have had good results are extremely useful to us. I would therefore be pleased were you to accept her. May I suggest to you a supreme opportunity for this purpose. We are in need of convent-educated African girls. But further we are doing a favour to the convents by accepting their African girls, as beings of a different kind from the nuns who are in Europe. Therefore, with a gentle approach, it would be good to ensure that the convents who offer African girls should assume the cost of the journey. Harsh necessity has taught this to me, who obtained 1,000 francs from each of the German African girls and from the Venetians, 300 svanzigs. When the delicacy of Your Excellency’s relationships with those offering African girls does not prevent it, you could get yourself paid for the journey. If the African of Novara goes via Marseilles, it would be better for her to stay in Novara until the time of her departure. I submit all this to your opinion since all you do is sanctioned in coelo et in terra.
[1561]
As for the Institut d’Afrique, I believe it would be useful for you to accept the honorary presidency, and for the African Work which you head to issue the annual 25 francs: I assure you that the first time I go to Paris, you will pay nothing. The Institut d’Afrique’s aspirations are also to help us, but when the Institute is firmly established. It cannot do so now, and if you are an honorary president you have the right, when the occasion arises, to try to obtain subsidies for our African Institutes. Everything the Institut d’Afrique receives is now absorbed by correspondence and by the present American movement. When later on we are in the position of founding a Seminary in Paris, we will have valid support from the Institut d’Afrique against either French or religious excesses of selfishness.
[1562]
I shall reply to the most important point of the Canossian Sisters and Daughters of Charity of St Vincent, mentioned by Fr Alessandro. But today I do not have time. Our worthy Missionaries kiss your hand. We are in an Eden of peace: what one wants, so does the other. And the cause of it all is that those three gentlemen who were accustomed to suffer so many sick people, are able to use many kindnesses and goodness to me who am morally sick. Fr Zanoni is the soul of the House within, and uses great charity with the sick outside it. At home, he is doctor, teacher, carpenter, blacksmith-locksmith, painter, everything. Full of ability, patience, energy, he is everywhere and for everyone. I cannot explain in any way the antipathy which Pietro Bertoli had for him, whom I decisively sent back from Marseilles. A large dose of pride certainly dominated that heart.
[1563]
We are happy amongst the crosses that the Lord sends us through not having received a subsidy from Cologne. But we shall be twice as happy on the day we can embrace our dear Fr Tezza. The Sisters have great dévouement. The Superior is an angel of tenderness, goodness and humility. The 16 African girls, thanks be to God, are all doing well and are firmly grounded in piety. However, those who are most useful to us are those who were educated at the Mazza Institute, where in addition to better and broader teaching, they are capable of putting up with more, and more easily adapt to the wretchedness, efforts and work. As regards home economy, one from the Mazza Institute is worth more than the other seven we have from the four other convents. Nonetheless the piety of these seven African girls is such that we are sure they will be steadfast and constant in their good habits. We implore your goodness to procure Unità Cattolica and Civiltà Cattolica for us.We only know a little of what is going on in the world so we would be glad to receive them even if they are sent to us after having been read and re-read. I did write to Fr Alessandro about this, but I beg you to put in a good word, so that some good soul will consent to grant our wishes. Even the Veneto Cattolico would be highly appreciated. Briefly, we beg you. In due course I shall send you an exact report of everything, of the Administration, of our current internal and external regulations, etc. But first you must make Cologne cough up!
[1564]
On the 12th of last month, His Eminence Cardinal de Pietro gave a talk in order to establish the Association of the Good Shepherd in Rome. There are many members: I hope that by now the council has been formed in Rome. In Marseilles too, the sublime soul, Mlle. Martiny is working to set up the diocesan Council, and I have good news. Bourg-en-Bresse in the Diocese of Beley has increased its 120 members through the work of Mlle. Eugénie Cabuchet. Until now I have no more recent news. We trust in God who is a holy father. The Holy Father, if what they write me from Rome is true, has established an Apostolic Visitor in the Viperesche Convent of M.V., who is deeply mortified. He (Mgr Vicegerent) has declared that since his convent had incurred great expenses and losses for the African girls, he is doing me a favour by contenting himself to demand from me only 1,500 scudi. At the very most he will relinquish some of the sheets provided by Vimercati. It seems that he has bought off my legal representative; but in this way he is making matters worse for himself: poor M.V.! St Philip was certainly right when he prayed to God to keep His hands on his head lest he become a Turk!
[1565]
Give all my respects to Marchese Ottavio and family; if the Marchesina Matilde would like other postage stamps I will send her some; give my regards to Mgr. the V. G., Perbellini, Fr Vincenzo ad Fr Al. Aldegheri, and the good and elegant Giovannino with all the members of the family. It seems tome that it would be a good thing to send the Decree, the Programme, the Plan and everything to be printed about the work to Her Majesty the Empress, the wife of Ferdinand, together with the Holy Father’s Letter of Indulgences. I think that Your Excellency has such a good relationship with Her Majesty the most pious Empress that you could make her become a most effective auxiliary to the Work. We all respectfully kiss your hand. Bless us every day, and accept every single one of our hearts, as the hearts of your most affectionate sons, and of your most unworthy but no less fervent son
Fr Daniel Comboni
I am sending you a picture showing a sister dressed in the costume of the kind worn by sisters we have in Old Cairo who are dedicated to our Work. Fr Zanoni repeats his request that you write to Mgr Cavriani.