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The Reconciliation Church and the Stations of the Cross


the Reconciliation Church


the Coordinator Elsie Heiss

The Reconciliation Church is a small Church at La Perouse, for the Aboriginal People of Sydney; there also is an Office of the Aboriginal Catholic Ministry, within the Church. Elsie Heiss, the Coordinator for this Church and Office, has been working for the ACM in Sydney for 13 years.

The Church is also a place where gatherings and workshops are held and as to be expected, these workshops usually have to do with Indigenous Issues. School children often come to the Church for this reason, and other groups such as the St Vincent de Paul Advisory Council, Caritas, Catechist groups of the Sydney Archdiocese, and many other groups use this Church from time to time.



The idea of a special Church at La Perouse for Catholic Aboriginal People first arose in 1998 while Elsie Heiss was on the St Andrews Parish Council at Malabar. Fr Pat Hurley and the Parish council wanted to do something positive for Aboriginal Catholics. St Andrews, especially under Fr Pat has had a long history of offering pastoral care to Aboriginal People. Aboriginal funerals are commonly held there at St Andrews, and it is also where many Aboriginal families have taken their children for Baptism.


a baptism at the Church

The parish decided to offer Elsie the use of a small outstation Church of St Andrews, formerly known as the Church of Our Lady of Good Counsel. It is situated in Yarra Road, near the Aboriginal Land Council Building of Yarra House, and the Yarra Bay Sailing Club.

The Church holds about 150 people, and has a large indoors gathering area at the back. After every Mass the congregation gather there for refreshments and conversation.

The church is continually developing. Aboriginal symbols are becoming more manifest, there are Aboriginal paintings, and a beautiful Aboriginal painting of the Madonna and Child, and the Stations of the Cross are beautifully expressed in Aboriginal form.

The Stations of the Cross have not yet been paid for, but the Aboriginal Artist, Richard Campbell has kindly allowed them to be hung in the Church. The Stations are large, approximately 1 Meter square.



On Friday April 11th 2001, Bishop David Cremin presided at a gathering in the Church to launch a fund-raising drive to help pay for these beautiful works of Aboriginal Christian art.


Bishop David Cremin and others at the Launch

This Church now attracts people from many parishes who come to experience its Aboriginal liturgies. And it is not just Aboriginal people who come. Many of those who attend are non-indigenous Catholics wanting to bring reconciliation into their spiritual lives. "I think it was the best move we ever made because this church has blossomed. This is where I want to be. This is why I wanted to join the Ministry in the first place because I wanted to minister," Elsie says.
A special Mass for Aboriginal People is celebrated every first Sunday of the month, and visitors are welcome. There is a lot of preparation before each Mass. Besides the planning of the Liturgy, fliers advertising the Mass are sent out to the people, and there is always a gathering in the back room after the Mass to enjoy conversation and refreshments. Various celebrants including Bishops take it in turn to celebrate the Mass.

A Note on the Artist Richard Campbell:

Artist, Richard Campbell is pictured with his sister Louise, speaking at the Official Launch of the Fundraising Appeal in April 2003

He is an accomplished Artist, who has been painting for approximately 30 years. He is self taught and is recognised as one of many Aboriginal artists who works with both contemporary and traditional mediums and symbols. He also is developing his skills and techniques in the area of abstract art. He was commissioned by Elsie to paint one of the Stations of the Cross, and for this purpose he spent many months studying the Stations in the many country Churches within reach of where he lived. When he completed the first of the stations, he found he was unable to stop work, the creative energy which had built up inside him during those months drove him on to finish the whole 14 Stations. He says of himself during this time, that he was impossible to live with; he began painting after breakfast each day, and continued almost non-stop until 2 am and 3 am the next morning, for months, until the whole project was complete. The Artist is currently painting 'The Resurrection' for the Church.


the Easter Vigil


the Easter Mass

The Madonna by Richard Campbell

the Tenth Station

the Eleventh Station


Donations to the Aboriginal Catholic Ministry, P O Box 296, Matraville 2036 to help pay for the Stations are urgently needed; Mrs Elsie Heiss Coordinator, and Fr Joe Kelly (Priest assistant to the ACM).

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