JESUIT PIONEERS.
A Page of
Australian Mission History:
1848-1901.
By Very Rev Austin Kelly, S.J.
Australian CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY No. 1063 (1948).
JESUIT PIONEERS.
To the lover of the few "antiquities" we have in Australia a visit to
the wine country near Adelaide is well worth while. There, in the midst of
sweetly undulating fields and sun-kissed vineyards, are "remains"
that tell a story of great deeds of forgotten heroes. Today the motorist, as he
speeds northwards from the beautiful "garden city," little dreams
that where now the broad North Road stretches straight before him, some one
hundred years ago, back in the 1850’s, a lonely Jesuit Missionary urged on his faltering
horse through trackless bush seeking for the Highland shepherd's hut or, more
rare, for the few rude farm-houses of the Austrian settlers. And yet, if he
only knew it, these woods and hills and vineyards could tell a story, quite
unknown to most Australians, but worthy of an undying record in our history.
Hidden in their midst, the modest buildings of rough-hewn stone built by the
Jesuit Missionaries, and their own silent graves, remind us today of these men,
who left home and Fatherland and sailed away into the great Southern Sea to lay
the foundation of God's Church in this "lovely morning land."
It was in the month of May,
that I drove from Adelaide to the old Jesuit College at Sevenhill — a drive of
some ninety miles through the autumn-tinted vineyards; and it was then that I
longed to let others share with me the thrill I felt on hearing of the labours
of the men who had toiled for fifty-three years ministering to the scattered
Catholic population and founding a diocese to hand over to others when the time
was ripe.
And here fortune came to my aid. For treasured in the old library in Sevenhill, in the original German, are the letters and relations of the early missionaries; and these were being translated by one of the Fathers residing there today. A few extracts from these, chosen here and there, will reveal, far better than anything else, the noble story of self-sacrifice and zeal.
Father Peter Sinthem, S.J., an Austrian, writing on the occasion of the
Centenary of the restoration of his Province, begins his Memoir of the
Mission in Australia with words that we may well echo today:
"On the 8th December, 1848, the first Jesuit Missionaries, two Austrian
Fathers, set foot on Australian soil; in 1901 the last Austrian Superior handed
over the Mission to his Jesuit brethren of the Irish Province; and returned to
his Austrian homeland. Today, when missionary activities have everywhere
received such a mighty impetus, it is certainly fitting that these 53 years'
work of the Austrian Jesuit Mission should be known to a wider circle. They
fill a page of glory in the mission history of Austria, and of the Austrian Province
of the Society of Jesus."
Father Sinthem recalls the
circumstances which led to the foundation of the Austrian Jesuit Mission:
"Founded in 1836, the colony (of South Australia) ten years later was already in a position to export a considerable amount of grain. The discovery of the copper mines at Kapunda and Burra-Burra gave a strong stimulus towards its further development. Great efforts were made to entice townsfolk, tradesmen, and farmers to emigrate to the colony from Germany and from England. Among the newcomers were a number of German Protestant families, who settled in the neighbourhood of Tanunda and Angaston. The good news sent home by these induced other Germans to follow in their footsteps, and the resolution to emigrate was made more easily in the midst of the confusion of 1848, the year of revolutions.
"A well-to-do Catholic of Silesia, Franz Weikert, allowed himself to be
persuaded to act as the leader of a group of emigrants. He sold his large farm
in order to be able to pay the passage money for all the group, a matter of
£1000: there were to be none but Catholics among the company of travellers. . .
. Weikert, who was a thoroughly practical Catholic, did not wish to find
himself and those who shared his destiny, without a priest in his new home. To
secure a priest he approached the Superior of the Saint Ludwig-Mission-Verein
in Bavaria, the Reverend Hofkaplan Muller, of Munich, who referred him to the
Provincial of the Austrian Jesuits, and thus it was that the Austrian Jesuits
secured their Australian Mission. The General of the Jesuits approved of the
Mission, but insisted on two conditions, that not one, but two, Fathers should
go, and that, as far as possible, they should remain together in Australia. It
was at Innsbruck that the Provincial communicated the decision of the General
to the assembled Fathers, and then asked who was ready to go. There was silence
for a minute, and then a young Viennese, Father Max Klinkowstrom, came forward
and said, `Ecce ego, mitte me.' (Here am I, send me.) And he was sent. Then a
second announced his readiness to go, a young man, Father Aloysius Kranewitter,
a Tyrolese, who at his first Mass had begged God to send him wherever the need
of priests was greatest. He was the second one chosen for the Mission."
Actually, it was this Father
Kranewitter who was to be the real founder of the Jesuit Mission in Australia;
he was born near Stams in the Tyrol on the 4th April, 1817. The beauty and the
majesty of the mountains that nurtured the lofty spirit of Andreas Hofer, did
not fail to inspire the soul of young Kranewitter, for when he had completed
his studies in the Gymnasium of Meran, he felt drawn to consecrate his life to
a great ideal, and entered the Novitiate of the Society of Jesus at Gratz in
1836. Until his ordination in 1848, his course was the usual one followed by
the Jesuit Scholastics; he studied the Classics and then Philosophy; he taught
for five years in the College at Innsbruck and began his theological studies,
being ordained before their completion. Father Sinthem has told us of the
petition he made to God at his first Mass — that he might be sent wherever
priests were needed most — and it was answered with a promptness that must have
exceeded his wildest expectation. In that very year, 1848, amidst the turmoil
of universal revolution, the Jesuits were expelled from the Austrian Empire.
Many sought refuge and a field to work in, far away in the missions of the
United States and Canada and of South America, while the rest were dispersed
among the provinces of Europe. It was at this opportune moment that God's
Providence caused Father Muller's request for priests to reach the Austrian
Provincial, Father James Pierling. As we have seen, Fathers Klinkowstrom and
Kranewitter responded promptly to his call for volunteers, and they joined
Weikert's party.
"
. . . The good ship ‘Alfred’," continues Father Sinthem, "took
all the travelling companions on board at Hamburg on the 15th August, 1848, the
Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady. On the next great feast of Mary, the Feast
of the Immaculate Conception, the 8th December, at Adelaide, the first Austrian
Missioner set foot for the first time on the Australian soil."
