
Donations of $2 or more are Tax Deductible
You may wish to subscribe to a Fr Bob Maguire Foundation monthly donation plan. Select an amount that’s manageable for you from the buttons below. Each plan runs for 12 months.
$10 will buy a family Breakfast
$25 will feed a family for a day
$50 will pay for medication for a week
$100 will shelter a homeless for a week
Karen Armstrong: The Bible: A Biography (Books That Changed the World)
Lee Siegel: Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob
Edwin Black: Banking on Baghdad: Inside Iraq's 7,000-Year History of War, Profit, and Conflict
Anne Rice: Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana (Christ the Lord)
Trying to keep up with WYD proceedings, I was delighted to receive an unsolicited email from people identifying themselves as Olive Wood Market.
The CEO of the group says he’s leader, also, of a religious singing and dancing crew, Al Raja, who’ll perform in Sydney in July.
Should I have been suspicious already? Why? It all seemed admirable. The Olive Wood Market offered online sales of many devotional objects e.g. rosary beads with bits of Holy Land soil impregnated. Jerusalem Christians make them.
Proceeds from the sales go to support beleaguered Holy Land Christians. So claims the online blurb. So far, so good.
But alas, no sign started flashing “Go Back. Wrong Way”, as I clicked on the box
labelled “Rosary and the Real”!
What followed was a long diatribe against the “false Catholic church of John Paul 2 and Benedict 16”. It included, even, a hip segment called “Heresy of the Week”.
How, said I to myself, can a WYD website include the ranting and raving of cyberterrorists? Settle down, I answered myself, it’s the nature of the internet, silly.
The young, wired, generation attending WYD will sort out the weeds from the e-wheat, I reassured myself.
My alert doesn’t amount to a “holywatergate” but just an advisory from a sympathetic observer.
Maybe WYD organisers got Google to sponsor the blurb from Olive Wood. It’s Google’s name on the site.
When you go as big as WYD – half a million at Mass with the Pope – you need to make strategic alliances.
You can’t give to God, so this formula demands, without giving to Caesar. Enter Telstra. “Simply purchase one of the products below and activate your Telstra SIM by 16 July 2008 and you’ll be automatically entered into the draw to win 1 of 10 double VIP invitations to the WYD 08 Final Mass! Click here”. My advice – don’t mass out.
And for another thing. Should the Pope apologise in Sydney, for sexual abuse perpetrated by Catholic officials over 150 years? Let me reprint a piece between a bloke, Ron, who is writing a book about the South Church. Quote!
“I see a figure today in the press,” says Bob, “which I am contesting in my Blog page – ‘tens of thousands of cases of clerical abuse.’ Now that’s popped up this morning – will the Pope come to Randwick and say, ‘I’m sorry on behalf of the Roman Catholic Global Church . . .’ ” Father Bob says in his high-faluting voice. “I am saying, ‘would our Melbourne headquarters mind checking this number – tens of thousands . . . ”
“That’s an astounding figure.”
“It’s gross!” exclaims Bob.
“Does he mean just for Australia?”
“Yeah, he means just for bloody Australia! What does he mean by it? I’m asking our officers in charge, as in fact, with Abu Ghraib in Iraq, if some of the soldiers in the ranks committed atrocities, then the easiest thing to do by high command is to put the heat on the soles of their feet, court-martial them, execute them, do whatever they do – but the high command itself will not answer questions as to how this came about. The Roman clergy is the same. They put the heat to the feet of Father Bloggs, lock him up in prison, strip him of his uniform, ridicule and humiliate him . . . ” Father Bob runs out of ideas for punishment. “Do whatever,” he says lamely, but then comes up with more, “Flog and hang Father Bloggs!”
