The Record Newspaper 30 October 1986

Page 1

Doubleview Parish tarts a concentrated program of prayer, discussions, co tact and reconciliation in preparation for the visit of Pope Joh Pau II on ovember 30. See page 2.

If the one-time Legio of Mary envoy o Africa, Ede Quinn, is ever canoni by the Church she ill be an example o the many ay p pie w are oming committ to he Church. This was sai by Arch ishop Foley after he less the E I Qu · nn Centre in Wi d r Street at will beco e perma n hea uarters for t e Legion of Mary in Perth. "She exemplifies for the church t e lay person who hro h discipleship beco s a rrussio ary i he life of the C rch. "In the arc diocese of Perth an increasin n mber of people are icating hemselves to full time service in the Church in the fields of education, parish pa oral ministry, social justice and other areas.

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Doubleview parish of Our· Lady of The Rosary is up and running in preparation for the'visit of Pope John Paul with vigi s of prayer, parish discussions and a special message to all Catholic families in the paris . Two Friday night vigils of prayer from 8 pm o 8 am have already been held and t ey will continue until the w ekend of the pope's arrival in Perth.

Archbishop Carnley's gesture

g ca s I 0 e

The Prime inister Mr Ha e ls pictured last wee making an award to the ational Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace for its work in human riqhts, the lopment of peop es and social justi ce in Australia and overseas. e award was received by Bis op William Brennan of Wa ga, presiden of e commission and r Jeff ·1 chairman of e cornmissio .

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THE CATHOLIC WEEKLY SYDNEY

ATICAN CllY: A full enquiry into security at the Vatican has been ordered by the pope following a dramatic robbery attempt. Thre men in a maroon Ford ona managed to get past the u ing fal e ecurity po t

In anticipation of Pope John gathering with religious heads at Assisi to pray for peace.

"Violence does not have the last word" UNo Christian, indeed, no human being who believes in God, creator of the world and lord of history, can remain indifferent in the face of a problem which touches so closely the present and future of humanity. It is necessary that everyone be mobilised to make his comribinion to the cause of peace. War can be decided by a few, peace requires the combined efforts of II." - Pope John Paul II, pes ing on peace in his homily at the Besilic« of St Paul, outside the walls in Rome, for the closing of the Week for Christian Unity.

statement, CO ing from Fa rsassuri ng o

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GUEST EDITORIAL

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From page 1 "This is so important today when so many lay

people ar beginning to ork the

voy

w The name Edel Quinn special brings connotations to Legionaries, and not without good reason. Born in County Cork in 1907, she arrived in Dublin in 1924 with her parents a d their other four chil ren. The Legion of Mary was then a fledgling of three years; its birthp ace was Dub in.

next eight years devoted h r tf who a-heartedly to · ng spr Leg lon in order to further the Church in

Africa. Oiff r nt ra

of diverse attitudes, langu

from

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RECO

tar

Ever wondered how top mu icians, ba and entertainers com about? Wh re it all rts from? W II if y u n al ng to Brother Colver's music den at St Mark's College, Bedford you could Ii in th ir jam

A community of m n of ancient origin who venture to b

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ions any lunch

time or Fr" ay ni ht.

r nd only s the Birth of th Blu ; but cha you'd come away

You'd

I ghted at what so

days

ervant ho e live and rel tion hip are moulded by pr � r nd pe ju tice, m r y nd lo

d r. For any information on rite to:

fo

another

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• H r jou eyings broug

on

Realisation of an idea

through towns and villages, along jungle paths and through the swamps of Kenya, Uganda, Tanganyka, Nyasaland and out to Mauritius in the Indian

Ocean.

ion and zeal bore frui s ta with amazing success and hout her ordeals and triumphs, her clear pr ical mind with a str� will, fund of warm and joyous red o

The Legion of Mary, founded in Dublin in 1921 has been made up of ordinary dedicated fock "th ome outstanding notable ch as Edel Quinn and Alfie Lambe who cause for beatification i being in e tigated in Rome. At la t Sunday' is ceremony ennie Harken pre ident of the A Senatus said the first A prae idioum t up at Bayswater by Father cBride in 19 0, expanding to four more the f llowing year.