Fortunately, Father Aloysius
Kranewitter was a good letter-writer, and the story of the early days of the
Mission is best told in the letters he wrote to his Provincial at home in
Austria.
THE VOYAGE.
Not only for the sake of the interesting matter they contain, but particularly
because they throw some light on the man that was coming to Australia, it will
be worth while to give some extracts from a letter dealing with the voyage. The
letter is his first to his Provincial, written 10th June, 1849:
"The whole sea voyage comes back to me like an unpleasant dream, the
remembrance of which brings little that is joyful, for nothing is more
disagreeable than to be tossed for months on end on the wide desert sea, which
one has already been gazing on to satiety. Certainly one learns from experience
more than from a thousand books, but the study is painful. . . . On the 15th
August our ship left Hamburg harbour, and on the 19th we left the mouth of the
Elbe. We were hardly floating on the waves of the sea before its almost magic
power displayed itself. In about an hour nearly half the passengers were
afflicted with sea-sickness. Our course lies by the Gulf Stream and the Trade
Winds towards Rio de Janeiro, then we make for the Cape of Good Hope, and from
there direct to Adelaide with the West Trade Winds, which always blow more
strongly toward the South. The reckoning is about 90 to 100 days to Port
Adelaide. On the 20th August, as we sailed past Heligoland, a Danish frigate,
which lay at anchor off the south of the Elbe, caught sight of us. She at once
set after us with full sail. But as she had seen us a little too late, and was
stationed north of the island, though she exerted herself for an hour, she
could not overtake us, and at 1 p.m., regretfully she turned back on her course.
"On
the 23rd I had to baptize a child of Protestant parents; and the day before,
after I had blessed it, a child was plunged into the depths of the stormy
waves. At 12 o'clock that night, I was called to the bedside of another child
struggling with death. It was carried off with convulsions next day. The last
day of our first month out, we had the misfortune to discover that in our cabin
there were some who were practically nothing but Christian pagans. An
historical discussion which occurred at table revealed the fact. One of our
cabin mates declared that quite a number of historical assertions had as little
truth in them as the Bible itself. This declaration naturally led to others, and
it became quite plain that those unfortunate men had long suffered ship-wreck
in matters of faith. On another occasion, one of these gentlemen maintained
that, were the Catholic religion logically consistent in all its teachings,
real belief would not be found any more among its members; the Protestants were
already taught in their schools to cast off all belief. I was ready to argue
with him on this matter, after I had instructed him as to what faith and
religion really was; we could not engage in any argument regarding religion unless
that were clearly settled.
"The 2nd October was a Sunday, the Feast of the Guardian Angels. It was the first day on which we were able to preach on deck to our ship's company, consisting of Catholics, Protestants, Jews and Christian heathens. After that, my companion, Father Max Klinkowstrom, preached every Sunday when the weather was fine and the sea calm, and he was always sympathetically listened to. I had time on my hands in abundance to cast my thoughts back to you and all my beloved friends at Innsbruck, to my homeland, and those dear to me there. Hardly a night passed that I did not dream that I was just as near to you as I really was far away, and with every minute was going farther away from you all. Still this was not home-sickness, nor regret, nor a longing to go back again; it was simply a painful feeling deep down in the soul.
"On the 11th October we stood before Rio's lovely harbour. The finest art
could not produce a more beautiful picture. On the right and on the left at its
entrance rocky heights rise up, separated only by a narrow strait, the
veritable pillars of the harbour fashioned by Nature itself. On each side, on
three terraces strong forts frown, with 30 cannon on each terrace. Our
three-master ran up the German flag [the flag of the German Confederation] and the
favouring breeze soon brought her between two lines of forts. We were
questioned as to who we were and where we came from. The German flag had not
yet been seen in these waters; so we had to declare this also. Then a cannon
from the left-hand fort announced our arrival. . . . A general permission was
given for us to land. Of course, we availed ourselves of the opportunity. Four Negroes
rowed us ashore. Rio is a city of 190,000 inhabitants, of whom about two-thirds
are blacks. These do all the hard labour, for it is considered a disgrace for a
white man even to carry anything through the streets of Rio; you see blacks in
swarms loaded like beasts of burden, and they sing a howling kind of
alternating chant as they haul things along. It is a doleful sight.
“Our first trip was to a German hostel, and the first thing we asked for was
fruit. They brought us oranges and Musa paradisiaca (Bananas. Translator's
note). These last were a novelty to us. They are round and long in shape, not
unlike very long potatoes, about three to four inches in length, of a
dark-yellow colour when ripe, with a skin about the thickness of the back of a
knife, light and soft; the fruit is rather mealy, with little juice, but with a
very pleasant flavour. It is quite a common fruit here.
"We
had a pleasant surprise when we met the only German priest to be found in the
whole of Brazil, who happened to be here at the time. He is called Reis, and
comes from Vienna. He was formerly a Redemptorist, but of late years (he left
the order) — he has been settled in the neighbourhood of Rio, about 10 miles
from the city, and he comes, from time to time, to town for the confessions of
the large number of German Catholics who live in Rio. He was very kind and
obliging to us, and was able to give us reliable information about religious
conditions here. We were not a little shocked by the picture he drew for us,
and if he were not a priest, we would not have believed half of what he told
us. There is a general indifference and neglect in matters of religion, though
there are four or five religious houses in the city, and the Italian Capuchins
on a hill near the city are real men of God. He recommended a visit to these
last, but it was too late to do so that evening, as we had to stay the night in
the German hostel. Later in the day, however, we visited the Church of the
Carmelites, where there were devotions in honour of Saint Theresa. But little
was the devotion we found there! When we entered the brightly-lit church, it
was like going into a cafe; people stood in groups engaged in open
conversation, while loud music of a very inferior type resounded from the
choir. Hardly anyone knelt, except some few, these mostly Negroes, at the
communion rail.