“What I’m asking of the bosses is, ‘Where were you? because this all happened on your watch’ They’ll say, ‘Don’t talk to us like that. How could we possibly know what was going on?’ My answer to that would be, ‘Well, you are supposed to be an organization as well as a movement. That’s what you pride yourselves on, with Roman diocese and headquarters, let alone little parish headquarters – but you’ve got a diocese and headquarters that is supposed to be responsible for two hundred and fifty clergymen. If you don’t know what is going on, you should stop being an organization and become something else!”
“You’ve got them flat footed,” I declare.
“I haven’t though. They’ll wriggle out just the same as the high command wriggled out of Abu Ghraib. No one at the Pentagon was sacked because of Abu Ghraib – only little Miss Whatshername who was running around taking photos of naked men.
“I’ve got nothing against the bosses. I’m simply saying that as in all authoritarian models when things go well they accept the honour and the glory. When things go badly they say we don’t know anything about it. You can’t have it both ways. If your Archbishop stands up and says, ‘Excuse me. That happened on my watch and I accept responsibility. Goodbye and good luck,’ then . . . he would then be portrayed as an honourable man by even worldly standards.”
R.J.M.
Download the poster from:
http://fatherbob.thepodcastnetwork.com/audio/A3poster_final.pdf
Download the flyer from:
http://fatherbob.thepodcastnetwork.com/audio/A4final.pdf
Comrade Bob,
Last night was a huge night for the Foundation. We had a lot of food to distribute and by 8:35pm it was all gone. There were a lot of people at the bus including three families with children. One of the couples that
came was David and his partner (and her children). We have not seen David for two years to date. He stated that he had accommodation for a year and then when he lost that (lease expired) he started to reside in his car
again and he met up with his new female friend and they have of late been sleeping in his car. She was asked to leave her mother's home as her mother could not cope with her five and seven year old children. We sent them to La Porchetta for a decent family meal, not so much for the grown ups but for the kids to have a nice night out for a change. Did so with the other two couples as well.
Assisted Evan and his daughter by obtaining for them a weekly rail pass and some clothes that I had. Also we gave out clothes to the other kids that I had on the ute with me.
We had again heaps of hot dogs and Alan brought bananas with him which were snapped up. When we used to give out apples there were not many takers as a lot of the people who attend the bus have no teeth and hence cant bite into an apple. The bananas were easier for the people to eat. Gave out one swag.
Lots and lots of coffees were made as we had to buy milk twice more during the night.
A magic night last night, as all the people who attended the bus were in a very calm and peaceful mood. On a final note, two volunteers did not show up and the rest of us had to work that bit harder.
Yours
Henri
Our man in Darfur, Sudan, John, has sent a brief eye witness account of chaos fanned by tribalism.
“How are we to live together?” This is the overriding concern of modern society – or needs to be globally accepted as such. Some of us have a vocation to keep people of different tribes in touch with each other.
Having achieved that, probably after much personal pain, the next step is to enable those same people to work together to create a “commonwealth” for our shared children.
Good tribalism IN, bad tribalism OUT.
Have a read of John’s birdseye view of what happens when good members of different tribes do nothing to create a “commonwealth” of the Sudan. Then join up with the like minded social activists in your vicinity to stop the local rot.
“Bob has conscripted me, which is fair enough as I owe him a fair bit.
Since Bob was working off memory he threw in places I have not been, that is Angola and Liberia but otherwise since 1994 I have been in the Humanitarian Field or more aptly the Aid Game (a serious Game it is) for about 14 years.
In Sudan my role will be administrative and not at the sharp end where the IDP's (Internally Displaced People) have sought refuge in camps.
As best as I can (forgive me for starting every sentence with I but I'm not that literate) I will pass on impressions and facts as they come to me. All dates and statistics are as the ex treasurer John Howard once said ''a little bit rubbery''
Af ew weeks ago an attempted coup failed in Khartoum or more accurately Omdurman the suburb across the river. That's where old Charles(Chinese) Gordon got killed by the Mahdi back in around 1885, one of the things he tried to stop was slave trading but as that was the Medium of Exchange in Sudan he was not that successful. You can find a statue of him next to the old treasury building in Melbourne. When they built that statue it was probably the last time Victorians thought about Sudan with any sort of interest.
