Showing posts with label Ballarat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ballarat. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

Ballarat politician, representing the Australian Labor Party, delivers an apology for the abuse of children in Ballarat

https://www.facebook.com/CatherineKingMP/videos/525928231151615/


Catherine King,
Federal Member for Ballarat, 
a Labor Member of the House of Representatives
delivering an apology for the abuse of children in Ballarat
and speaking about church redress schemes.

Wednesday, 2 May 2018

The alleged crimes of George Pell

From The Editor of Beside The Creek:

I am not republishing or rephrasing this 

I live in Ballarat, Victoria, Australia where many of the
alleged crimes have been perpetrated.

I live a few hundred metres from the Catholic Church
and Presbytery where many of the dreadful incidents
of child abuse in Ballarat are alleged to have occurred.

Hopefully, people will read the material on the internet
for themselves.  There is much to read.
Everything from the status of Cardinal Pell within The Vatican
and the regime of Pope Francis to the wealth of the Catholic Church 
in and around Melbourne.
I think it is fair enough to say that, innocent or guilty,
the retirement plans of Cardinal Pell
have been severely interrupted.
A number of good Australian journalists have covered
Pell and his alleged crimes.
However, I would - particularly - commend
the following book by Louise Milligan -
Cardinal: the rise and fall of George Pell.

A warning though: the book may still be sub judice.

Friday, 21 July 2017

Ballarat Interfaith Network - July 2017 Meeting;; Notice of 2017 AGM in August



MEETING OF THE BALLARAT INTERFAITH NETWORK
Wednesday 26th July 2017 AT 7 PM
At Eastwood Street Leisure Centre, Ballarat.
Enter via the front door, first room on the left.



Guest speaker for the evening will be
Neil Paramanatha
who will speak on the topic of

MyJourney in the Hindu Faith



Forthcoming

Annual General Meeting
23 August 2017 at 7pm
Eastwood Leisure Centre

Guest Speaker:  Siddick  

Wednesday, 21 June 2017

Stillness - peace and quiet in God - at historic St Paul's Balarat

Want to take time out from modern life? 
Want to seek within for the peace you know you can have?

Then this could be what you need.
Time out to be quiet and at peace.


Sunday, 30 November 2014

The 160th Anniversary of Eureka will be celebrated at historic St Paul's on Bakery Hill - details below.

Father Constantine Osuchukwu is pleased to welcome you
to a very different celebration of Eureka
- at St Paul's we are celebrating humanity:
the international people of Ballarat 160 years ago
and the multicultural city that Ballarat is to-day.
There will be music, poetry, spirituality - and supper.

PS: Father Constantine is a member of Ballarat Interfaith Network 
and is the Interfaith Officer for the 

This week - on Wednesday December 3 - 
the 160th Anniversary of the Eureka Rebellion
will be commemorated and celebrated in Ballarat.  

and there is

And this year there is a new - and somewhat different - event 
on the Eureka Calendar - at St Paul's Bakery Hill in Ballarat.
St Paul's is the site of the establishment of the Ballarat Reform League.

