Part One
| Part Two
by Fr. Augustus Luca

hree
years after the foundation of the Xaverians, Guido M. Conforti had a
young priest who helped him in the guidance of young missionary
students, while Conforti was quite busy as Vicar General of the
Diocese. That was the
year 1898. It was in
that year that Mons. Francis Fogolla,
bishop in China, came to Parma.
Even in the midst of doubts, Conforti did not hesitate to
send to China Fr. Caio
Rastelli, and the only theology student,
Deacon Odoardo Manini. They
left with Bishop Fogolla.
As soon as they settle in the Eastern Shanxi, Fr. Caio was sent to the Western Mountains. He personally experienced the sacrifices of hunger and the endless work to be done. With the Boxer insurrection, Fr. Caio made his escape through rough terrains and valleys, followed by a group of ten soldiers who wanted him dead. Young Manini, too, found it difficult to avoid the persecution. They both arrived in Mongolia, and found refuge in the fortified residence of the Scheut Father, Belgian missionaries. For two months they sustained the assault of the Boxers and Mongols.
Meanwhile, at Taiyan-fu, capital of Shanxi and center of the diocese, Bishops Grassi and Fogolla were killed, together with three missionaries, seven sisters, five seminarians, and nine mission workers. With them, 32 protestants were also killed, the pastors with their families.
At the end of the persecution, Fr. Caio Rastelli was exhausted by the travels, the lack of sleep, the desolation of the land, the illness of typhoid. He died on Feb. 28, 1901, at the age of 28. Conforti called home Manini, the only remaining missionary. The first mission to China was over in two years.
But Conforti did not waver. In 1902 he was named bishop of Ravenna, and asked the Propagation of the Faith to assign his missionaries to a new mission in China. Four of these missionaries left for the region of Honan, China in 1904. After two years, three other Xaverians reached them. And in the following years, they left two by two.
This new mission did not come without complications and sorrows. In 1908 Fr. Vincent Dagnino, the youngest of the Xaverians, contacted yellow fever while assisting a sick; he died in just a few days, and he was 24 years old. The following year, Fr. Corrado Di Natale, a Maltese Xaverian of 23 years of age, died of malaria, after only a 40 day-stay in China.
The First Xaverian Bishop
Since
January 1906 the Apostolic Prefecture of East Honan was established
with its center of Cheng-chow.
Eight million people lived in an area of 25,000 sq. miles.
It was a mountainous region, with no more than 600
Christians. In 1911 Fr.
Louis Calza was named Apostolic Vicar of Honan, and will be
consecrated Bishop in April 1912 by Conforti, by then Bishop of
Parma. Bishop Calza was
33 years old, the youngest bishop in those years, at the head of a
diocese of twelve Xaverians and a vast mission territory.
Bishop Calza had to return to China soon after, for there was
a civil war between rival factions that had started in 1911: the
supporters of the republic versus those of the empire.
What followed were attacks by bandit bands, hunger, looting,
abandoned children, misery and sorrow.
The First World War isolated the group of Xaverians even
more.
In 1921, other departures of missionaries took place. But the 1920’s brought more conflict among national-communists of the south against the regular northern troops. Our missions were often battle fields, with threats from both sides. Oftentimes, bands of brigands assaulted small villages and cities and in December 1927 three Xaverians were imprisoned. They were freed, by a miracle, on Christmas Day.
Things calmed down a bit in 1928, and that is when Bishop Conforti took the long journey to visit his missionaries in China. He wanted to visit with his missionaries, understand their difficulties, sustain them in their efforts as their Religious Superior, and found, if possible, a novitiate house for young Chinese missionary students.
He lived the hard life of his missionary sons for 40 days, traveling with any means available. Like in the Apennines with the horse, Bishop Conforti adjusted well also in the travels in China.
He admired their zeal and dedication, their sacrifices and the many good fruits for the Reign of God. Those 600 Christians became 16,000 by 1928, with Churches built, schools and orphanages administers, dispensaries and small clinics in full operation. Bishop Conforti was filled with great joy in his heart, and loudly sang his “Nunc dimittis” once he returned to Parma. He died on Nov. 5, 1931. He was 66 years old.