“The next morning, in nasty weather, we visited the Capuchin Fathers. Our route
led up to a pretty hill, one of four in the city, on three of which are the
homes of religious. The one to which we climbed rose in terraces, and I could
see on it a small church with two towers, on the left of which was a large
building like a monastery. I thought this must be where the Fathers lived whom
we were going to visit, but the church was shut up, and all around I saw
Brazilian soldiers. I was told I must go on further. Finally, I found a second
small church on the very top of the hill and a new building beside it; this was
what I sought. I was received very kindly, and I had the great delight of
saying Mass once more. The little Italian that I knew proved very useful to me
in making myself understood by the Father Superior. His whole appearance was ‘one
of kindliness, piety and mortification’, and when I told him who we were, he
invited us to stay with him. Nothing could have been more welcome to us, and
even yet, whenever I think of it, there comes vividly back to my memory,
standing there on its hill, the little monastery and church where we were so
courteously received. I shall never forget the kindness of these sons of Saint
Francis; only God in His charity can repay them for it. The Capuchin Fathers
have a residence in Rio which they recruit with subjects from Italy. There are
four priests and a lay brother there at present, distinguished by the poverty
and simplicity everywhere found among the Franciscans, and most kind and
obliging. My companion (Father Max Klinkowstrom) was suffering from a severe
ear-ache and had to keep his bed. But the kindness of the Fathers made it
possible for me to visit the city on several occasions.
“The
streets are very dirty; they have pavements at the side, but one is in constant
danger of tripping on them, as they are so badly built and full of holes. The
houses are all low-lying, only a few are two stories high, so that with its
large population the city is spread out over a large area. It has hardly any
note-worthy buildings. There is a museum, but it is badly arranged, and has
only a small collection. Near the entrance are two wire cages in which are kept
Brazilian snakes of about 12 feet long; most of the Portuguese do not go any
further than these, and they seem to take the greatest pleasure in teasing the
poor beasts with little sticks.
“The way to and from the town always took me past that (other) little church (of
the Carmelites), so that I naturally was anxious to have a closer view of it. I
found that it had once had a building attached to it at one side, and this had
either been pulled down or fallen down in decay. The stones that lay round
about showed that it had been a building with a broad pillared entrance. The
church, of no great size to look at, had two little towers over the entrance,
and over the door was a date, 1565, and a little above the date the word
"Jesus." You can imagine what I conjectured from this. And my
conjectures were confirmed by what I learnt from the Capuchin Fathers.
“It
was the first and the last residence of the Society of Jesus in Rio, the church
itself built perhaps by Father Anchieta. It was the most beautiful site that
Blessed Anchieta could have chosen for a residence. [Father Jose (Joseph)
Anchieta was formally beatified in 1980.] Built on a terrace on the hillside,
the building had one of the best positions in Rio; in front was a fine view of
the beautiful harbour and the whole city, and behind was a fertile slope
suitable for a nice garden. But now the church is closed — there are left now in
Brazil only two establishments of the Jesuits, away in the interior, the
nearest being Santa Catarina, 40 miles from Rio. How gladly would I have flown
there! But the time was too short; we had to be on board ship by next Sunday
evening.
"It
was the Sunday of the dedication of the church, the Feast of Saint Theresa (15
October), and I was delighted to be able to say Mass still on that day, the
best way in the circumstances of celebrating the dedication. That Sunday we had
our last meal with the Fathers. My colleague was so much better, that he was in
a condition to continue the voyage. As the time for our departure approached,
the good Fathers did not wish to let us go, and wanted us to stay longer with
them; my colleague should first completely recover from his illness. We excused
ourselves by saying that our destination was Australia; the Fathers undertook
to get us berths on another ship, and even to pay for them! Surely, the
argument that we could not leave our own people unaided was sufficient to
persuade us not to go away yet? This was a plea that had its attractiveness
indeed. We could visit our brothers at Santa Catarina, we could see Brazil with
its primitive forests, we could recreate ourselves by a pleasant journey, we
could stay for a time with people so worthy of a visit, and perhaps we could do
quite an amount of good work among the many Germans to be found in Rio and
elsewhere! But our call was further afield. We had quite a tender leave-taking,
and the kind Fathers were moved to tears at our departure."
On the Feast of the Immaculate
Conception of Our Lady, the 8th December, 1848, Father Kranewitter and his
companions landed at Port Adelaide.
"ALL NEW AND UNKNOWN TO US."
"On the 4th December we heard the cry, `Land! Land!' and could you
describe the emotions in the hearts of all of us at the cry? It was Kangaroo
Island that lay straight in front of us. On the 5th December, we lay in the
Outer Harbour of Adelaide; we had still to go up a narrow bight to reach Port
Adelaide, the harbour of South Australia proper. This inlet of the sea follows
a serpentine course inland for about two English miles and the water is very
shallow. A good tide and wind are necessary to sail up it, and often a ship
must lay in wait for eight days for a favourable chance. We reached Adelaide on
the 8th December, having left Hamburg on the 15th August.
"Having
more than enough of ship life, we seized the first opportunity of landing. We
were fortunate enough to be able to do this in the afternoon. A launch lay
alongside the 'Alfred' and its pilot agreed to bring the passengers to
land at a reasonable price. At four o'clock Father Klinkowstrom and I, Mr.
Weikert and three other of our company, stood on Australian soil; in front lay
a broad stretch of deep sea and behind was a plain bounded by hills covered
with green trees stretching right across in bow shape from side to side. The
first thing we noted was the sand with its mussels and cockles, and then the
plant life, all new and unknown to us. Not a shrub, plant nor tree was like
those at home, except perhaps the red stock-kith-flower that grew wild in the
sand ridges.
"Adelaide
is situated about two German miles inland, hackney-coaches ply constantly
between the harbour and the city, and these brought us there by eight o'clock
in the evening. It was only after much trouble that we found the 'Catholic
Chapel,' and the residence of the Bishop, as well as that of the Right Reverend
Dr. Backhaus.
CLARE VILLAGE.