Thursday, 26 June 2014

The building of two mosques - and a tale of two close-by communities

More about the building of Mosques in Bendigo and Ballarat - and demonstrating the contrast of communities

~~~~~~~~

Anti-mosque campaign sparks hate concerns

24 Jun 2014By Phillippa Carisbrooke
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  • Duration00:03:45
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The proposed mosque for Bendigo (IAM)





Some fear the battle against Bendigo's first mosque may incite religious hatred.
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In the regional Victorian city of Bendigo, a legal challenge is being planned against a city council decision to grant planning permission for a proposed $3 million dollar mosque.

A lengthy and fierce battle is expected, which some fear may incite religious hatred.

But just 130-kilometres south of Bendigo, in Ballarat, work is quietly and peacefully progressing on another mosque.

Phillippa Carisbrooke reports.

(Click on audio tab to listen to this item)

Monday, 16 June 2014

Celebrating Ballarat's new Mosque #1

This report was published in The Courier, Balliarat's daily newspaper, over the week-end.  I am expecting photos to come to me which should help in providing a broader report.


Ballarat's first mosque helps build community


BALLARAT has ushered in a new era with the first dedicated prayer space for its growing Muslim population nearing completion.
Construction of the city's first mosque is due to be finished within two months.
The Courier was given a tour of the near complete Elsworth Street mosque on Saturday.
Once open, which could be as soon as August, the mosque will have the capacity to hold about 150 people and will be open every day from dawn.
Aisha Aboulfadil, a Muslim living in Ballarat for the last seven years, said the mosque represented more than just prayer.
"It can feel really disjointed here in Ballarat... it can feel like 'well I'm a Muslim and people accept that but why don't we have anywhere to pray?," she said.
"This is huge for Ballarat, it will bring people together, it will build our community, it will offer the chance to meet others of the same faith... it is so much more than just a place to pray."
A local 17-year-old Muslim refugee, who fled brutal conflict in Pakistan in 2012, said the mosque would make life in Australia without his family a little easier.
The teenager, who didn't want to be named, said he often travelled to mosques in Melbourne to pray.
"I pray everyday... but I've never had the chance to pray at a Mosque in Ballarat," he said.
"This means a lot for me, and it means a lot for Ballarat... it's a very big thing."
Ballarat's Muslim community, which includes about 70 families and a strong contingent of students, currently pray from home or use a dedicated space at the university for collective prayer on Fridays.
A topic of debate and anger in many communities around the country, the construction of the mosque in Ballarat has so far been smooth sailing.
Ballarat Islamic Society board member Mehfooz Ahmad said the group wanted to thank the people of Ballarat for their "overwhelming support".
"At the beginning there was a little bit of resistance... but now we can't thank the people of Ballarat enough for their support," he said.
Mr Ahmad was quick to denounce some of the myths surrounding mosques, including concerns about the traditional 'call to prayer' being played over loudspeakers.
"That will not happen here because it simply isn't required," he said.
He said many Islamic countries played the call to prayer over loudspeakers to remind people to pray, adding it wasn't required in Ballarat because of the small number of Muslims and the fact they would know prayer times at the new mosque.
While not a residential area by any means - the mosque is mostly surrounded by industrial buildings - the mosque is neighboured by two homes.
Mr Mehfooz said those occupants had also been supportive and co-operative.

Tuesday, 3 June 2014

You are invited to a barbecue and mosque tour hosted by Ballarat Interfaith Network and the Islamic Society of Ballarat >>> 14 June

Ballarat is getting a brand-spanking new Mosque. Please come and see. Below are details of a barbecue being hosted by the Ballarat Interfaith Network and the Islamic Society of Ballarat at Lake Esmond on Saturday 14 June from 11am to 1pm.  There will also be a visit to the nearby construction site.

All the details are below.



Monday, 10 February 2014

The Mayor of Ballarat speaks in support of building the city's first mosque

From the newsletter of the Faith Communities Council of Victoria:


Ballarat Mayor speaks out in support of mosque construction

By Lily Partland, 3rd of February 2014, ABC Ballarat
The Ballarat Mayor Josh Morris responds to an anti-Islamic group's opposition to the construction of a mosque. Anti-Islamic group Restore Australia is encouraging Ballarat residents to protest against the development of a mosque in Canadian.
