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PERTH, WA: January 12, 1995
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Aussie pardon Flashback! The Pope waving goodbye at Perth airport in 1986.
Aboriginal rite of purification will be used at the opening of Papal Mass Eucalyptus smoke will replace the opening Elements of local cultures will characterize the celeThere are priests and bishops, incensation at next Thursday's Papal Mass. SThis brations in the four countries that Pope John Paul will is widely used, the Missal explains, among the visit: The use of musical instruments such as drums, a YDNEY:
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8,173
10,092 reli-
gious.
Aborigines around Australia as a rite of purification and wholeness. Green gum leaves are placed on the first and participants walk through the smoke, washing it over their faces with their hands. The entrance procession will move through the smoke and a brazier brought to the altar where a deacon will place green leaves. The Holy Father will move past the smoke to greet the people and reverence the altar. This is one of the many cultural elements that will characterise the pope's journey. Rubrics and Mass texts will be in English. though local languages such as Pidgin and Motu (Papua New Guinea) and Sinhala and Tamil (Sri Lanka) will he used.
rondalla band, liturgical dancers and the use of candles, flowers and incense throughout the ceremonies. The pastoral visit of 33,415km is the seventh longest of his papacy and the longest in the last five years and includes Papua New Guinea. Australia and Sri Lanka. The Pope's 63rd foreign trips centres around the 10th World Youth Day in Manila, his second vist there, the fourth centenary of the elevation of Manila to the rank of archdiocese and the establishment of the dioceses of Cebu. Caceres and Nueva Segovia. and three beatifications in Port Moresby. Sydney and Colombo. The Philippines is the only country of Asia with a Catholic majority. It has 65.650.000 inhabitants of whom 55,047.000 or 83.8 per cent are Catholic.
During his first trip in 1981. the Holy Fathers beatified Lorenzo Luiz - the first beatification outside the Vatican and canonized him in Rome in 1987. giving the Philippines its first saint. He also visits Port Moresby, the capital of Papua New Guinea, a country of 3,920.000 inhabitants of whome 32.2 per cent. 1.261.000 people. are Catholic. There are 22 bishops. 510 priest and 1.277 religious.
He previously visited Sydney in 1986. Australia has 17.660,000 people. of whom 4.994.000 or 28.3 per cent are Catholic. There are 60 bishops, 3.563 priests and 10,622 religious. Sri Lanka is being visited for the first time. There are 17.620.000 people and 6.8 per cent or 1.191.000 is Catholic. It has 15 bishops. 847 priest and 2.561 religious.
Sydney and Melbourne diary
ow it will happen in Sydney: Wednesday. January H • Performances by Josephite schools at 18
6pm IN An Inter-faith welcome to the Pope at 7.30pm
I I The welcome to Pope john Paul II to Australia by Cardinal Clancy, in the presence of representatives of member churches of the National Council of Churches and the representatives of the Jewish and Islamic communities. • A Mary MacKillop Pageant "The Legend is Alive" featuring the music of Tommy Tycho's orchestra and performances by Julie Anthony, Peter Cousens, Genevieve Davis, Mame Johnson. Grace Knight, David Lemke. Bobby Limb. Felicity Urquhart and Normie Rowe. Thursday, January 19 • Gates will open at 12.30pm. Tickets are NOT required. • Strategically placed, large video screens will carry filmed material as preparation for the Mass
and Beatification. Close-up shots of the altar and the words of songs and prayers will be displayed at appropriate times. • Activities commence at 2pm (approx.) with adults and children's choirs. There will be a rehearsal of the people's parts earlier in the afternoon. • Aboriginal Elders will welcome all to honour the sacredness of the land. • A dramatic bringing together of soils from the countries and regions. in which the Sisters of St Joseph carry out their ministries, will precede the Mass symbol of the cultures represented by Scotland. Peru, Ireland. New Zealand and various regions around Australia. IN The Prayers of Intercession will be offered in a number of languages. representing the ethnic diversity of Australia. • Preparation of the gifts will include bread, wine
and a book describing the breadth and rich variety of josephite ministries. And in Melbourne... On the 15th January. 1842 Mary MacKillop was born in Brunswick St. Fitzroy. She spent nearly a third of her life in Melbourne. At her 153rd birthday Mass in All Saints church Fitzroy Archbishop Frank Little will be assisted by Father Ted Murphy, parish priest of Roybridge. Scotland. the birthplace of Mary MacKillop's father. Alexander. Fitzroy soil will be taken to the beatification Mass at Randwick to be placed in an urn with other soil from significant places in Australia, New Zealand. Scotland, Ireland and Peru. At the Fitzroy Birthday Mass an icon of Mary MacKillop will be blessed and hung in All Saints Church. Following the Mass, a birthday celebration, with the customary birthday cake, will take place.
I'm okay, now how about your canoeing and skiing? jATICAN CITY (CNS) - A relaxed Pope John Paul II V told Polish pilgrims that despite growing older, he feels pretty good. "The hair is still in, and the head isn't doing so bad either," he said Jan. 7, a few days before embarking on his longest foreign trip in five years. "They say the pope is getting old and that he's not able to walk without a cane. But somehow, he keeps going on and on." he said.
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"So if people are interested in these things in Poland, tell them: This pope isn't doing so badly," he said. The 74-year-old pontiff, who was still walking tentatively following thigh bone surgery in 1994, has joked publicly about his age and physical condition in recent weeks. The pope made the remarks to pilgrims who accompanied two new bishops he had ordained the previous day. Recalling his own outdoor activities - especially
canoeing and skiing - as a young priest and bishop in Poland, the pope joked about the latest crop of bishops. "It seems to me this new generation is weaker. I ask the new bishops: So, do you canoe? And they answer with a yes that is not very convincing. Then I ask them: Do you ski? And they respond: A little," he said. "That's what they should say about me in the future: Not only was he pope, but he skied and canoed. And sometimes he broke his leg," he said.
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