"Great was our joy to have reached the goal of our voyage, and it was a
great consolation to us to have completed the journey on the Feast of the
Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin, and on the next day to be able to
say Holy Mass again after such a long interruption. Weikert, a simple, honest
countryman, the father of eight children, and a fervent Christian, leased a
piece of land about 60 miles north of Adelaide, near a little hamlet called
Clare Village. Most of the inhabitants of the village are Irish Catholics, and
they have built a small church, which the Bishop will consecrate soon. Since I,
as far as the languages go, could help at the same time the German family of
Weikert and the Irish Catholics, I decided to accompany him. The Bishop
approved of the plan. He thanked Weikert for bringing us with him, and
commissioned me to give especial attention to the German Catholics, who live
scattered about the country. I was to visit them and often go the rounds of my
district, and if at any place there was a good many living together he would
secure me an altar stone and Mass vestments for them; up to the present, owing
to the scarcity of priests who could take care of them, often, for a very long
time they had had no opportunity of attending to their religious duties, and
this put many of them in danger of losing their faith. I very gladly undertook
this task and on the 14th December (1848) I set off with Weikert for Clare
Village.
"It
was midsummer, all the grass was dried up with the heat and the sun burnt
fiercely, though the heat of it was tempered by a slight cool breeze. Even in
our own Tyrol, it is more fatiguing to travel on foot in the summer heat than
it is here. The heat is not so oppressive, since it is freshened by a prevalent
sea breeze, and heavy dew falls every night, although often for months on end
there is not a drop of rain. On the 20th, we arrived at Clare Village, and took
up our residence in a perfectly new house which an Irish Catholic had built on
a section of land a little off the road in a low-lying valley.
"As
people speak here it is a 'large house,' though it is only one story high with
five rooms and no windows. Though this dwelling seemed to us mean and narrow,
it was the best in the neighbourhood, and its pretty setting, together with the
pleasant mildness of the climate, made it quite a tolerable place to live. We
found the church only half finished, and so I had to hold Divine Service on
Sundays and Feast Days in the house of an Irishman. I could not start on my
rounds as soon as I should have wished, for the winter rains came on too soon,
and I had no horse at my disposal. I have now remedied that defect, and next
week I hope, under the protection of the most Blessed Virgin after the Feast of
her Assumption, which I intend to celebrate here, to begin my first mission
journey. May the Holy Mother and our loving Father [Saint] Ignatius secure
blessings from heaven for the enterprise."
FAILURE OF A GREAT SCHEME.
Despite the courageous vein of this letter, we notice already that Weikert's
noble enterprise had ended in failure. True, Australia must be ever grateful to
him for the splendid Catholics of Austrian stock that have since played such an
important part in the Catholic life of South Australia, but his scheme, on
which he had spent his small fortune, was to create a wholly Catholic
settlement, with the farms of the Catholics lying about their church and, I
suppose, on every farm one of those wayside shrines so dear to Austrian
Catholics. He was to be bitterly disappointed. The party he had brought out
scattered, and that explains why Father Kranewitter finds himself ministering
to a widely dispersed flock from the house of an Irishman. Weikert, once a
wealthy landowner, had to be content to lease land, and to struggle to make
ends meet.
What was Father Kranewitter to do? He consulted the Bishop of Adelaide, Dr.
Murphy, who arranged that Father Klinkowstrom should stay in Adelaide, but that
Father Kranewitter should go north with Weikert and his family and share their
home, making of it a centre from which he could sally forth to attend to the
spiritual needs of the Catholics scattered thinly in the surrounding country.
He became, indeed, a shepherd, who had to go in search of his flock. As he had
no horse, nor money to buy one, he travelled on foot, seeking for his
fellow-emigrants. He found many of them settled near Angaston and east of
Gawler, some fifty miles from Clare Village.
"On the first Sunday of the month I pay a missionary visit to the German
settlements. My congregation is, as yet, very small. I have found about forty
Catholics, who live in the midst of bitter Protestants and hardly dare to
profess their faith. However, a change for the better is apparent. Protestants
are becoming more tolerant and the Catholics come regularly to Mass, wherever
it is said, even from a distance of eight or ten miles."
Father Kranewitter's companion, Father Max Klinkowstrom, after but a few months' labour among the Catholics in Adelaide, was compelled by ill-health to return to Europe.
"My companion, Father Max Klinkowstrom, remained in Adelaide to attend to
the spiritual needs of the German Catholics in the city; he carried out this
duty conscientiously until he was compelled to return to Europe. The climate of
Australia was quite unsuitable for him, and the doctor in Adelaide, Dr. Bayer,
a German, told him that the Australian sun played havoc with such as have
trouble with the liver, that it was like poison for him, and that he must go
back. Violent head pains and diarrhoea had nearly brought about his death
already. On the 17th March, 1849, as an English ship sailed that day for
London, he took ship back to Europe. God in His love so arranged matters that
the news of his departure reached me at the same time that your letter to me
arrived."
Happily, Father Kranewitter
was not left alone for very long, for in the month of April, 1849, two Jesuit
Lay-brothers, Brothers Schreiner and Sadler, arrived in Australia to help him
in his Mission.
A REVIEW OF THE MISSION.
"I received your letter before Holy Mass, and at once recognized the
handwriting of the address, but did not open it then. I, first seeing myself
left so deserted in union with the Holy Sacrifice, united my will with that of
the all-beneficent God. After Mass, I opened the letter and what a surprise I
had! I am not to be left alone; for your letter informed of the arrival in the
near future of two helpers from Europe. Think with what delight I devoured the
lines of your dear script full of fatherly affection. Was it not the merciful
providence of God that brought together the sad departure of my dear companion
and the consoling news of the near arrival of two others! How happy I was to
see good Brothers Schreiner and Sadler arrive here in April, quite hale and
hearty, just at the time that we needed hands for our work!
“We are building on to our house a hut which will serve as a
sleeping-compartment for the two newcomers; they are now having plenty of hard
work and much discomfort; but soon things will be better and their work will be
richly rewarded: I have made a contract with Weikert to share with him for some
years labour and attention to the property and profits, expenses and receipts.
Our neighbour, who has a lease of the better part of the block of land on which
we live is going back to Adelaide and has handed over to us his small house and
his lease under very favourable terms. And so, we have living accommodation
which is sufficient for our means, though not attractive in appearance, and
sufficient income to live on. For this year then we have two pieces of land for
cultivation and so are quite safe financially. We intend to keep house with
Weikert for two years, and meanwhile look round for an opportunity and then buy
from the Government a fertile piece of land in a good position. If this plan is
not unpleasing to God and has His blessing, I am quite sure that it will
prosper.
