Society Matters | Volume 30 No. 3 | Spring 2020
7 Volume 30 No. 3 | Spring 2020 Fr Janssen notes in one of his many letters: “You tell me that you have in mind to found an agricultural school, a trade school, a technical school, a house for young vocations and an art school: these are high-sounding projects but to execute them demands many trained people … don’t be discouraged by my comments … zeal is good, but too much zeal is not good”. Fr Arnold’s counsel proved wise, as Fr Peter soon found that work in the parish, assistance to other parishes, welcoming missionaries travelling to New Guinea, caring for sick missionaries: all these activities were enough to fill his days and keep him from achieving the dreams mentioned in Fr Arnold’s letter Fr Larry Nemer SVD, Province Archivist, writes that from the start, the Divine Word Missionaries in Sydney had as their aim, not just to rest content with day to day pastoral work and seeing to the needs of the New Guinea Mission, but also to broaden the basis of their work in Australia so that it might be more in tune with their missionary ideals and eventually that they set up a mission sending house which would take young Australians and prepare them for work in China and the Pacific. “All the plans, however were slow to reach fruition, and it was to prove a long, hard haul and two world wars before a missionary training centre was to be established in the small hamlet of Marburg, halfway between Brisbane and Toowoomba in Queensland in 1944,” he says. After World War I there were many tensions in Australia, including anti-German hysteria, nationalism, racism and the debate about diocesan clergy versus religious clergy. “In Sydney, this led the new Archbishop Kelly to ask that the parish of Drummoyne be relinquished in favour of the diocesan clergy in 1919 and Fr Klein and Br Leo now had to search for a new property which would be suitable as a base for recuperating New Guinea missionaries and for a purchaser for the New Guinea mission as well as a possible site for a future mission house,” says Fr Larry. “For almost a year they ‘floated’ from one rented residence to another in Ryde and Gladesville, from October 1919 to October 28, 1920, when Providence stepped in.” Fr Patrick Moore, parish priest of Epping, purchased a suitable property – ‘Hillcrest’ – on Midson Road – on behalf of Fr Klein, who, although by now an Australian citizen was classed as an ‘alien’ and was not allowed to purchase property. Fr Klein, Brothers Leo and Odoricus, named the house ‘Arnoldy’ and it remained until 1965 when, under the leadership of the Regional Superior Fr Lawrence Mack, the Society moved to 199 Epping Road, its current Provincial Centre. The Sister Servants of the Holy Spirit also began their ministry in Australia from ‘Arnoldy’, taking up residence in 1926 and establishing their foundation in 1933, before relocating to Brisbane after World War II. The campus on Epping Road has continued to develop over the years as its purpose changed. The first demountable chapel was replaced with a modern new chapel and buildings were established to accommodate the Province’s administrative centre. A number of different groups have been accommodated at Epping Road over the years, including postulants, novices, graduate students, immigrant chaplains, asylum seekers, ill or retired SVD members and confreres providing ministry to the laity. From its shaky start, the AUS Province now has a range of strong and vibrant ministries with multicultural parish communities, Indigenous communities, ethnic chaplaincy, prison ministry, hospital chaplaincy, formation for missionaries who have been sent out all around the world, and more. The Province has also grown to include New Zealand, Thailand and Myanmar.
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