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At a certain
point you say Annie Dillard
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The foundation of the Australia-New Zealand Province Beginnings: It was a Marist priest who had been cared for by sisters of the Society of the Sacred Heart, Grand Coteau, who urged Bishop Pompallier to send for the Society of the Sacred Heart. The Bishop, on a visit to France, asked Madeleine Sophie Barat for help. She had to refuse at that time but gave him hope that it could be possible in the future.
A
group of five Religious of the Sacred Heart reached Timaru on January 19th,
1880. In 1905 the Society spread from the South Island to Island Bay in
Wellington, in the north, then to Baradene in Auckland in 1908. Timaru was entrusted to Suzannah Boudreaux, a
native of Louisiana and the child of a poor family. Suzannah had been
adopted by Philippine Duschesne
and it was through this connection Suzannah realised her love for the
Society and made her vows at seventeen. She went to new York where for
thirty years she worked with Mother Hardey, ready for anything and 'taking
people by the heart".
New Zealand was founded from the West, Australia from the East.
In 1879, when the Parkes Government was preparing a Bill to make
education "compulsory, secular and free", Archbishop Roger Bede Vaughan,
resolved to maintain the Catholic system, invited several congregations to
send teaching religious to Sydney. The outcome was that on April 1st, 1882, a group of five sisters embarked on the S.S. Orient, and after a long sea voyage of 39 days, arrived in Sydney on May 9th. The Superior of the group was Febronie Vercruysse, a Belgian, three were English, all converts of the Oxford Movement and one Irish .
The Sisters expected to start a day school, but eventually the
Archbishop requested a boarding school, as there were few in Sydney at the
time. For six weeks, the Sisters of the Good Samaritan made them
welcome while they searched for a locality. Finally, with much urging from John Hughes (backed by some
financial help) the choice fell on Claremont on the hill above Rose
Bay.
By 1888 there were three boarding school and three free schools, supplied by personnel coming every few years from Europe and by some local vocations. After 1904 when the anticlerical French Government confiscated 42 Sacred Heart school and properties in France, 2,500 religious had to find homes in other countries, and the convents in Australia and New Zealand opened their doors to many of these.
It was this fact, rather than its origin, that gave the Society
of the Sacred Heart its French ethos in the early years of this
century. Foundress: St Madeleine Sophie Barat
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Society of the
Sacred Heart - ANZ |