‘Unless I am much mistaken, in four years I should be in the position to send
you the passage money for those who would be pleased to come to us, especially
if you would send us some more helpers, for labour is very costly here. These
should not look for easy conditions at first, and must be ready for hard work;
but, as I said before, labour reaps a quick profit here.
"Make
whatever arrangements seem best to you, and let us know of your intentions.
With my heart full of gratitude, I kiss your hands for sending me here, and for
the help that you have sent me too. If it should please you to make any changes
in our disposition, or send us anywhere else, we would gladly exert ourselves
to obey the slightest indication of your wishes; if we should receive further
helpers it would be an inexpressible consolation. Meanwhile, we act according
to the first suggestions you gave us, making no change, which was to aim at
securing a good piece of land with fertile soil, and to set our good brothers
to cultivate it.
"You might think that this country is almost over-supplied with priests, seeing that a Bishop and ten priests have charge of a Catholic population of only about 4000 souls; but that is not so at all. South Australia is a colony in process of very fast development. The first settlers only came here about 10 years ago, and already the population has grown to 40,000. Every month ships come from England with immigrants, and every year from Germany, and of the immigrants a small number set themselves up in the city, while the greater number settle on the land.
“If the growth in population continues I shall soon need priests for a college.
Any helpers who are coming to us or intend to come in the future should bring
with them, above all things, all that is needed for Sung Mass. We have a small
church without a tabernacle or altar pictures, and, except for the set of Mass
Vestments that I brought with me; there are hardly any serviceable ones to be
got.
"I
shall now tell you something about the financial side of our farming. All the
soil is wonderfully fruitful here. The first year, without any help from
manure, it produces a very fine crop of wheat. A section of land such as the
immigrants usually buy or lease here is 100 acres, forming a square, so that
each acre runs for 200 feet in both directions. The work of cultivating a piece
of new land is certainly hard and constant, but the return is great; to take an
example, a ton of potatoes costs £10, or 100 florins of English money, and a good
acre gives a return of five to six tons, and often eight to nine. A ton of
oaten hay is worth £5. Wheat is, at the least, always a profitable crop, good
land giving 20 to 30 bushels (a bushel is equivalent to a Tyrolese ‘staar’) per
acre, and a bushel of wheat is sold for 3 shillings.
“The climate is extremely mild, so that the keeping of cattle practically costs
nothing, as they can be let run freely on the pasture lands during the whole of
the year without the need of stalls for shelter; you only have to milk the cows
in the morning and evening in an enclosure of some kind. It is winter here now,
but it is little different from a summer in the Tyrol. On the coldest day we
have had, there was some ice in the morning; but the sun soon made it melt. The
winter here merely serves to provide the soil with moisture so that it may be
in a condition to produce its various types of fruit. One finds practically no
fruit growth here, but whatever one plants and cultivates gives a good crop,
especially vines and Southern European fruit trees. No-one, then, will have a
reason to regret tilling this soil. But whoever expects to find everything here
already will be bitterly disappointed. Hence, it is necessary to bring with one
house and land implements, and seeds of all kinds.
"As
regards the black natives living here, they are, in a word, just grown-up
children. They are swarming at this moment all around our house with a number
of scraggy-looking dogs; but as I can make nothing yet of their language, I am
not in a position to announce the Gospel to them. They are very like our gipsy
folk in Europe in appearance, and the only beggars in the country. I intend to
write some more about them in my next letter, when I have got to know them
better myself, and also after I have learnt more about them from the German
Catholics whom I shall meet on my mission round. It is possible to send letters
to Europe every month from Australia now, and there are prospects of a fast
steamship service between Australia and Europe; I would make good use of this
for sending letters."
In one of these promised letters, Father Kranewitter can report some spiritual progress and even begins to hope that South Australia may one day rival America in extensive Catholic settlements, but he still finds it hard to hold out much prospect of speedy success with the blacks.
NEW HOPES AND AMBITIONS.
"Our little house, of split tree trunks bound together, with a roof of
thatch, has only two rooms, but all the same we three live in it with a German
doctor quite satisfactorily. We are living about half a mile from Clare in a
delightful valley, quite alone, in peaceful isolation. Brothers Sadler and
Schreiner are active at work on the farm. I see to the spiritual ministrations
for all of us, and every first Sunday make a missionary visitation to the
German settlements. My flock here is certainly a small one, but in the German
villages, I have already found more than fifty Catholics. The poor people are
planted in the midst of Protestants of a fanatical and pietistic stamp, and
hardly have the courage to proclaim themselves openly as Catholics. But already
much of that has been changed. The Protestants do not dare to mock so
constantly as they used to do at the Catholic Church, and a young man who
through cowardice had allowed himself to be taken up by one of their
congregations came back, after my third visit, to his good mother the Catholic
Church. I find the good people most zealous in their attendance at Mass, and
although many live two or three leagues from the house in which I say Mass,
they are always most regular in attendance, and the delight that they always
show at having their spiritual director once more with them, is always a rich
reward for the tiring journey. I travel about 30 leagues to these people, and
on the way I rarely meet a soul, and still more rarely a human habitation; and
as one finds here instead of fresh springs and murmuring brooks, only now and
then a tank of collected rain water, the heat of the sun and the thirst is very
trying during one's travels. . . . . .
"This
so far is the scope of my missionary work. It is a small beginning, but in the
course of time, we may easily advance much further than that. This rests
largely with my superiors and depends on the hidden designs of eternal
Providence. The colony is in process of growth and the number of its mines are
a guarantee of abiding prosperity. It is probable that the number of German
Catholics will soon greatly increase, and what has been done in America may
soon be accomplished in South Australia too; to say nothing of the aboriginals
the conversion of whom will give work for us to do of no small magnitude. All
the attempts made on them by the Protestants of the various sects have so far
proved useless.