ballarat-mosqueBut the Ballarat Mayor Josh Morris says the city's growing cultural diversity should be celebrated.
"One of the best things about Australia is its religious and cultural diversity.
"It's really important to note that we as a city are growing, we as a city are becoming more diverse, and therefore there's going to be a need in our community for facilities that are going to meet the needs of our growing and diverse community."
The Islamic Society of Ballarat's plans to build the city's first mosque at 116 Elsworth Street East have been approved by the City of Ballarat, with the building expected to provide enough space for 150 people to pray (photo above shows the site of the proposed mosque in Elsworth Street Canadian).
Cr Morris says while elected representatives have a responsibility to take into account the views of the community, objections to planning applications on the basis of political ideology are irrelevant to the planning process.
"Irrespective of faith everybody has a right to a place of worship and that's something that I certainly respect and something that I believe as a society we should respect."
The Catholic Mayor says while living in the United Arab Emirates he was fortunate enough to have access to a Catholic church.
"I think it's really great that we see within an Islamic nation that there was welcoming of people of diverse faiths and people such as myself.
"So I think it's really important that within our society we're welcoming and understanding of everybody who lives here."
By Lily Partland, 3rd of February 2014, ABC Ballarat

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Dignity, Australian Trees and the Interfaith Tree: a speech given by Chris Parnell in Ballarat at the close of The Tree of Life Project, 23 November 2013

speaking at the close of The Tree of Life Project
Ballarat Botanical Gardens
23 November 2013

Dignity, Australian Trees and the Interfaith Tree

Dignity as a human value is action that includes self-worth, self-regard and self-respect. What we think, feel and do with regard to ourselves, are the foundation of our integrity in encountering and interacting with others. In this manner, dignity is built on self discipline, self respect, self confidence, self sacrifice and self
satisfaction. Dignity becomes a path toward the goal of life.

If I think, feel and act with dignity, then I will think, feel and interact with others with dignity also. Where my life is sacred unto myself, then I will have regard for rights, and I will also have regard to the sacredness of others and their rights. Dignity is not only something I have for myself, dignity is something that I also confer on the other. In doing so, I am recognising and honouring the true humanness of each and every other person. Living dignity builds the dignity of the other.

The Trees of Faith Stories
The Bodhi Tree

Trees figure in myriad ways in the stories of the different religions. In the Buddhist faith, the Buddha achieved self-enlightenment sitting under the Bodhi tree.


In the mystical tradition of Islam, the great Sufi poet Rumi said,


Every tree, every growing thing as it grows, says this truth: 
You harvest what you sow. 
With life a short as a half taken breath, don't plant anything but love.

The Banyan Tree
In the Bhagavad Gita, Lord Krishna said,
"There is a banyan tree which has its roots upward and its branches down, and the Vedic hymns are its leaves. One who knows this tree is the knower of the Vedas." 

In the Sikh faith, we have the story of Guru Nanak as a young man being kept in the shade of a tree as the sun moved across the sky. The shade of the tree did not move from the sleeping young Nanak.


In the Baha’i faith, there is the orange tree beside the Mausoleum of The Bab, from which devotees take the seeds and plant them nearby houses of worship, worldwide.


The Latter Day Saints have the narrative of the revelation of the Tree of Life, with an iron rod beside it; this is the rod of faithfulness to the Word of God.


In the Jewish faith, the sacred narrative of Moses begins with the burning bush, and Moses being told to take off his shoes, for he is standing on sacred ground.


In the Christian faith, Jesus teaches that you will know a tree by its fruits: 
“Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep's clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves. You will know them by their fruits. Are grapes gathered from thorns, or figs from thistles? So, every sound tree bears good fruit, but the bad tree bears evil fruit. A sound tree cannot bear evil fruit, nor can a bad tree bear good fruit. Every tree that does not bear good fruit is cut down and thrown into the fire. Thus you will know them by their fruits. (Mt 7:15-19)
The Trees of Australia

Trees feature notably in Australian Life. We have the ever-present gum tree, the eucalyptus tree and the wattle tree. Many of our Cenotaphs and war memorials have trees growing from seeds of the tree at Lone Pine at Gallipoli. 


