PILGRIMAGE IN AUSTRALIA
ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II
TO THE ABORIGINES AND TORRES STRAIT ISLANDERS
IN «BLATHERSKITE PARK»
Alice Spring (Australia),
29 November 1986
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
It is
a great joy for me to be here today in Alice Springs and to meet so many of
you, the Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders of Australia. I want to tell you
right away how much the Church esteems and loves you, and how much she wishes to
assist you in your spiritual and material needs.
1. At the beginning of time, as God’s Spirit moved over the waters, he began to
communicate something of his goodness and beauty to all creation. When God then
created man and woman, he gave them the good things of the earth for their use
and benefit; and he put into their hearts abilities and powers, which were his
gifts. And to all human beings throughout the ages God has given a desire for
himself, a desire which different cultures have tried to express in their own
ways.
2. As the human family spread over the face of the earth, your people settled and
lived in this big country that stood apart from all the others. Other people did
not even know this land was here; they only knew that somewhere in the southern
oceans of the world there was "The Great South Land of the Holy Spirit".
But for thousands of years you have lived in this land and fashioned a culture
that endures to this day. And during all this time, the Spirit of God has been
with you. Your "Dreaming", which influences your lives so strongly
that, no matter what happens, you rema,in for ever people of your culture, is
your only way of touching the mystery of God’s Spirit in you and in creation.
You must keep your striving for God and hold on to it in your lives.
3. The rock paintings and the discovered evidence of your ancient tools and
implements indicate the presence of your age-old culture and prove your ancient
occupancy of this land.
Your culture, which shows the lasting genius and dignity of your race, must not
be allowed to disappear. Do not think that your gifts are worth so little that
you should no longer bother to maintain them. Share them with each other and
teach them to your children. Your songs, your stories, your paintings, your
dances, your languages, must never be lost. Do you perhaps remember those words
that Paul VI spoke to the aboriginal people during his visit to them in 1970? On
that occasion he said: "We know that you have a life style proper to your
own ethnic genius or culture – a culture which the Church respects and which
she does not in any way ask you to renounce... Society itself is enriched by the
presence of different cultural and ethnic elements. For us you and the values
you represent are precious. We deeply respect your dignity and reiterate our
deep affection for you".
4. For thousands of years this culture of yours was free to grow without
interference by people from other places. You lived your lives in spiritual
closeness to the land, with its animals, birds, fishes, waterholes, rivers,
hills and mountains. Through your closeness to the land you touched the
sacredness of man’s relationship with God, for the land was the proof of a
power in life greater than yourselves.
You did not spoil the land, use it up, exhaust it. and then walk away from it.
You realized that your land was related to the source of life.
The silence of the Bush taught you a quietness of soul that put you in touch
with another world, the world of God’s Spirit. Your careful attention to the
details of kinship spoke of your reverence for birth, life and human generation.
You knew that children need to be loved, to be full of joy. They need a time to
grow in laughter and to play, secure in the knowledge that they belong to their
people.
You had a great respect for the need which people have for law, as a guide to
living fairly with each other. So you created a legal system – very strict it
is true – but closely adapted to the country in which you lived your lives. It
made your society orderly. It was one of the reasons why you survived in this
land.
You marked the growth of your young men and women with ceremonies of discipline
that taught them responsibility as they came to maturity.
These achievements are indications of human strivings. And in these strivings
you showed a dignity open to the message of God’s revealed wisdom to all men
and women, which is the great truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
5. Some of the stories from your Dreamtime legends speak powerfully of the great
mysteries of human life, its frailty, its need for help, its closeness to
spiritual powers and the value of the human person. They are not unlike some of
the great inspired lessons from the people among whom Jesus himself was born.
It: is wonderful to see how people, as they accept the Gospei of Jesus, find
points of agreement between their own traditions and those of Jesus and his
people.
6. The culture which this long and careful growth produced was not prepared for the
sudden meeting with another people, with different customs and traditions, who
came to your country nearly 200 years ago. They were different from Aboriginal
people. Their traditions, the organization of their lives, and their attitudes
to the land were quite strange to you. Their law too was quite different. These
people had knowledge, money and power; and they brought with them some patterns
of behaviour from which the Aboriginal people were unable to protect
themselves.
7. The effects of some of those forces are still active among you today. Many of
you have been dispossessed of your traditional lands, and separated from your
tribal ways, though some of you still have your traditional culture. Some of you
are establishing Aboriginal communities in the towns and cities. For others
there is still no real place for camp-fires and kinship observances except on
the fringes of country towns. There, work is hard to find, and education in a
different cultural background is difficult. The discrimination caused by racism
is a daily experience.
You have learned how to survive, whether on your own lands, or scattered among
the towns and cities. Though your difficulties are not yet over, you must learn
to draw on the endurance which your ancient ceremonies have taught you.
Endurance brings with it patience; patience helps you to find the way ahead, and
gives you courage for your journey.
8. Take heart from the fact that many of your languages are still spoken and that
you still possess your ancient culture. You have kept your sense of brotherhood.
If you stay closely united, you are like a tree standing in the middle of a
bush-fire sweeping through the timber. The leaves are scorched and the tough
bark is scarred and burned; but inside the tree the sap is still flowing, and
under the ground the roots are still strong. Like that tree you have endured the
flames, and you still have the power to be reborn. The time for this rebirth is
now!