“The
conversion of our blacks will always remain a difficult and repulsive task
here; for all the evil conditions that men found among the lowest tribes in
America are to be found amongst these people. They have no fixed place of
abode, but wander over the country in small groups, they are divided into many
different tribes, they either have no chiefs or have little respect for them,
they are not at all numerous, and yet every second hundred of them will have
their own peculiar language; so little is the idea of a Supreme Being developed
amongst them that you would hardly credit their ignorance. They are not of evil
disposition, you would rather say that they are of a kindly nature; they are
not a warlike race, and in general are devoid of any outstanding sign of real
character. They shun work like lazy children and for a little bit of work they
want `Plenty to eat'; but in spite of all this I believe that a missioner of
the True Church would not work without profit among them."
Inscrutable are the ways of
Divine Providence. Reading these lines of the Jesuit Missioner eighty, one
hundred and more years after he penned them, we wish that his dream of a great
and populous Catholic land had come true. But he had not reckoned with the
greed and folly of men. The poor aboriginals are gone, and gone because
unchristian men denied them the right to live and refused to them the
civilizing message of Christian Truth. Gone also are the prosperous German
villages because the call of the "accursed gold" lured the simple
farmer from his vine-garlanded cottage to the reeking "diggings" of
Victoria.
Bitter, indeed, are the
thoughts of what might have been but for the folly and the greed of men.
TWO GREAT PLANS.
The struggle for very existence which absorbed so much of the missionaries'
time, must have caused Father Kranewitter to chafe at the slow development of
their spiritual work. Two plans he had at heart, with which he hoped to lay the
foundations of an enduring apostolate; firstly, he wished to form a purely
Catholic settlement with its church and school, and secondly, he longed to
establish a College of the Society of Jesus. To realize both these projects he
prayed and worked, and, thanks to his trust in God and his courage and
foresight, realize them both he did, before he was recalled to Europe in 1856.
He writes to his Provincial on 2nd May, 1850.
"I
have just made my mission visitation of the German settlements for the first
Sunday in April, after which I went on about 30 English miles to Adelaide to
pay a visit to an old Catholic lady and her daughter who arrived in Australia
about four months ago, to strengthen their Faith, which had met with various
strong trials; I got back on the second Sunday to the station where I always
say Mass on that day. A few minutes before I began, a letter from overseas was
handed to me, sent to my address by Dr. Backhaus. What a delightful surprise it
was to receive a letter from Your Reverence! I opened the envelope — there were
two enclosures — and in one of them two most valuable money bills. This was quite
beyond my expectations. At once, the thought flew to my mind — Is it the
passage money? I did not read the letters then, but laid them quietly together,
and first at the Mass, that I was on the point of celebrating, I availed myself
of the opportunity of begging God to make me fully resigned to whatever the
letter might bring me. After my devotions, I could not wait long before opening
the letter I was longing so much to read. You could not easily realize the
effect that your beloved writing and your fatherly words had on me under the
circumstances in which I was, still less could I put it in words. We send you
our most heart-felt thanks for the generous gift of all that the letter
contained. We shall consider it as a treasure entrusted to us, and make use of
it in the very best way we can.
“As I was not more than 50 English miles from Adelaide, I decided to make the
most of my opportunity and to return to Adelaide, to cash the draft, to have an
interview with the Bishop, Dr. Murphy, and communicate the whole matter to him,
and to find out from him in person what way I might act most in accordance with
his wishes, so that I should be able to send you news at once about the matter.
What an improvement has been made in our affairs in the course of a year Your
Reverence will already have seen from my other letter. We are in such a
fortunate condition that very soon we may hope to have a proper German Mission
Station; what our hampered circumstances have so far made impossible, will
certainly be a reality in the course of a year, if God so wills. Most of the
German settlers that I visit at present on my rounds are to be found in a place
which is very unprofitable to them, where they settled on their first arrival,
owing to their ignorance of the condition of the land. All this can be remedied
now, at one stroke. It is quite easy to secure land of a better quality under
favourable conditions. A good piece of land can be rented by them in common,
with right of purchase, and be settled with good practising German Catholics,
and in this way, we shall have our first independent settlement. I do not yet
see clearly how it will all work out in detail, but I am quite certain that it
will come. It would be better to choose a place at some distance from the city.
All this will shortly be decided upon, and I shall not delay to send you news
of the result. The Bishop quite approves of the plan, and will himself
contribute to its realization.
May we not hope that at this spot a fire may be kindled from which the torch of
Christianity may be lit to spread the Truth to the Interior of this quite
unknown part of the world? Were not our Fathers the first to penetrate into the
inner heart of other parts of the earth? Would that I should be one of these
missioners!"
SUCCESS.
Writing on 29th January, 1851, he relates how he has been successful in the
preliminary negotiations for the two projects he had so much at heart.
"About six miles from here, where the range of hills on which Clare lies,
opens out on to a wide plain, there is to be found, clinging closely to the
hills, a fine stretch of land, quite level and open, without trees or rocks,
about a square mile in area. Without any further preparation the farmer could
drive his plough into the soil at one end and run his furrow unhindered to the
other. Two deep ditches which in winter carry the water from the hills away
from the level ground bound the spot to south and north and conceal copious
springs of fresh water, where they run from the recesses in the hill, and which
are called "gullies." Your Reverence will realize that I quickly made
up my mind, and I had good reasons too. For over the whole wide stretch from
here to Adelaide, to east and west, no better site was offered. The two springs
are above all quite a triumph for a settlement in South Australia, where
springs which give unfailing sweet water are rare indeed. . . .
"A
beginning has been made to secure a property, and a fine one at that, for our
Society. . . . . By a most fortunate chance, or, rather, by the kindly
disposition of Divine Providence, it came about that one of the finest sections
in the neighbourhood, a little way from the road, appeared on the horizon. . .
. I met an agent, who told me of a piece of land that was good, and which could
be leased for £2 per acre with right of purchase and £14 to £20 rent. These
were the easiest conditions I have so far heard of; and so we went off together
to see the place. He brought me to an allotment no more than two miles from
here, a Section over which I had already walked with the deepest longings that
one day we might call it our own. I had hardly the patience to walk around it
from corner to corner, and hardly had we finished our walk when I blurted out:
'I will take it.' Delighted with my find I hurried home, almost at a trot, and
there was waiting for me a letter full of kindness from your fatherly hand. Is
it not remarkable that Your Reverence's letters nearly always arrive at an
important phase of our life in Australia? The dear companions, who with such
courage and generosity have received their mission to far-off Australia, will
now, if God so wills, find things better."