Legion has an Initially when th

introduced

Legion

into

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lndividua ly made nd hand-finished here in Austr lia. I

Andrew Rurak accordian and keyboard and the onlv. girl member Kim

La

ence.

Seu p ed by Rene Vanden Berghe and cast in a mi ture of resin and marble. Of icially approved and licensed by t e ational Papal Visit Office. Measurements: Heigh : Including Plinth 23cms (9") eight: 2.5

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First of a series of 10 articles by special arrangement

tb The Advocate, Melbourne. -

The boy who was to become pope was a lively, cheeky youngster. He used to mimic teachers when they turned their backs, was a noted joketeller among his friends, and was annoyingly keen on soccer. One writer has told how Karol Wojtyla and a friend used to spend hours kicking a ball against the wall of the church in the market town of Wadowice. "An exasperated priest would rush out and cuff the MIO boys, threatening terrible punishments if they didn't go somewhere else to play," she records. Young Lolelc got into mischief more dangerous than that Once he was with his friend Boguslaw whose parents owned a small basement cafe across the street

from the WC>jlyta flat

ODO

In the cash drawer they found a pistol left there for safe keeping by the local policeman. While Boguslaw was playing with it he pointed the barrel at his friend and bangl Off rt went The bullet is said to have missed the future pope by centimetres. His outgoing ways probably resulted partly from being spctled by his mother. That is not surpriSlng as he was the baby of the family (his brother ec;...erd was 14 years his senlOf). Karol junlOf's birth was a consolation for his mother, who had lost her only daughter three �rs before, a day after she was born. Also, as Mrs Emilia Wojtyta was 40 when he came

into the IIIIOOd it seemed likely that he would be her last child. "She used to fuss over him as though he was a young prince," Mrs Helen Sczepanska, a former neighbour, recalled sewral years ago. "I used to VIIOOder what would become of a boy who received such adulation. Surely he would grow up to be terribly selfish." But he did not turn out that way, partly because of his basic cheerfulness and partly because of his father's common sense. There was another reason - the dramatic removal of the maternal care lalllshed on him. When his mother was 49 she died gMng birth to her second daughter, who was stillborn.

ODO

Mrs WC>jlyta had long suffered from bad health which was not improved by the added burden of menial work. A teacher in her younger days, she W3li reduced to taking in sewing for payment to help the family get by. Her husband, formerly a staff offioer in the AustroHungarian army, ci'ew a lowty salary for his desk job at the regional draft board. There was lrttle affluenoe in Poland in the decade of Western IIIIOOd called the Roaring Twenties, a time of flappers, jazz and the booming movie in<iJslry. Poland, during Lolek's young days, has been described as a countJy "three-quarters subsistence farmers, one-quarter quarrelling minorities." It had been a battleground during the Gr&at War • and had set out on a shaky independence resulting from its surprise cavalry defeat of Russian forces in

1919.

At No. 7 Koscielna Street. behind the big. oniondomed church where Lolek had been baptised, the family lived in a first floor flat. There was no bathroom, the toilet in the hall',wy was shared by all tenants but the block of flats had running water - a �rative luxury in Poland.

ODO

Karol Wojtyla with his father, Karol. I The Record, October 30, 1986

Although struggling to make ends meet. the boy's mother found time to instruct him in the faith. Also, she made a small altar and white tunic for him so he could play at say,ng Mass. Despite his rnou-'s co11ce110 a tad attention on him, Pope John Paul has said that his memories of her are vague. Still, he told distinguished French Catholic writer, Andre Frossard, several years ago, he did remember feeling deprived when she trallelled to Cracollv Without him, piobabfy to consult doctors. Yet from adole9CElt1Ce, a few years after her death just before he turned nine, he began to feel "the cruel loss of her absence." 'There comes a moment when boys brought up by their father - no matter how well and tel m1y painfully discover they haw been� of a mocta-," he said. Three years later he and his father were to reel under another blow: Edward died from scarlet feller which he caught from a patient at a ho&prtal where he had begun to wonc as a doctor.

l\

"My mother's death made a deep impress,on on my memory," he told M. Frossard, "and my brother's perhaps a still deeper one because of the dramatic oircumstances in which it occurred and because I was more mature." He was 12, had lost his mother and brother and MIO sisters he had � known. But his father had alreactv proved to be lolling and attenwe, a reliable rock of a man - but stern, according to one of Karol's boyhood friends. "The program never changed," he recalled of the years following Mrs Wojtyta's death. "It was early Mass every morning, followed by school, a meal, an hour's free tJme then horne'M>rk. "If Lolek was caught playing 1n the street after the prescnbed time he was hauled back immediately." The pope's memories are much warmer than that arid are suffused with gratitude.

