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Blessed Mary MacKillop
First Australian Blessed
Co-founded Sisters of St Joseph of the
Sacred Heart 1866.
Born: 15 January 1842
Died:
8th August 1909
Beatified:
15th January 1995
Mary MacKillop's Story
On January 15, 1842 Mary MacKillop was born of Scottish parents, Alexander
MacKillop and Flora MacDonald in Fitzroy, Victoria. This was less than seven
years after Faulkner sailed up the Yarra, when Elizabeth Street was a deep
gully and Lonsdale Street was still virgin bush. A plaque in the footpath
now marks the place of her birth in Brunswick Street, Fitzroy.
Mary, the eldest of eight children, was well educated by her father who spent
some years studying for the priesthood in Rome but through ill health had
returned to his native Scotland until 1835 when he migrated to Australia with
his parents. Unfortunately, he lacked financial awareness, so the family was
often without a home of their own, depending on friends and relatives and
frequently separated from one another.
From the age of sixteen, Mary earned her living and greatly supported her
family, as a governess, as a clerk for Sands and Kenny (now Sands and MacDougall),
and as a teacher at the Portland school. While acting as a governess to her
uncle's children at Penola, Mary met Father Julian Tenison Woods who, with
a parish of 22,000 miles2 (56,000 km2), needed help
in the religious education of children in the outback. At the time Mary's
family
depended on her income so she was not free to follow her dream. However, in
1866, greatly inspired and encouraged by Father Woods, Mary opened the first
Saint Joseph's School in a disused stable in Penola.
Young women came to join Mary, and so the Congregation of the Sisters of
St Joseph was begun. In 1867, Mary was asked by Bishop Shiel to come to Adelaide
to start a school. From there, the Sisters spread, in groups to small outback
settlements and large cities around Australia, New Zealand, and now in Peru,
Brazil and refugee camps of Uganda and Thailand. Mary and these early Sisters,
together with other Religious Orders and Lay Teachers of the time, had a profound
influence on the forming of Catholic Education as we have come to know and
experience it today. She also opened Orphanages, Providences to care for the
homeless and destitute both young and old, and Refuges for ex-prisoners and
ex-prostitutes who wished to make a fresh start in life.
Throughout her life, Mary met with opposition from people outside the Church
and even from some of those within it. In the most difficult of times she
consistently refused to attack those who wrongly accused her and undermined
her work, but continued in the way she believed God was calling her and was
always ready to forgive those who wronged her.
Throughout her life Mary suffered ill health. She died on August 8, 1909
in the convent in Mount Street, North Sydney where her tomb is now enshrined.
Since then the Congregation has grown and now numbers about 1200, working
mainly in Australia and New Zealand but also scattered singly or in small
groups around the world. The "Brown Joeys" may be seen in big city
schools, on dusty bush tracks, in modern hospitals, in caravans, working with
the "little ones" of God - the homeless, the new migrant, the Aboriginal,
the lonely and the unwanted, in direct care and in advocacy, in standing with
and in speaking with. In their endeavours to reverence the human dignity of
others and to change unjust structures, the Sisters and those many others
who also share the Mary MacKillop spirit continue the work which she began.
This great Australian woman inspired great dedication to God's work in the
then new colonies. In today's world, she stands as an example of great courage
and trust in her living out of God's loving and compassionate care of those
in need.
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