What kind of work did Suzanne Aubert do?

What kind of work did Suzanne Aubert do?

In 1860, after working as a nurse in her homeland, France, Suzanne Aubert voyaged to New Zealand to work as a Catholic missionary in Auckland. She joined the Marist Māori mission in Hawke’s Bay in 1871, then the mission at Hiruhārama (Jerusalem) on the Whanganui River in 1883.

Why did Suzanne Aubert go to Jerusalem?

Because of her fluency in Māori language, Sister Aubert was sent by Redwood to assist in the Whanganui mission. Along with Soulas and three Sisters of St Joseph of Nazareth, she arrived at Jerusalem on the Whanganui River on 8 July 1883. A year later the Sisters of St Joseph withdrew.

Why did Suzanne Aubert found the Sisters of Compassion?

During 1913, frustrated with the church bureaucracy and wanting to obtain a Papal Decree for her Congregation, Suzanne Aubert, aged 78, travelled to Rome. In 1917 Pope Benedict XV conferred a pontifical Decree on the Congregation of the Daughters of Our Lady of Compassion.

How did Suzanne Aubert get to New Zealand?

Suzanne Aubert was born in France in 1835 and, refusing to accept an arranged marriage, ran away to sail to New Zealand in 1860 to work as a missionary having taught herself Te Reo Māori on the ship. She began working with young Māori women in Auckland, then joined the Marist Māori mission station at in Hawke’s Bay.

How old was Suzanne Aubert when she died?

91 years (1835–1926)
Suzanne Aubert/Age at death

On 1 October 1926, Aubert died aged 91. New Zealand’s newspapers spread the word and crowds gathered to pay their last respects. Her funeral at the church of St Mary of the Angels was widely reported to be the largest funeral ever accorded a woman in New Zealand.

Who was the first NZ bishop?

On 2 December 1928, Frederick Bennett was consecrated as Bishop of Aotearoa in Napier Cathedral. As assistant to the Bishop of Waiapu, he ministered to Māori throughout the country under licence from the diocesan bishops, many of whom opposed this arrangement.

Where did Suzanne Aubert come from?

Saint-Symphorien-de-Lay, France
Suzanne Aubert/Place of birth

Is Sister Loyola Galvin still alive?

Deceased (1922–2021)
Sister Loyola Galvin/Living or Deceased

What did Bishop Pompallier do in NZ?

Bishop Pompallier was born in Lyons, France, in 1801. He was consecrated Bishop with responsibility for Western Oceania (including New Zealand) in 1836. He arrived in New Zealand in 1838, and by the mid-1840s had established a number of Catholic missions. By 1843 the French missions claimed about 45,000 Maori converts.

When did Bishop Pompallier died?

21 December 1871
Pompallier died at Puteaux, near Paris, on 21 December 1871.

Where does Bishop Pompallier lie now?

Today, the bishop’s remains lay in the meeting house at Motuti for people to be welcomed on to the marae and pay their respects. Others prepared food and worked on final preparations. Mr Adams said the return of Pompallier had happened with a lot of tolerance and hospitality of the marae and the people of Panguru.

Where was Bishop Pompallier buried?

Puteaux
Bishop Pompallier returned to France in 1869 after thirty years of missionary work in New Zealand. He died in 1871 and was buried at Puteaux near Paris.

Who was Mother Aubert and what did she do?

Suzanne Aubert. Suzanne Aubert (19 June 1835 – 1 October 1926), better known to many by her cleric name Sister Mary Joseph or Mother Aubert, was a Catholic sister who started a home for orphans and the under-privileged in Jerusalem, New Zealand on the Whanganui River in 1885.

Who was sister Mary Joseph in New Zealand?

Suzanne Aubert (19 June 1835 – 1 October 1926), better known to many by her cleric name Sister Mary Joseph or Mother Aubert, was a Catholic sister who started a home for orphans and the under-privileged in Jerusalem, New Zealand on the Whanganui River in 1885.

How many brothers and sisters did Suzanne Aubert have?

Aubert’s mother, Clarice, worked for Church welfare organizations and her father, Louis, was a huissier. Aubert had three brothers—Alphonse, Louis and Camille—and the family was middle class and respectable.

Where did Father Soulas and Suzanne Aubert go?

In 1883, Father Soulas and Suzanne Aubert left Hawke’s Bay to go to Hiruharama, or Jerusalem, 60 kilometres up the Whanganui River. In 1883, Aubert assisted Father Soulas as an interpreter and Māori cultural adviser along with two young Australian Sisters of St Joseph: Sisters Aloysious and Teresa from Whanganui.