\)

from PAT CONNEUY

who was commiuiooed bJ Tlte Adrocate in Melbourne to write about the life and auomplishmfflts of Karol WojtJ/a, Pope John Paul II, in preparwoo for his risit to Australia at the end of tbe montll,

Mother knew he would be Pope

The greatness was to take shape 30 kilometres to the north,..-!. in Cracow. He was to become archbishop of that ancient university city, for centuries the centre of Poland's Catholicism. Sadly, Mrs Emilia Wojtyta did not live to see her dream and rer son's destiny realised: she died when he was only eight. But even at that age it seems that the boy, nicknamed Lolek, knew about rer basic hope for him - one of status in such a deeply religious country. "She wanted one son a doctor and the ott- a priest." Karol Wojtyta told an inteMellller five years ago.

"My brother was a doctor and in spite of everything, I have become a priest.''

DOD

"My father was admirable and almost all the memories of my childhood and adolescence are connected wrth him," he told M. Frossard. "The VIOience of the blows which had struck him had opened up immense spiritual depths in him. His grief found Its outlet in prayer. "The mere fact of seeing him on his knees had a decisive influence on my early years. He was so hard on himself that he had no need to be hard on his son. His example alone was suff1C1ent 1D inculcate d1sc1pllne and a sense of duty. He was an exceptJonal

A major issue can be mentioned

The sb eogth of character built up over the years was to be tested and deepened after the Nazi invasion when he was taken far from his books and acting and huried into the wond of labouring men. Also there were the influences mentioned by writer George Blazynski in his book John Paul II: A Man from Cracow. "There are four landmarics of

enthusiasm for the theatre, an enthusiasm so strong that it

seemed likely his future would

lie in the acting p,ofessioo. One of his high school teachers, Father Edward Zacher, has

told of one time when that prospect

saddened someone

no less than the Archbishop of Cracow.

U

Uidance. I ne'Mlat young Karol's mother-who had been so to guiding him towards Holy Orders said about that attitude if she had been

.1 deepiy Catholic Poland pnests gaya religK>us

" 1he State educatJon system. Still, 1n his early ry ICliool years, there was no indication that the letic. studious and arnstic Wojtyta had any

lowards the cloth.

He became renowned for reciting lengthy sectJons from Homer's Odyssey and speeches from the Aeneid by Virgil. He could sing, too, and dance spectacularly from a wide repertotre of Strauss waltms and the mazunais and other traditional Pol!Sh dances. But it was in theatre that his true talents and

ambitions lay.

grew up and worked," he says.

within the single An:hdioce.

Wojtyta, then about 17, was

of Cracow: the shrine of

chosen to propose the vote of

Czestochowa,

the

gas

chambers of Auschwitz and the city of Cracow and the

manner of speech, the prelate

blast fumaoes of Nowa Huta."

asked Father Zacher. "Is that

And above and through all this

replied. "He is in love with the theatre and they have talked The artlStic facet of his makeup was the one that bloomed in the Boys' High School, or gymnasium.

human hope and tragedy under whose shadows Wojtyle

the school in 1938 and Karol

boy going to be a priest?" "I do not know," Father Zacher

up his own mind about a YOCation without

in their poor and simple lifestyle.

"And they are all to be found

Imp, essed with his bearing and

SOl1

parents and the discipline

taught by his pen� father

Archbishop Sapieha was visiting

thanks.

ODO

On a personal level there were the

devoutness instilled by both

divert him from a religious vocation. That was his

But there was plenty of fun in the boy's Irle. Sport was taking up more and more of his time and he was turning into a skilful and daring soccer goalkeeper. He also took advantage of the swimming months in that generally cold climate and there's a tale (probably exaggerated) that when the River Skawa rose young Karol Woj!y1a would be out there surfing m the floodwaters. He was fond of canoeing and hockey, k>O, but he began to develop a fondness for the Tatra mountains not far out of WSOONice. The boy from the foothills found not only a sporting challenge in the rugged heights but friendship with the spirited, independent Goral mountain people. And he found peace.

on the youth - and others that were soon to press on him.