The coup failed, supposedly 200 vehicles crossed the Chad border and dove to Khartoum without not being noticed a modern day WW2 Long Range Desert Group. So about 200 cars soldiers/rebels/kids and nobody notices them. A bit of a leak somewhat worse than a public servant and fuel policies. Except for the death of an undisclosed number of government soldiers and rebels (one estimate about 34 cars were shot up) the effect was that the Government of the day was not infallible and was lying when they said they controlled provinces around Khartoum. Where did the rest of the attacking force go, the government doesn't know that either but it seems they split to all points of the compass without getting caught.
So how do you sneak thru about 1000 miles of government controlled country. And what's this got to do with Humanitarian Aid you may also ask. A rough answer is that nobody/organisation/religion/group is fully in charge or in any state of agreement for any length of time. Tribal connections are strong on both sides of the Chad Sudan border, so connections/networks exist where friendships/bribes/common hatreds exist and things can be done, such as attempting a coup.
To add to the situation South Sudan has been at war for about 25 years up to 2003 when peace talks started to take hold but at Abeyi (a potentially Oil rich area) where the Government troops and ex rebels are in a combined army fighting has broken out with the town burnt to the ground. Yes the majority of homes were grass/thatch huts but if that is that you have got and it turns to ashes, you and your family are going to be distraught, and if one of your family/tribe is killed you are going to be angry. Killing usually leads to revenge and more killing, blaringly obvious but sadly true.
Of course the borders of Eritrea, Ethiopia, Central African Republic, Uganda, Democratic Republic of Congo and Kenya (once a light of peace but now under threat of tribe/civil war) all surround Sudan. All of these countries house their own rebels/oppositions/tribes on both sides of the imaginary construct that is a national boundary.
This is not the best ground to start a civil society, in fact every body wants Regime Change and only occasionally does any one film it and put it on TV. No film no event.
Of course Sudan also interferes in other bordering states, a few months back they backed a coup that almost brought down the government in Chad. Chad obviously had decided not to turn the other cheek.
Forgive me for the length of the ramble, I hope it sets the background for the situation in Sudan and Darfur.”
R.J.M.
Last Saturday morning, I drove to the next parish where there’s a recently, beautifully renovated church/Shrine in honour of Mary, known “in house” as Our Lady.
The twin parishes of Middle Park and Port Melbourne have been there for 100 years plus. The Carmelite Order of Priests has faithfully staffed both places for over a century. My parish, South Melbourne, was mother to both parishes.
So what? Well, last Saturday the Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel played host to a couple of sacred artefacts known as the Cross and Icon.
This Cross became popular during the previous Pope’s World Youth Day celebrations. This Icon is of Mary and is in the Byzantine style, i.e. more Orthodox than Roman.
They both appeared in Middle Park after a trip from Sale, eastern Victoria, and took pride of place in the beautifully lit and decorated Shrine.
A Sudanese choir sang spiritual songs from an improvised stage. Light refreshments were available in the street which had been conveniently blocked off by local council officers.
I don’t think that precaution was taken in case the assembled Catholics on a quiet Saturday morning, in a very quiet Middle Park street, could break out and try to convert the locals to catholicism.
I presume it was in case the good citizens of the respectable neighbourhood would run over with their high cylinder, turbo driven, four wheel driven vehicles, the 200 visiting caltholic pilgrims.
After a couple of hours of social and devotional fellowship, about 30 of the 200 grabbed the Cross and Icon and carried them in procession from Middle Park along the Beach Road for about a mile before reaching Station Pier.
There is “parked” the ferry, Spirit of Tasmania, which would carry the Cross, Icon and escort to Devonport, Tasmania, of course.