9. We know that during the last two hundred years certain people tried to
understand you, to learn about you, to respect your ways and to honour you as
persons. These men and women, as you soon realized, were different from others
of their race. They loved and cared for the indigenous people. They began to
share with you their stories of God, helped you cope with sickness, tried to
protect you from ill-treatment. They were honest with you, and showed you by
their lives how they tried to avoid the bad things in their own culture. These
people were not always successful, and there were times when they did not fully
understand you. But they showed you good will and friendship. They came from
many different walks of life. Some were teachers and doctors and other
professional people; some were simple folk. History will remember the good
example of their charity and fraternal solidarity.
Among those who have loved and cared for the indigenous people, we especially
recall with profound gratitude all the missionaries of the Christian faith. With
immense generosity they gave their lives in service to you and to your
forebears. They helped to educate the Aboriginal people and offered health and
social services. Whatever their human frailty, and whatever mistakes they may
have made, nothing can ever minimize the depht of their charity. Nothing can
ever cancel out their greatest contribution, which was to proclaim to you Jesus
Christ and to establish his Church in your midst.
10. From the earliest times men like Archbishop Polding of Sydney opposed the legal
fiction adopted by European settlers that this land was terra nullius –
nobody’s country. He strongly pleaded for the rights of the Aboriginal
inhabitants to keep the traditional lands on which their whole society depended.
The Church still supports you today.
Let it not be said that the fair and equitable recognition of Aboriginal rights
to land is discrimination. To call for the acknowledgment of the land rights of
people who have never surrendered those rights is not discrimination. Certainly,
what has been done cannot be undone. But what can now be done to remedy the
deeds of yesterday must not be put off till tomorrow.
Christian people of good will are saddened to realize – many of them only
recently – for how long a time Aboriginal people were transported from their
homelands into small areas or reserves where families were broken up, tribes
split apart, children orphaned and people forced to live like exiles in a
foreign country.
The reserves still exist today, and require a just and proper settlement that
still lies unachieved. The urban problems resulting from the transportation and
separation of people still have to be addressed, so that these people may make a
new start in life with each other once again.
11. The establishment of a new society for Aboriginal people cannot go forward
without just and mutually recognized agreements with regard to these human
problems, even though their causes lie in the past. The greatest value to be
achieved by such agreements, which must be implemented without causing new
injustices, is respect for the dignity and growth of the human person. And you,
the Aboriginal people of this country and its cities, must show that you are
actively working for your own dignity of life. On your part, you must show that
you too can walk tall and command the respect which every human being expects to
receive from the rest of the human family.
12. The Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ speaks all languages. It esteems and
embraces all cultures. It supports them in everything human and, when necessary,
it purifies them. Always and everywhere the Gospel uplifts and enriches cultures
with the revealed message of a loving and merciful God.
That Gospel now invites you to become, through and through, Aboriginal
Christians. It meets your deepest desires. You do not have to be people divided
into two parts, as though an Aboriginal had to borrow the faith and life of
Christianity, like a hat or a pair of shoes, from someone else who owns them.
Jesus calls you to accept his words and his values into your own culture. To
develop in this way will make you more than ever truly Aboriginal.
The old ways can draw new life and strength from the Gospel. The message of
Jesus Christ can lift up your lives to new heights, reinforce all your positive
values and add many others, which only the Gospel in its originality proposes.
Take this Gospel into your own language and way of speaking; let its spirit
penetrate your communities and determine your behaviour towards each other, let
it bring new strength to your stories and your ceremonies. Let the Gospel come
into your hearts and renew your personal lives. The Church invites you to
express the living word of Jesus in ways that speak to your Aboriginal minds and
hearts. All over the world people worship God and read his word in their own
language, and colour the great signs and symbols of religion with touches of
their own traditions. Why should you be different from them in this regard, why
should you not be allowed the happiness of being with God and each other in
Aboriginal fashion?
13. As you listen to the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, seek out the best things
of your traditional ways. If you do, you will come to realize more and more your
great human and Christian dignity. Let your minds and hearts be strengthened to
begin a new life now. Past hurts cannot be healed by violence, nor are present
injustices removed by resentment. Your Christian faith calls you to become the
best kind of Aboriginal people you can be. This is possible only if
reconciliation and forgiveness are part of your lives. Only then will you find
happiness. Only then will you make your best contribution to all your brothers
and sisters in this great nation. You are part of Australia and Australia is
part of you. And the Church herself in Australia will not be fully the Church
that Jesus wants her to be until you have made your contribution to her life and
until that contribution has been joyfully received by others.
In the new world that is emerging for you, you are being called to live fully
human and Christian lives, not to die of shame and sorrow. But you know that to
fulfil your role you need a new heart. You will already feel courage rise up
inside you when you listen to God speaking to you in these words of the
Prophets:
"Do not be afraid for I have redeemed you; I have called you by your name,
you are mine. Do not be afraid, for I am with you".
And again:
"I am going to... gather you together... and bring you home to your own
land... I shall give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you... You shall be
my people and I will be your God".
14. With you I rejoice in the hope of God’s gift of salvation, which has its
beginnings here and now, and which also depends on how we behave towards each
other, on what we put up with, on what we do, on how we honour God and love all
people.
Dear Aboriginal people: the hour has come for you to take on new courage and new
hope. You are called to remember the past, to be faithful to your worthy
traditions, and to adapt your living culture whenever this is required by your
own needs and those of your fellowman. Above all you are called to open your
hearts ever more to the consoling, purifying and uplifting message of Jesus
Christ, the Son of God, who died so that we might all have life, and have it to
the full.
© Copyright 1986 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana
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