The "everything" that happeoed in the years between his mou-'s exptessed wish and his ordination will be spelled out in a later chapter.

now, however, because it was the one that seemed likely to

person."

"Throughout his life the Tatras have remained a refuge, a place for reflection and for taking stock in times of crisis," according to biographer Mary Craig. All this exercise was building a sturdy body. A photograph of him aged 10 on an outing with his class shows a solidly built lad with steactv gaze and the round, but strong features still stamped on the pope today. The interests of the sports-mad boy began 1D widen the next �r when he started at high school. His father sent him there because the feas IIIIElre. less than at the MIO Catholic schools and It had a fine staff and a solid reputation. There was a third reason: the Pallo!!Jne and Carmelrte teachers tended to pressure the pupils to become prMISIS. Mr Wojtyta, delipite his convictions. wanted his

"You will see," the pope's mother used to say when he was only a baby, "my son will grow up to be a great man." A neighbour of the Wojtyla family has recalled that prediction being made as the pram containing little Karol was wheeled through a park in the town of Wadowice.

him

into

philology

taking (the

Polish

study

of

Language). "A great pity - he would make a good one." The prelate and the priest might not haw so readily dol.bted the chance of a vocation if they had known about the many influences which W9l8 at work

was, and still is, the 1000-year

tradition of Polish Christianity and a faith so in1Bn9e that it has not only survived but thrived over centuries of

oppression. BecaUM - 85 the pope himself

has often said - the Church and history of Poland are

intetwined it might be an idea to look briefly at their origins. "A faniway country," John Paul called his homeland on the night he was electad pope.

The Record, October 30, 1986

9

Ii


"To my knowledge there is not one successful businessman in Perth - and I know plenty of them - who does not work hard. There is no substitute for hard work if you want to achieve success in business." Coming as it does from eminently successful businessman John Joseph Hughes, the state's b · ggest motor dealer, that comment has undoubted validity.

Self help sche

'

work at e top ...

It s a cornerstone of the p ilosophy of the man who was born at Fremantle on December 6, 1935, and educated at the

The Marist Lodge at 12 Lapage Street, Belmont was opened in 1980 and is having its first fete, on Sunday, November 2. Residents have produced a stock of goods ready for sale which has involved sewing, crocheting, basket knitting, weaving and other activities. Being relatively new as far as lodges go, and their first fete, the whole p ace is with buzzing excitement, so I checked out a couple of residents to see who they were and what they did with their lives before finally settling down at Marist Lodge.

Lo g b 0

loo s bac with gratitude to the CBC Fremantle

went teaching in country for

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husband, Jim rais d two daughters nd two they

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Lack of faciliti s occasion the · nal a mes age which he decip red s: "Hugh · 's ·meyou tout and did your own y." Coincidentally,

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Australia. In Octob r bought

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wa n't r nt, Mrs O'Grady

said, everyone

1985

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would t in turn accommodating the t on a rota i nal basis and children eta n to school In a horse and u "Social life consisted da a 'nly


un s for Marist Lodge residents

If you are a single ma

of any age and you are serious abou II e. I ou are capa le o lov ng a grea deal. Per aps the Lord rs calling you o be. His Pries

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you t Jude' ovena. ay the Sacred Heart of Je us be adored; glorified, loved and pre erved throughout the world now and forever. acred Heart of Jesus, pray for us St Jude, wor er of iracle , pray for u . St Jude, helper of the hopele , pray for us. ay thi prayer nine time a day. By the eighth day your prayer will be an wered. ay it for nine day , it has never been known to fail. Publication must be promi ed. Thank you t Jude. P. & G.B. 1

DEATH TI1 G qualityor at the right price. '.John Freakley. Phone 361 4349.

1:Tectrical . ConTr· ctor lJ.V. D'E terre, 5 Vivian St, Rivervale. 30 yrs experience, expert, efficient, reliable. Ring 362 4646, after hour 385 96!>().