Father Kranewitter, it is
true, even early in his Mission work, experienced many disappointments and saw
the promise of failure, nevertheless he planned and prayed with his eyes fixed
on a glorious future. His letters home show him as a man of God and as a shrewd
and prudent man of affairs; to his foresight we owe the founding of the German
and Polish settlement at Sevenhill and the College and lands that gave
stability to the Jesuit Mission and served as a spiritual centre from which
radiated through the South the life-giving light of the Faith.
"As
I told you before, we bought a piece of land on which to found a permanent
station, and here again I must say that God in His loving Providence has
blessed our plan and prospered it. . . . The Mission now owns 700 acres of land
of which a part is overgrown with stout gum trees, while a part consists of
rich soil suitable for tilling and pasture, but most of all for the planting of
vines.
“Yes.
‘What a beautiful place for a college!’ said a Protestant on a visit to us,
rightly guessing, even though he was not a prophet, at the thoughts which we,
however, had not yet openly expressed. The fine healthy position of the place
beside a spring of water which one so rarely finds in Australia marks it off as
especially appropriate for such a purpose and one could hardly undertake
anything more profitable to the good cause in Australia than the opening of a
college to train up men in the true Catholic spirit.
"But
in these times when the hire of labour is so costly, since the discovery of
gold mines, when one must give an ordinary labouring man £50 a year and his
keep, and pay a bricklayer 14 shillings for a day's work, building is not to be
lightly undertaken. But, when in the second half of 1855, as we had expected,
the price of labour became more moderate, we set our hands to the work in God's
Name, and started to build a house to satisfy our immediate pressing needs, and
to accommodate a few pupils."
Now that the opening of a
Jesuit College was assured, Father Kranewitter could pause to take a breath,
and his superiors decided that it would be a breath of his native air. In
October, 1852, there had joined Father Kranewitter one who was to become the
best known and best loved priest in South Australia, Father Joseph Tappeiner.
This heroic missionary at first, owing to his as yet imperfect knowledge of the
English language, restricted his labours to the German population, while Father
Kranewitter attended the distant stations and looked after the Irish Catholics
in Clare, the Burra, Undalya and Saddleworth. From 1853 to 1855, Father
Tappeiner visited regularly Tanunda, Adelaide and Bomburnie.
Father John Pallhuber arrived
in the beginning of 1856. He was destined to do strenuous work as a missionary,
for which he had been prepared by a seven years' residence in the Province of
Maryland, U.S.A. His arrival made possible the recall of Father Kranewitter,
who left Sevenhill on March 28th, 1856, to proceed to Austria for the
completion of his theological studies and the making of his third year of
probation. Of his recall, Father Kranewitter writes.
"In
November, 1855, my fellow-worker, Father Tappeiner, made his first mission
journey 100 English miles to the north, and visited afterwards all the
scattered Catholics of German speech south of here. At Christmas, he stayed in
Adelaide to assist in the work there. On his return, he brought the news that
my successor, Father Pallhuber, sent by our superiors, had arrived in Adelaide
from North America. My orders were to return to Europe to complete my studies
and prepare for my profession. On the 28th March on board an English ship, I
was carried out on to the high seas once more; we rounded Cape Horn, and under
the loving protection of God reached London after a voyage of 100 days. At the
beginning of August, 1856, I stood once more on yours and my native soil, which
I had left eight years before."
In 1859, Father Kranewitter
returned to Australia, where he worked on the South Australian Mission until
1870, when he was sent to take care of the German Catholics in Melbourne. For
ten years as a member of the Jesuit Community at Saint Ignatius', Richmond, he
discharged this duty faithfully, winning for himself universal esteem. The
"History of the Society of Jesus in Australia" says of him:
"A
model religious, cheerful, exact in all details of duty, of tender piety and
gentle as a child, he was beloved by his penitents, who made it their mission
to induce others to choose him as confessor. A wetting received during a visit
which he paid to a country district to say Mass and administer the Sacraments,
brought on an illness which affected his lungs, and consumption caused his
death in less than a year. He removed for change of air a few days before he
died to Heidelberg, a village near Richmond. On the day of his death he asked by
telegram to be relieved from the obligation of reciting the Divine Office. He
also sent word that he felt much weaker, but thought there was no necessity for
any Father to visit him just then. As he grew worse he was urged to have
another telegram sent, but he shook his head, saying, `God is good, He will
take care of me.' His trust in the Divine goodness was not in vain; for as soon
as the first message reached Richmond, Father Mulhall determined to go at once
to Heidelberg. He did so, and on entering the sick man's room, the latter
exclaimed: `Thanks be to God that you are here.' A short time afterwards Father
Kranewitter died. It was the 25th August, 1880."
The College of Saint Aloysius,
Sevenhill, founded by Father Kranewitter, was therefore the first Jesuit
College in Australia. For thirty years, it struggled against difficulties of
every kind, the great distance from any centre of population, the scattered
nature of the Catholic stations and the lack of funds, until finally in 1886,
when the colleges in other States were opened, it was closed. It became, what
it is today, the Church and Residence of Saint Aloysius.
We must not forget, however,
that in spite of its chequered career, nearly 400 pupils had passed through its
classes during these 30 years, and some of these achieved distinction in after
life. One of the first pupils was Julian Tenison Woods, afterwards so well
known as a priest and scholar (and as the co-founder, with [Saint] Mary
Mackillop of the Cross, of the Australian Sisters of Saint Joseph).
For a time Sevenhill served as
the Novitiate of the Society of Jesus, and in 1866. there came to Saint
Aloysius' College to enter the Society, Thomas O'Brien, a native of Sydney, the
first Australian to enrol under the banner of Saint Ignatius. It is interesting
to note that as Father Thomas O'Brien he was the last Rector of the old College
when it closed its doors in 1886.
