Bishop Charles Gauci - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 19 Oct 2023 03:50:09 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Bishop Charles Gauci - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Call for unity after Indigenous Voice referendum https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/10/19/call-for-unity-after-indigenous-voice-referendum/ Thu, 19 Oct 2023 05:08:59 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=165170 Call for unity

A call for unity has been made following Australians voting against a proposal to amend the constitution, thus denying First Nations people an advisory body for the government. Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge has issued a reflection, published by The Catholic Leader, saying to Australians "It's time to look forward rather than look back. "There's an Read more

Call for unity after Indigenous Voice referendum... Read more]]>
A call for unity has been made following Australians voting against a proposal to amend the constitution, thus denying First Nations people an advisory body for the government.

Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge has issued a reflection, published by The Catholic Leader, saying to Australians "It's time to look forward rather than look back.

"There's an urgent need now to create a new kind of national unity, and that can't be left to the politicians because there's more to this than politics" Coleridge wrote.

The final vote on "The Voice" was 60 percent against the proposal. All six Australian states rejected the plan.

Bishop Charles Gauci, chair of the Bishops Commission for Relations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, commented, "Voters rejecting a referendum to give greater political rights to Indigenous people in Australia doesn't mean we accept the status quo."

Gauci said many Australians "will be glad" to see the campaign has come to an end.

"For our nation though this should be seen as a time for a new beginning" the bishop reflected.

Australia is home to just under a million Indigenous Australians, and a great number of those face disparities in health, education and opportunities in a nation of nearly 27 million people.

Moment of disagreement

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese also made a call for unity in the face of this "moment of disagreement."

Albanese stated "We are not Yes voters or No voters, we are all Australians. And it is as Australians together that we must take our country beyond this debate."

Archbishop Coleridge said the Australian Catholic bishops have spoken of the need for a new engagement with Indigenous peoples.

"Fine words and symbolic gestures are not enough," the archbishop said

"In the Archdiocese of Brisbane we will commit ourselves more resolutely to our Reconciliation Action Plan.

"It's up to all of us to ensure that what we do from here serves national unity and racial justice, because we'll never have the first unless we have the second," Coleridge concluded.

Sources

Crux

The Catholic Leader

CathNews New Zealand

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Darwin bishop threatens to close schools over discrimination laws https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/11/21/darwin-bishop-threatens-to-close-schools-over-discrimination-laws/ Mon, 21 Nov 2022 07:05:58 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=154363 Darwin bishop to close schools

The Bishop of Darwin has threatened to close Catholic schools if the Northern Territory's Labor government changes laws that strip schools of the right to hire employees based on faith. Bishop Charles Gauci wants the Northern Territory government to shelve its plan to remove the right of religious schools to employ staff who share their Read more

Darwin bishop threatens to close schools over discrimination laws... Read more]]>
The Bishop of Darwin has threatened to close Catholic schools if the Northern Territory's Labor government changes laws that strip schools of the right to hire employees based on faith.

Bishop Charles Gauci wants the Northern Territory government to shelve its plan to remove the right of religious schools to employ staff who share their faith.

The NT parliament is considering government amendments to the Anti-Discrimination Act.

The change will end an existing provision that lets "religious educational institutions discriminate against staff based on their sexuality''.

Bishop Gauci has warned that the draft bill has the "unintended consequences'' of preventing religious schools from requiring staff to teach in line with the school's faith.

"Denying faith schools the right of ensuring that their belief systems are upheld by employing the right people is a violation of religious freedom,'' he wrote in his Bishop's Reflection on Thursday.

"Can you imagine a Catholic school employing a leader of a school who advocates atheism, or thinks that the beliefs of our church are silly?

"Now, it doesn't mean that every teacher is a Catholic or even a believer. But we certainly have a firm policy that the principal, the deputy, the director of religious education, are practising members of our faith community," Bishop Gauci said on Darwin's Mix 104.9 Radio on 16 November.

"I'm taking this very, very seriously.

"It's really questioning whether we are going to be viable in all of our schools. And we have plenty of them, giving a great contribution to people across the NT," Bishop Gauci said.

Government taking a "radical approach''

He said the legislative amendments could force Catholic schools to let teachers promote atheism or polygamy to students.

"If I cannot have a faith school … then we would have to seriously consider closing them, and then all the kids would have to go to the state schools,'' he said on Wednesday.

"We are not talking about a teacher's personal beliefs or even their own private lives; we are talking about what they do in schools and what they teach.

"I repeat: more than half the students to come to our schools are not Catholic, but they value what we present and what we hold."

The Australian Association of Christian Schools said the NT government was taking a "radical approach'' towards anti-discrimination laws by removing the longstanding employment exemption for religious schools.

"Completely removing (section) 37a from the Discrimination Act leaves our schools vulnerable to claims of discrimination when it comes to employing staff who share the faith,'' AACS executive officer Vanessa Cheng said on Thursday.

The Australian Christian Lobby also called on the NT government to reverse the amendment.

"Everyone understands the right of political parties to hire staff who are members of their parties, and for other values-based organisations to hire staff who adhere to their ethos,'' the ACL's NT director Christopher Brohier said.

"And yet the NT government plans to deny faith-based schools this same right.

"Religious schools should not be forced to hire staff opposed to, or out of step with, their beliefs.''

Mr Brohier said the NT bill "discriminates against parents who choose to send their children to religious schools".

Sources

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