1

BARRY (Philip Patrick). The children & randchildren of th late Mr Philip P. Barry ould H e to incerely THA 'K Rev. Fathers Tom Gaine, ichael Keating, the matron & taff of t St Camillus nur ing home, Forre tfield, relative and friend for their expre ion o ympathy, prayer , condolence , card phon call and al o their attendance at the a and uneral. Plea e our accept heartfelt th n and e regret our inability to than • you individu Uy.

THANKS

Cha ain

inv vement

re·ected

from Charles TORY, locl<ridge Sir, Are the Christian members of our defence forces generous defenders of freedom? Or, are they - I the rest of us - victims caught up ln a tragic 'Neb of fear and threat? Bishop Mayne, head of the Catholic Ordinarlate to the defence forces, be ·eves the former view to be true. " •.• most of the people in the defence forces are prepared to dle so th ir fel ovv citize and freedom

Australian involvement in that un-declared war I defended myself and th Government with qualms. The qualms came much later. Having learned more of the history of lndo-China in the meantime, and havif'YJ also learned more of how that was fought, I realise the vve.akness of my arguments in the light of the example and vision of Christ Our otherwise egitimale defence stance ·s morally compromised by Australia's part in an alliance with a nucl rpower.Atissue'sthe first strike planning and capability of the United

This is what Bishop Mayne so dearly explained.

Capitalis answer re u e

from George PURBRICJ( Belmont e

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peece:".

States. tf evidence

from

PAC

"Those who give military service must be considered 'Ministers of the security erd freedom of peoples' and indeed 'if they carry out their duties properly, they also tru/ot contribute to stabilizing

Father Michael GAIT, Bind n

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LLIO A tor bicentenial sailing adventure

Julie Della Franca Catholic Parish youth worker is on her way to being a "girl in a million". Julie is holidaying on Kangaroo Island SA and is not even aware of her good fortune. Mr

Crew 'Will have to climb masts 30 m tr

Della Fran a of

Bullsbrook rang the office youth } erday to tell the oodn Julie has iU1Vi ed th fir t f

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Comp icity charged MEXICO CilY (NC) � uth m Mexican bisho have charged f deral officials with "complicity" in a i ted tern f ill . gal narcotics cultivation and tra.ffi ing in their region. Th nine bish of Chia· pas and Oa.xa

"This i a great day," rchbi hop oley aid at the beginnin of the ortham

A.don target

At

a social, Northam's following Mass celebration, sesquicentennial Archbishop Fo ey said the pioneers oft e area were men a d women of Christian faith and culture. Into the lifestyle they had built displaced migrants had come after Wo d War II seeking freedom, and a new life, he said. Many of these, he said, had settled in Northam. They had enriched the town and district with their various cultures. The pres· nt of St Joseph's Parish Pastoral Council, Mr LB. Evans, welcomed guests who included the ayor of Northam, Mr V.S. Mrs Ottaway, the p esioent of Ottaway a the Shrin of ham, r D.R. Antonio and Mrs Anto lo. the District Superinte t of Police and Mrs Primrose and officers and members of St J hn Ambulance. I

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e s a g a who plo and develop d ortham distr'ct

red the

Dan Monsignor Dovvney said thi in t homily at the sesqicentennia Ma . 'red by

schoo and th Siste of St Joseph of the App rition traced the history of th ca Church in ortham inc bishop Salvado first · · t town in

856.

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mini eredto pri the Catholics of the

the first G raldto .

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of St Jo eph of the to Apparition who ca ham in 1889 and who still t ch re, and t Si rs of St John of God and the Marist Brothers who

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PERTH PICCADIU.Y ARCADE ··················-·····321 8151 19 NAPOLE

STREET

FREMANTLE 30 MAR ET STREET...............

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Sunday

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Easter

morn·ng 1879.

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community

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service

bi-centenary in on oft


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TE tr PETER

ESSER

The St Joeeph's Pig i Tennis Club held their n trophy pt8Setl,tatioo Saturday even ·ng at the club Ferris was presented with the men's mpion ip trophy nd Kathy William with the women's trophy. ill Mitchell and B rry hon won the ·s whit Kerry and Marl ne the women·

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Greyhounds - with The Record Tipster

in the association

.

Materi I

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unu ual n me p e nted text soeced, pr. fer.

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eet ne friend o er a cup f off C m and enjoy yours If.


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