I acknowledge that the Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle is on the lands of the Awabakal, Biripi, Darkinjung, Wonnarua, Worimi, Kamilaroi and Wiradjuri people.
On Thursday 18 August, the Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle will launch its Reflect Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP). This is a very significant and important event because it formally acknowledges our commitment to reconciliation and truth-telling.
We will gather:
This marks a long journey for the diocesan Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Ministry Council who have worked for many years to make this day a reality, when all aspects of diocesan life will embrace this RAP.
In our first step in our reconciliation journey, we are committed to:
For some background, I think it may be helpful for you to read the words of:
Motion 1 of the Fifth Plenary Council of Australia – Reconciliation: Healing Wounds, Receiving Gifts:
All Australians have much to learn from the cultures, spirituality, and knowledge of country of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. However, our society is yet to recognise fully Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples as the traditional owners and custodians of the lands and waters now known as Australia, or to achieve right relationships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and communities.
The Catholic Church in Australia has been caught up in this history of dispossession, Stolen Generations, racism, and the undermining of language and culture. Dioceses, eparchies, and religious institutes have made sincere efforts to share faith, education, and pastoral services with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. However, much suffering has been inflicted by the historically misguided attempts of those who were ignorant of the cultural richness of these peoples.
We know that we will not be ‘fully the Church that Jesus wants’ us to be until Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people have made their contribution to the life of the Church and “until that contribution has been joyfully received by others” within the Church.
The Plenary Council joyfully receives the following recommendations of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council (NATSICC), which were submitted “in the hope that the Catholic Church in Australia will more resemble the Church that Jesus Christ wants her to be in relation to Australia’s First Peoples” (John Paul II, Address to the Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders, 29 November 1986):
The Fifth Plenary Council:
The Decree, which will be sent to the Apostolic See, follows these words. I believe our step this week, to launch this RAP and the establishment of a RAP Reference Group to oversee this Reflect RAP and to begin working on our Innovate RAP, honours our own Diocesan Synod recommendations and the work of the Plenary Council.
Reconciliation is about relationships. It is about loving, truth-telling, deep listening, respectful engagement, and shared hope for a future that is different to the past and the present. Reconciliation requires the participation of all parties. It demands commitment to the journey without knowing the destination.
As a diocesan community we are committing to forming and growing these deep relationships when we gather on Country, at a future time, to listen to the stories of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People, so as to stretch our understanding and deepen our empathy, in the hope that together we can find a new path that bears the fruit of our shared reflection.
Please look out for our diocesan Reflect Reconciliation Action Plan and the invitation that will come in the future, for us to gather with our local Aboriginal communities.
Thursday should be a proud yet humbling day for all of us.