My spies tell me the Archbishop Denis Hart, Melbourne, met the entourage at Station Pier and wished it well.
I had vamoosed from the Shrine earlier, to do Parish and domestic chores but showed up again an hour or so later to check all was well. It’s not often that devotional pilgrimages are seen in that bayside, happy suburb.
The annual Grand Prix racing cars event causes mayhem in the same scenic area.
The beach road is often closed to through traffic by hundreds running or biking in marathons to raise awareness and funds for pressing health issues.
That little group of pilgrims quietly reminded the locals that there’s more to life than meets the eye. Men, women and children, a multicultural group, proudly, not arrogantly, carried the big heavy Cross and slightly more carrier friendly Icon, in full view of the bemused, never hostile, weekend bayside tourists.
By the way, I’d just turn up on Church occasions like the Cross and Icon. I dress down rather than up. I want to show respect for the energies lay people put into devotional exercises designed, usually, by clerics.
I have my reservations about projects like Cross and Icon because I’m a “pinko leftist” Vatican2 man.
We clerics of the 1950’s/1960’s were trained and deployed to hand our systemic Catholicism back to the original owners – lay people.
We were also trained and commissioned demolition experts. Some of us cleaned churches and shrines of marble altars and plaster statues to create space for lay people to install their “unknown god”, aka Jesus of Nazareth.
We challenged lay people to take the place occupied over many centuries by Cross and Icon. Be living crosses and icons. Church $’s, we said, should buy food for the poor and excluded first and if any $’s are left, buy a cross or an icon for the church building.
Were we wrong? Powerful factions within Catholicism say we were and exclude us “pinko leftists” from any further leadership roles within systemic catholicism
That suits me. I can be an undercover catholic like Jesus is an undercover God!
R.J.M.
Should I go into a monastery now I’m 74 and never have anything to say on TV or radio?
I got a call late one night last week from “concerned of Werribee”. He’d just seen me on TV pontificating on Gordon Ramsey’s coarse language – you know the Brit chef who swears a lot during his cooking show.
“A Current Affair” had rung earlier to tee up an interview. A South Australian church official had advised a ban on the Ramsey show. I didn’t know about it. No matter. You don’t have to know much but you have to settle on a quick “grab” favourable to the cause, do no harm, do a little good.
I decided before the TV crew arrived, to make the point that coarse language is a matter of manners, not morals – in most cases, that is.
I used a Latin proverb to sum up the point – “de gustibus non est disputandum” or “in matters of taste, there’s nothing to argue about”.
We all have likes and dislikes. You can’t order someone to like this or that.
You don’t have to use coarse language yourself or encourage it to be able to live with it.
The bloke who rang me said he was ashamed to be in the same church as me. “You’ve exceeded your use by date. Retire or go to Tasmania!”
That shook me. Maybe he thought because there’s “devils” in Tasmania it must be Hell. Anyway just to share with you a day in the life of an inner urban parish priest.
People say “Why do you do it?” Some are convinced I’m an egotist at best, a narcissist at worst. They say “showing off”, I say “putting in”.
I like people to know that Catholicism is a broad church. Most disputes among catholics are about matters of taste, not morals.
What the celebrant wears to Mass, how many bows to make before receiving communion, whether to talk among ourselves before the service begins or to observe a reverend silence to get in the mood – these are all recently revived matters of taste. There’s no good or bad in them.
Church bosses may well, from their acknowledged elevated vantage point, advise us, rank and file, on disciplinary matters. That’s part of their job. And they must alert the general membership to the clear and present public danger generated by the moral viruses of affluence, abortion, lousy prison and illegal migrant detention systems, just to name a few.
But even in these indisputably serious matters, there must be a new language, a better “style” of discussion, so all members of this hard fought for pluralised society can share, with respect, different, even opposite views without risking social disharmony.
Church people should be actively engaged in building civil society, without fear or favour. We should put a substantial amount of regional and local church resources, including real estate and parish personnel, at the service of the neighbourhood.
