The
S outhern C ross
November 5 to November 11, 2014
World’s Franciscans in SA for peace
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Durban’s Hurley Centre almost ready to start BY STUART GRAHAM
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An aerial picture of the Denis Hurley Centre nearing completion, with Durban’s Emmanuel cathedral behind it. The centre’s coordinators hope to take occupation of the building before the end of the year, when the keys will be handed over to Cardinal Napier by the construction company. The formal and official opening of the building is scheduled for November 9, 2015, the 100th birthday of Archbishop Hurley. That evening, “World Religions in Concert” will be presented by the KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic Orchestra in the mall between the cathedral and the new centre. See also page 8 for Winnie Graham’s memories of Archbishop Hurley. (Photo: Barker Sky Imaging)
HE almost completed construction of the Denis Hurley Centre in downtown Durban has given people hope and the confidence to “make things happen”, the project's coordinator Mr Paddy Kearney has said. “Archbishop Hurley's reputation for someone who stood up for human rights is very well known,” said Mr Kearney, who wrote a biography of the late archbishop of Durban, titled Guardian of the Light. “What this centre shows is that, like him, we can make a change. We have this building which will provide facilities for conferences, meetings and outreach of all kinds. It has given people confidence to get things done.” Mr Kearney said many living in the neighbourhood around the centre, adjacent to Emmanuel cathedral, are unemployed, sick, or are refugees from other parts of Africa. For them, the building is a sign of hope. “It is a very downbeat neighbourhood. But people are excited about the completion of the centre. It is like a dream,” Mr Kearney told The Southern Cross. The aim is to start using the building,
which had been under construction for nearly six years, for projects by the end of the year. The centre, said Mr Kearney, is being very careful not to “extend itself too far” as the need for help in the area is enormous. “We will be careful to do what we are able to do,” said Mr Kearney. “We are talking to other faith communities in the neighbourhood and are trying to encourage them to have outreach projects.” The mosque next door has been very supportive and is proud that this is happening in the neighbourhood, said Mr Kearney. “The Muslims also have a school that will make a wonderful centre for training. The Hindus have a building with 14 classes and two halls... That could play an important role in the neighbourhood.” Mr Kearney said Muslims, Hindus and Christians have all supported the Denis Hurley Centre project in various ways. Catechism classes and other events of the cathedral parish have all taken place in the nearby Hindu building for the past two years. A Muslim group meanwhile, asked to amalgamate its feeding scheme with the Denis Hurley Centre. Mr Kearney said people of all faiths still Continued on page 2
Priest presented with a classic rock guitar for kids’ project STAFF REPORTER
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SOUTH AFRICAN priest was the subject of a two-page spread in the Morgenpost newspaper in Dresden, Germany. Fr Wim Lindeque of Stellenbosch, near Cape Town, was in the eastern German city of Dresden for an annual gala to raise funds for the Aids project HOPE Cape Town, on whose board the priest serves. The HOPE gala in Dresden, attended by German celebrities, is regarded as one of the highlights in the city’s social calendar. This year German interior minister Thomas de Maizière was among those who attended. The event raised R1,5 million for HOPE. Also representing HOPE Cape Town at the gala was co-founder Fr Stefan Hippler, whose bishop in Trier, Bishop Stephan Ackermann, has given the priest permission to stay in Cape Town indefinitely.
Fr Lindeque was presented with a guitar used by the German hard rock band Scorpions in the 1980s. It was donated by the band’s former road manager, Hermjo Klein, who had kept the guitar as a memento. In the newspaper spread, Mr Klein is pictured holding the guitar as Fr Lindeque strikes a rocking pose. The guitar will now be used by a music project which is part of the Afterschool Development Centre which Fr Lindeque established when he served in the parish of Manenberg, a gang-ridden area of Cape Town. The centre, which takes care of about 200 youngsters, is supported by HOPE Cape Town. At the gala, HOPE Cape Town honoured Hamburg shipbuilding magnate Peter J Krämer, who in the past ten years has spent $180 million to build 1500 schools in Africa.
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