Showing posts with label Women and Faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Women and Faith. Show all posts

Friday, 6 July 2018

NAIDOC Week (July 8-15) - Faithful Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Christian women on the NAIDOC Week journey

Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Christian women profoundly shape our lives, our churches and our nation.
As leaders, trailblazers, pastors, theologians, politicians, activists and social change advocates, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women fought and continue to fight, for justice, equal rights, our rights to country, for law and justice, access to education, employment and to maintain and celebrate our culture, language, music and art.
To honour these women, this NAIDOC Week (July 8-15), we are sharing stories from Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Christian women who have – and continue to – faithfully serve God, his Church and his peoples in the face of injustice and disadvantage.
Video: Brooke Prentis invites us to NAIDOC Week
This will be a deeply moving week.
You'll hear stories of our mothers, grandmothers, ministry leaders with over 50 years experience, and theologians. You'll see paintings, you'll see videos, you'll be moved, inspired, convicted and challenged.
The theme of NAIDOC Week this year is "Because of her, we can!" That's why throughout the week we're sending daily emails from Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Christian women through the Grasstree Gathering and some non-Aboriginal friends of the Grasstree Gathering, as they share about the Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Christian women that have inspired them and shaped their lives. The stories of these women will highlight the ongoing work ahead of us as we hear and see the path ahead they've forged for us to follow upon.
Join us as we celebrate the Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Christian women who have gone before us, and continue to lead ministries that seek justice, healing and Reconciliation in this land.
Grace and peace,
Brooke Prentis
Aboriginal spokesperson for Common Grace and Coordinator
of the Grasstree Gathering


PS. I've spent the last few weeks connecting with Aboriginal Christian women across the country, as we've put together this NAIDOC Week 2018 series. I can tell you this will be a truly profound week for us all, and I earnestly encourage you to sign up for the journey.

Friday, 1 June 2018

The Religious Society of Friends, Peace and Social Justice

This article has come from the journal, The Friend, which is published by the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) in Britain.






‘Conchies’ play goes to Edinburgh Fringe

A play about a community of conscientious objectors will be performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival


A scene from the play. | Photo: Courtesy of Ian Sharp.

A Lincolnshire pacifist community that included several Quakers 
is the subject of a play being taken to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival this August.
Ian Sharp’s play Remembrance, which premiered last year, tells the story of a community of conscientious objectors (COs) that grew up around the villages of Legsby and Holton-cum-Beckering during the second world war.
The production will be presented at Edinburgh Meeting House and has Quakers in the cast, including the ninety-nine-year-old sole surviving CO of the community, Donald Sutherland.
Playwright Ian Sharp told the Friend: ‘The play is based on several interviews I did with surviving members over many years and some from the 1980s that I stumbled on. It tells the story of the community, its ideals and how the community broke up, mainly via their testimonies and with other scenes. One of our cast is the son of two “Conchies”. as they were called.’
Remembrance premiered last December at the Broadbent Theatre in Wickenby, where it sold out for three nights. One of the performances was specifically for people with family connections to the conscientious objectors, including musician Damon Albarn, whose grandfather was a member, and the actor Jim Broadbent, whose father Roy founded the Legsby community.
Ian Sharp said: ‘There wasn’t a dry eye in the house.’
Another member was Francis Cammaerts, who later become a key figure in the French resistance movement. His nephew is Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse.

Thursday, 10 May 2018

Orthodox Jewish Fashion


From The Editor, Beside The Creek:  Some years ago I lived in Sydney. The eastern suburbs of Sydney have a significant number of Jewish residents.  I used to frequent Bondi which is the beachside suburb next to Coogee.  I recall that one Saturday (Sabbath) morning on my regular visit to Bondi there was a young man sitting on a bench on the grassed esplanade. I have never forgotten him.  He was quite distinctive. He was sitting there looking reflective - but he was not dressed for the beach let alone for surfing. He looked like he had stepped right out out of the seventeenth century. I don't wish to cast aspersions, but, Bondi being Bondi, I could only think that this young man was either envious of those plunging into the surf or that he was hoping to see some beautiful young surfer maiden.

Searching on Google, this is as near as I could find.




Sydney sisters build empire with 'man-repelling' Orthodox Jewish fashion

RN BY SIOBHAN HEGARTY FOR THE SPIRIT OF THINGS
Orthodox Jewish sisters Chaya Chanin and Simi Polonsky at Coogee Beach.
PHOTO 
Brooklyn-based fashion designers Chaya Chanin (L) and Simi Polonsky (R) on a recent trip to Australia.
ABC RN: SIOBHAN HEGARTY

Growing up in the beachy Sydney suburb of Coogee, sisters Simi Polonsky and Chaya Chanin stuck out like a sore thumb.
"On Saturdays everyone is wearing bikinis, shorts, guys aren't wearing shirts," Ms Polonsky remembers.
"It's really just a fun, chilled beach vibe… and as a kid you just want to fit in, except we had to go to Synagogue."
Her sister chimes in: "And my mother would buy us these frilly, collared dresses and patent shoes with matching bows … and it's a really hot summer Saturday in Coogee!"
As Orthodox Jews and daughters of the local rabbi, the sisters were expected to follow the Torah's teachings of tznius: modesty.

The dos and don'ts of Orthodox dressing

The most common interpretation of tznius requires women to cover their elbows, knees and collarbones.
"If you do want to wear pants, leggings, trackies, jeans, whatever it is, it's with a skirt or a dress over it," Ms Chanin explains.
"We don't wear sleeveless [clothes] and no plunging necklines."





Friday, 16 February 2018

LISTENING TO THE FEMALE VOICE : WOMEN AND FAITH

From: Fatih Erol Tuncer [mailto:Fatih.Tuncer@acu.edu.au]
Sent: Thursday, 15 February 2018 4:37 PM
To: Aziz Cooper
Subject: Upcoming Public Panel Discussion on Listening to the Female Voice: Women and Faith

On behalf of Australian Catholic University and Australian Intercultural Society, I am delighted to invite you to:
A Public Panel Discussion
Date:  Tuesday 6 March 2018
Time:  6.00 – 7.30 pm
Venue:  Christ Lecture Theatre, Australian Catholic University Melbourne, 115 Victoria Parade, Fitzroy.
Registration:  Registration is free via https://womenandfaith.eventbrite.com.au





A copy of the event flyer is attached for your information. You are also invited to pass these details on to those in your networks who may be interested.

We look forward to welcoming you.

Fatih Erol Tuncer
Project Officer, Faculty of Theology and Philosophy
Australian Catholic University

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T: +61 3 9953 3920

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