WelCom November 2017: This year marks 150 years in New Zealand for a number of Catholic and community organisations. Celebrating their histories and jubilees in October were the Society of St Vincent de Paul, St Joseph’s Māori Girls’ College and Sacred Heart College Napier.
St Joseph’s Māori Girls College 150th Jubilee
Deacon Danny Karatea-Goddard
St Joseph’s Māori Girls College, Greenmeadows Napier, celebrated 150 years over the weekend of 6–8 October. The school has nurtured 8000 girls throughout that time including notables such as Dame Whina Cooper, the first president of the Māori Women’s Welfare League, Dame Katerina Te Heikoko Mataira, a founding member of the Māori Language Commission, and singers Moana Maniapoto, Hinewehi Mohi and Maisey Rika.
St Joseph’s Māori Girls’ College was founded in 1867 by the Sisters of Our Lady of the Missions and Māori Missioner Fr Reigner sm who saw the great need for education for Māori in that rapidly changing world. They started the first boarding school on the convent property. It was called St Joseph’s Providence and was opened on October 10th, 1867, with 20 pupils, the first principal being Sr Mary
St John.
Current principal Dame Georgina Kingi, a former student herself, has dedicated more than 50 years of her life to the school. She notes a key element is ‘the support one has and that starts with your boards, your boards of trustees, the trust board the hostel management board’. She also mentions ‘the ongoing support of the parents and wider family that have made getting to 150 years possible’. Ms Kingi, herself a past student of the college, was a teacher at St Joseph’s from 1969 before becoming the principal in 1987 where her influence has had a lasting effect on her past students.
HE ARA ROA – A History and Recollections of St Joseph’s Māori Girls College by Malcom Mulholland is currently in its first draft with Huia Publishers. It is expected the publication will be available in the middle of 2018.
I ō mahi katoa, mahia!
In all that you do, do well! – School Motto
Sisterhood of the Sacred Heart
Trish Williams
Friday night saw the start of the celebrations with over 420 gathering to reconnect with classmates and to share stories and memories. The buzz was electric and there was much laughter, many hugs and wonderful memories shared. Pupils from the 1930s through to the 2000s celebrated together.
A glorious Hawkes Bay day greeted the many hundreds who flocked to the school on Saturday. Current students dressed in the uniforms of bygone days welcomed the visitors. The physical changes to the school impressed many as they wandered down memory lane and shared stories of the past while marvelling at the modern environment now found on top of the hill. An impressive Jubilee cake donated by Heavens Bakery was cut and then our principal, Steve Bryan, unveiled the beautiful new sculpture with its four sails which connect our past with our present.
Saturday night’s celebration was attended by another 230. We were treated to the beautiful singing voice of past student Laura Jeffares and later entertained by Sr Mary Rose Holderness, who shared memories of her student days up on the hill.
The final celebration was the Jubilee Mass at St Patrick’s Church which was filled to capacity. As Bishop Charles Drennan led the Mass the congregation were in fine voice and filled the air with beautiful song and prayer. Past and present students and staff joined to celebrate the college sisterhood.
The weekend was a celebration of faith and friendship, of laughter and love. Congratulations to all those who contributed to making the weekend so wonderful.
Trish Williams, HOD English Sacred Heart College, is a past student and a member of the Jubilee Committee.
SVDP celebrations a great success
Mike Fitzsimons
St Vincent de Paul’s 150th National Conference, was hosted over Labour weekend in Christchurch where the Society first began in New Zealand. It was a great success and an inspiration to those attending, says John Kennedy-Good, President of the Society’s Wellington Area Council.
John said a highlight was the impressive service held at the Pro-Cathedral in Christchurch with four bishops attending. The main celebrant was the Apostolic Nuncio Archbishop Martin Krebs who was joined by Bishop Owen Dolan, Bishop Charles Drennan and Bishop Emeritus Basil Meeking.
‘The celebrations were very well attended and the hospitality offered was superb,’ John said.
‘It was a well-organised conference and a great celebratory occasion. There was a strong spirit of collaboration, common purpose and good will, and plenty of confidence in the future of the Society in New Zealand. The young people, especially the youth from Auckland, did a wonderful job. The video they created was totally impressive and received a tremendous applause from the gathering. The life and spirit evident at the Conference augurs well for the Society’s future.’
The International Society was well-represented. There were excellent presentations from International Territorial Vice-President, Frank Brassil, and from the National Presidents of Sri Lanka, Tonga and Samoa. There were also presentations from ‘Twinning’ co-ordinators Tony Muir and Arthur Schultze.
Fr Jim Consedine delivered the keynote address, Honouring Frederic Ozanam – Expanding the Vision. Fr Jim’s extended family has had a long and dedicated involvement with the Society.
Fr Jim honoured and paid tribute to the ‘thousands of Vincentians like yourselves, who, from your small group bases, for 150 years in New Zealand have gone about the daily charitable works of the Society without fanfare, ministering to the sick, the lonely, the dispossessed, the poor, the hungry, the homeless, the prisoner.’
He also challenged the Society to rediscover its social-justice roots and to involve itself more in issues of justice as well as charity.
‘I sometimes wonder what happened to the social justice vision that originally inspired Frederic Ozanam [Society co-founder]. In New Zealand, the Society today is perceived as focused on the charity dimension with little recognition of its justice origins. We do charity well but not justice. And yet the need to address issues of injustice and inequality and oppressive social structures is there in the Society’s Handbook, said Fr Jim.
‘The Gospels didn’t differentiate between the two dimensions, justice and charity. Neither did Frederic Ozanam. Like Jesus and Pope Francis, he saw them as two sides of the same coin, both vital, both essential, equal dimensions of the central command of Jesus to love God and our neighbour.’
The 150th Anniversary of the Society is being celebrated by local branches of the Society throughout New Zealand in the course of this anniversary year.
Photos: Annette Scullion and Supplied