St. Vitus
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by R.N Schachter
St. Vitus

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John was born in Italy in the nineteenth century. He was the son of a peasant farmer who died when John was two. At the age of nine, he had a dream that made clear his destiny: to help poverty-stricken urban youth. In his dream, he was surrounded by a gang of unruly street urchins whom he tried to control with reason and then with force. A mysterious lady appeared and said, 'Softly, softly if you wish to win them! Take your shepherd's staff and lead them to the pasture,” As she spoke, the children metamorphosed from wild animals into lambs. He entered the seminary at the age of sixteen, but was so destitute that members of his community, including the mayor, donated clothing to him. He was made a chaplain, and his first assignment was at a refuge for girls, This left him enough time on Sundays to work with underprivileged boys. But a matriarch who was a primary funder of the girls' refuge gave him an ultimatum, demanding that he stop moonlighting. So he quit the refuge and he and his mother, “Mamma Margaret,” began to take in street kids and care for them. This effort expanded into the Salesian Order, named after St. Francis de Sales, which focused on educating and providing opportunities for destitute boys. John was known to entertain the young men by performing magic tricks and acrobatics, and he tried to instill in them an appreciation for nature by taking them on field trips. He eventually founded a similar order for girls called Daughters of Our Lady, Help of Christians. John was renowned for his charisma and ability to generate money for his continually-expanding foundations. When he died in his early 7O's, after an exhausting life of hard work and dedication, more than 40,000 people attended his funeral Mass. John is also the patron of apprentices, boys, laborers and magicians. His feast day is January 31.
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