Putting ourselves “out there” would be a good practical way of saying sorry to the alleged tens of thousands of victims of abuse by catholic officials over seventy years. (This figure is quoted in the press 8/5/08. Would Australian Catholic HQ check that figure for us rank and filers? It’s us who’ll cop the flack up to the Pope’s visit and afterwards!)
Like Daniel Grollo and his developers, local churches, synagogues and mosques could offset whatever socially toxic imprint they have left in a neighbourhood by providing goods and services for the local poor e.g. food distribution outlets, safe houses for abused women and children, 24/7 one stop “shops” for troubled teenagers – all without “convert to our religion” small print clauses.
The local synagogue, mosque or church could pilot such a breath taking initiative until a cluster of like minded partners got their act together.
I guess that what this parish and this foundation are doing as a coalition of the willing continuing a 150 year old tradition of service to the poor, deserving and undeserving. Not “showing off” but “putting in”.
RJM
Joe Caddy, Catholic Priest colleague, Chaplain to Victorian Prisons, was brave enough to write in a Melbourne paper that prisons are not for rehabilitation but for breeding criminals.
I agree. You probably agree. Where does that leave us? Nowhere I suspect.
That’s the trouble with good ideas. They need not just one good person but dozens to agitate for change and to keep at it for years, maybe even a lifetime.
Is that persistence possible these days? Just as the abolition of slavery took many young people their whole lives to achieve, so will the reform of our prison system.
Indeed, I don’t intend to do more here than raise the question. I feel the need because I’ve known many people who’ve ended up in prison. I’ve watched as they’ve struggled to recommence living “outside” without much constructive support. So, they go in and out for years.
There’s one bloke I met when I first arrived in South Melbourne Parish. He was 16 then. He disappeared into the juvenile justice system. He came out, then disappeared into the adult system.
He kept feeding the revolving door for 30 years. I’ve seen him only every few years, whenever he’s “out”.
He’s now spent far more time in than out. He can’t survive out. He’s almost 50 years but still 16 at heart and an untamed 16 at that.
Joe Caddy’s right. Prison is a waste of time and resources in terms of results. Unfortunately while retributive justice rules the roost, restorative justice must wait for 100 Joe Caddy’s to launch a campaign for prison reform.
I’m fortunate to have been Priest at South Melbourne for 25 years. I’ve learned a lot and unlearned even more.
My first time years as Priest, in half a dozen suburban parishes, in the 1960’s, brought experiences of working with 40 year old parents and their teenage children. I became part of the parish/neighbourhood support team. Together we looked after our young. If one of them “strayed” from the herd, we became collectively unnerved.
Some suburbs were better than others at this essential service. This was a lesson in itself. It was safer to be a teenager and reassuring, too, in one place than another.
Young people need to feel valued as part of a “place”. Country footy clubs (indeed, all sports clubs) are a good example of helping teenagers “grow up”.
Occasionally, a local club falls into the hands of untrustworthy people and becomes a bad influence for teenagers. The same occupational hazard stalks all adults working with young people. Some of my own vocational “profession” have grossly offended against teenagers who trusted them with their bodies, minds and hearts.
I continue my care and concern for the young people at risk and partly to offset the toxic footprint left by a few colleagues. I put that here on public record.
Daniel Grollo of Grocon (a leading Australian developer) used these words, “offset the social imprint left by developers” as an explanation of his intention to build, without beyond cost profit, a shelter for 100+ homeless people in Melbourne.
I’ve been talking and writing about this “offset” for years. Thanks Daniel, for being creatively compassionate towards homeless people. As with Joe Caddy and prison reform, we need hundreds of Daniel Grollos to make a real difference in the lives of the excluded poor.
After these two examples of intellectual “mothering” by blokes, let’s hear it for the greatest communicators of them all – Happy Mothers’ Day!
RJM