The Gum Tree exudes copious sap from any break in the bark. If you look at a gum tree, and examine the branches carefully, you will always find one branch is bare, dead, bereft of leaves and gum nuts. It appears the tree is pruning itself, casting off its unwanted part. This is a metaphor for human life. We cannot do in the evening of our lives what we did in the morning of our lives. We shed attachments and desires naturally as we age, just as the gum tree sheds its needless appendage. Human life is like that, we are continually letting go of attachments, glamour and affectation from our past for they weigh us down needlessly as we grow peacefully into the evening of our lives.

That one dead branch suggests to us that life and death, hope and loss, always coexist in the world. The gum tree, our Eucalyptus, is a unique living symbol of hope and survival.


Throughout our land, we find our own genus of the Eucalyptus tree, eucalyptus regnans. A Eucalyptus tree which regenerates itself. This is a unique tree, the only tree which regenerates itself in bushfire. The heat of bushfires causes the seed pods to burst open and they are fanned forward to land where they will and take root and grow.

The Eucalyptus and its gum weeping variants suggest the cycle of creation, preservation and destruction. This cycle of Generation, Organisation, Destruction

(GOD) spells the process of divine creation, maintenance and receiving – renewal of all life energy.


Wattles, also called acacias, are wonderful native plants. In fact, Australia's official floral emblem is a wattle. More than 850 species of wattle grow in Australia. The Australian Coat of Arms features the Kangaroo and Emu perched on sprigs of Wattle. Henry Lawson was once accused of sedition, when he wrote a poem about a strike camp at Barcaldine in Queensland. It was then that the memorable imagery suggestive of the Australian value of "fair go" entered the Australian soul, that of blood on the wattle:
So we must fly a rebel flag
As others did before us.
And we must sing a rebel song,
And join a rebel chorus.
We’ll make the tyrants feel the sting
O’those they would throttle.
They needn’t say the fault was ours
If blood should stain the wattle.
Seeds from the Lone Pine cones have been planted at the Shrine of Remembrance and the Australian War Memorial. These have been successfully propagated and presented as living war memorials to schools and ex-service and other organisations throughout Australia and New Zealand.

Trees as symbols suggest the marriage of heaven and earth. Like the Banyan of India, we may emulate a tree in meditation and reach up to heaven to breathe in the divine love. Our feet become the roots as we reach down and breathe the sustenance of Mother Earth.

Trees are also symbolic of the growth of faith. When we plant a sapling, we put a fence around it to protect it, we put manure or fertiliser on it, and we water it and protect it as it grows into a great tree, giving shade and shelter to many. It takes discipline and time to give that shade and shelter.

No one throws stones at bare trees; 
only the fruit-laden trees attract the stones. 

The Interfaith Tree

The Interfaith Tree of Australia accommodates all. We have striven as a nation to protect freedom of religion and worship in Australia. The work of the Australian Human Rights Commission and its collaboration with the Australian Multicultural Foundation and educational institutions produced the keystone reference document, Freedom of Religion and Belief in 21st Century Australia.

The foundation of our Interfaith Tree is dignity and respecting the rights of the other. As interfaith networks, we welcome the other and enter into dialogue with the goal of understanding, cooperation and harmony.
Interfaith Networks are not about syncretism where religions are merged; no, no: this is not the goal. Interfaith Networks respect and honour the boundaries of all religions.

It is from within these boundaries of faith and discipline, prayer and practice, that we encounter the other and experience points of contact in experience of the divine, with whatever name we honour and worship the Divine.

Our Interfaith Tree has many branches accommodating people of faith, and people of no faith. Often, people of no faith have profound values which they espouse and practice in the public domain. These values, truth, right conduct, love, peace and non-violence, are also human values. It is these values which we share in common as Australians that highlight interfaith activities as important to community well-being, respect and understanding. It is culture and values that bind our Australian society together.

Please note: The photos and links in the above speech were inserted by the editor of this blog.

Monday, 11 November 2013

In retreat - no, not going backwards or running away. Rather - stretching ourselves for the journey ahead!



On 2 November, the Ballarat Interfaith Network had a Retreat Day at the rural property of our Chair, Elham. It was beautiful. Some of us don't experience such a concept in our own traditions. Others of us are well used to the concept.