In the meantime, as year by
year missioners arrived from Europe, the work of spreading the Gospel went
forward steadily: from the rough stone fortress at Sevenhill the "White
Horsemen of Christ," as so many valiant knights, sallied forth bearing the
Standard of the Cross, preaching, teaching, healing and by their selfless lives
winning the love of the simple pioneers and kindling in their hearts the love
of Christ. Churches and schools and stations they raise as they push farther
and farther into the unknown, following in the wake of the intrepid settlers. I
cannot name them all, but just a few to show how far-flung and how thorough was
the work of these Jesuit Missioners:
Mintaro, the musical Spanish of its name recalling the rapture of the muleteers
as they drove their teams on to the mines at Burra-Burra;
Tanunda with its glorious grapes;
Wakefield;
Kooringa of the mines;
Bomburnie with its model German Village;
Undalya and Farrell's Flat;
then far away to the north, Jamestown and Port Augusta.
A FLOURISHING CATHOLIC COUNTRYSIDE.
Of this rapid spread of Catholicism Father Tappeiner tells in a few vivid lines
in a letter to the homeland.
"When
the foundation was laid of the church at Mintaro there were only three Catholic
families with their dependants in the place, now it is our strongest station.
The whole district, especially towards the north, is dotted with the homes of
practising Catholics so that the larger number of them find it necessary to
assist at Mass outside the doors of the church."
At the end of the letter, he adds:
"What I say of Mintaro is true, more or less, of the other stations, no
church can hold all the faithful. Fifty or more are obliged to hear Mass at the
church door."
Among all the missioners, the
personality of Father John Pallhuber stands out as being that of a Saint
Francis Xavier or a [Blessed Joseph] Anchieta.
A scholar to whom the direction of the studies at the College at Sevenhill was
entrusted, and who was the wonder of all for the breadth and versatility of his
learning; theologian and classical scholar; and, as an Apostle, one who counted
as naught toil and danger in the quest of souls.
From Sevenhill he writes:
"Every month I cover, at the very least, 1,000 English miles.
"Here is the routine I follow: On Thursday morning I leave on horseback or by the waggon, taking with me everything I shall need on the journey, including a chalice and wine for Mass.
"I have two routes to choose from, one of which will secure me a night's
lodging once on my way, and the other perhaps three. Either way I must go
through fields and scrub and even forests, some of them stretching for more
than 20 English miles. As for water, there is scarcely a drop, and what there
is, is foul or salty; at times, I lodge at a shepherd's hut, where I say Mass
and baptize the children. Before my track was well-worn and familiar, I got
lost sometimes, but, thanks be to God, I have always been fortunate enough to
find my way again; not everyone has been so fortunate, for several have met
disaster on this trail.
"On
Friday evening, as a rule, I reach Kadina, a little town of two to three
thousand inhabitants, about 60 miles from Sevenhill. Here for the last five
years I have invariably lodged with the same family. As soon as I arrive, I
visit the sick and transact any business that awaits me; then on Saturday
morning, at half past nine, I hear confessions and say Holy Mass, after which I
visit the good folk and settle their little troubles. I then go to Port
Wallaroo, six miles away to the west by a rough horse track; in this small
place of some 3000 souls, I first make known my arrival and arrange for the
morrow, and in the evening make my way back to Kadina. At six o'clock on Sunday
morning I ride or drive to Wallaroo, where I hear confessions and say Mass,
give an instruction and baptize the children: at ten back as fast as I can to
Kadina, where I do the same. I have something to eat at midday and at about two
o'clock, I set out for Moonta, another town of three or four thousand people,
twelve miles to the south, where I go through the same round of work. At midday
the next day, according to the needs of the case, I return to Kadina or to
Wallaroo. Then lest my normal work at Sevenhill should suffer, I must,
sometimes on Monday evening, more usually on Tuesday, and in exceptional cases
on Wednesday, set off on my return journey."
It was only the tall gums and
the laugh of the kookaburra that reminded me, as I stood waiting for the
high-power car that was to whisk me back to the ugliness of modern life, that I
was in Australia and in the twentieth century. Surely this old stone house,
with its high gables and its dormer windows, its stone-flagged passages and its
dungeon-like cellars, is a little bit of mediaeval Europe that has lost its way
in the bush or has slept or wandered for centuries in the manner of the fables!
And this old Gothic church, built by the hands of religious brethren, surely it
has watched over the fortunes of some Austrian village and seen the centuries
slip by, seen Crusaders ride past and heard the tocsin sound as armies, like
the ages, rolled on!
And I thought of the more than thirty heroes that sleep their last sleep in the
vault beneath the old church,
of Pallhuber the scholar, a peer of the grandest missionaries,
of the beloved Tappeiner,
of Rogalski of the Poles, whose little church I had seen abandoned at Hill
River, its door ajar and still the glorious oil-painting of Saint Stanislaus
over the altar, sent it was from Poland to raise the hearts of the exiles;
I thought of them all, how far away from home and friends and from their
beloved Fatherland, they had dreamed a great dream of founding another great
Catholic land, had prayed for strength in this same stone church, before this
same tabernacle over which hung, as it hangs today, the great Madonna sent them
by King Ludwig of Bavaria, and how strengthened to bear the heats and burdens
of the day, they had gone forth, from their very door at which I stood, down
that same straggling path, out into the bush.
Of such men and of such a work as they have done there can be no thought of
failure.
There must we end the story of the pioneer Jesuit. The work he had so bravely
begun prospered and became a centre of spiritual strength for South Australia,
and who can measure the extent of the influence for good that the lives and
labours of the Austrian Fathers who followed him, has had on the spiritual life
of our beloved land?
Strange to say, and, indeed, prophetic of the expansion of his work, rather,
Aloysius Kranewitter's earthly remains lie, not with his brethren in the vault
of the Old Church at Sevenhill, but he alone of these devoted men, is buried
with his Irish and Australian brethren in the cemetery at Boroondara in
Melbourne. From his place in Heaven he must contemplate with joy the celebration
of the hundredth anniversary of his landing in Australia, and it will not be
merely the massive buildings and wide grounds of the Jesuit colleges or the
grandeur of the churches that will fill him with gratitude, but the number of
souls that have found salvation and sanctification through the work of his
Order. Father Kranewitter was a builder and an organizer, but a man of God
first.
*****