Our Wise Guide was Frank Purcell who is President of Shepparton Interfaith Network. He is the one on left of the photograph. Frank is a very learned man and his knowledge of his own faith and the need for interfaith networks and activities is substantial. We learned a lot. 

It was a good preparation for The Tree of Life Project and all the wonderful things we want to do for nine days under that banner.

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka - M.A.D.E. : Human Rights Arts and Film Festival - Oct, Nov 2013

          


M.A.D.E for Movies


M.A.D.E and the Human Rights Arts and Film Festival present four award winning and thought provoking documentaries.

 

PRAY THE DEVIL BACK TO HELL  (72 minutes)

FRI 25th OCT 7.30pm
SUN 27th OCT 11.30am
SUN 3rd NOV 2pm



Director: Gini Reticker/ USA / 2008 / Documentary

Tribeca Film Festival ‐ Best Documentary Feature
      
Pray the Devil Back to Hell chronicles the remarkable story of the courageous Liberian women who came together to end a bloody civil war and bring peace to their shattered country.

Thousands of women — ordinary mothers, grandmothers, aunts and daughters, both Christian and Muslim — came together to pray for peace and then staged a silent protest outside of the Presidential Palace.

A story of sacrifice, unity and transcendence, Pray the Devil Back to Hell honours the strength and perseverance of the women of Liberia. Inspiring, uplifting, and most of all motivating, it is a compelling testimony of how grassroots activism can alter the history of nations.
Trailer:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uon9CcoHgwA


WORDS OF WITNESS (68 minutes)

SAT 26th OCT 7.30pm (one screening only)

We are pleased to announce this session will be introduction by
Ella McNeill - Director of Human Rights Arts and Film Festival. 




Director: Mai Iskander / Egypt and USA / 2012 / English and Arabic with English subtitles / Documentary

Berlinale, 2012, One World Film Festival, 2012 – Best of the Festival Jury Award

During the Egyptian uprising, social media was the weapon of choice for a new generation. In Words of Witness, filmmaker Mai Iskander follows Heba Afify, a budding online journalist reporting from the frontline of the revolution. Heba's attempts to report are continually compromised by the restrictions she faces as a young woman in Egyptian society – in particular, by her mother's incessant reminders that, whilst a journalist, she is above all 'a girl'. Exploring the personal and political in equal measure, Words of Witness is a timely glimpse into post-­revolution Egypt today.              
Trailer:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jjgin_7xpb8

 

TAXI SISTER + RED WEDDING - 2 Documentaries combined as one session (1hr 45 including 15minute intermission)

SUN 27th OCT 1.30pm
SUN 27th OCT 5.00pm
FRI 1st NOV 7.30pm


TAXI SISTER (30 minutes)

 

Director: Theresa Traore Dahlberg / Senegal / 2011 / Wolof and French with English subtitles / Documentary    
There are 15,000 taxi drivers in Senegal; only 15 of them are women. Taxi Sister follows one of them. As Boury speeds around Dakar transporting tourists and locals to their destinations, she must defend herself against the social taboos that define driving as a male profession. An energetic peek into urban West Africa, Taxi Sister revels in the solidarity of a small group of women as they accelerate change.
Trailer:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mGf6pVRRui0


RED WEDDING (58 minutes)


Directors: Lida Chan & Guillaume Suon / Cambodia and France / 2012 / Khmer with English subtitles / Documentary


IDFA, 2012 – Winner Best Mid-­Length Documentary  
Thirty years have passed, and on the eve of her son̢۪s wedding, Sochan Pen is finally ready to break her silence. At the age of 16, she was forced to marry a soldier as part of Cambodia's genetic engineering. Juxtaposing haunting archival and present day footage as Sochan confronts the people responsible for her rape and torture, Red Wedding is a land mark exposition of forced marriages under the Khmer Rouge.

 Trailer: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBnePP31c04
 

Bookings Essential - 1800 287 113 or

http://made.org/WhatsOn/Events.aspx

Tickets $10 or Conc. $7 per session


M.A.D.E (Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka)
102 Stawell St South, Ballarat
Phone: 1800 287 113


info@made.org
http://www.made.org

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Museum of Australian Democracy at Eureka (M.A.D.E) is Australia's newest museum. It is located on the site of the Eureka Stockade in Ballarat, western Victoria. With the evocative 159-year-old Eureka Flag as its centrepiece, M.A.D.E’s interactive and immersive exhibitions will explore the evolution and the future of democracy – looking at culture, civics, history and citizenship.
For more information, visit our website www.made.org