John Roughan - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Sat, 20 May 2017 22:08:57 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg John Roughan - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Tribute to a good father https://cathnews.co.nz/2017/05/22/thoughtful-selfless-agreeable-fault/ Mon, 22 May 2017 08:10:41 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=94132

One benefit of bearing an unusual name is that anybody I meet who knew my father is liable to ask, "Are you any relation to Vaughan Roughan?" Though he was a primary school principal whose career was spent in Southland and Canterbury, his former pupils and colleagues are everywhere. "He was a nice man," they Read more

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One benefit of bearing an unusual name is that anybody I meet who knew my father is liable to ask, "Are you any relation to Vaughan Roughan?"

Though he was a primary school principal whose career was spent in Southland and Canterbury, his former pupils and colleagues are everywhere.

"He was a nice man," they would always tell me, "a good man." He really was.

Forgive me if everybody feels this way about their father but I cannot shake a conviction that my brothers and sisters and I were exceptionally and undeservedly lucky.

As the oldest I've often worried how I could possibly do justice to his qualities when it came to his funeral. The worry became more urgent late last year when, aged 89, he began to go downhill and went into care.

He lingered until Thursday of last week. My siblings in Christchurch were called to the rest home in the early hours.

His breathing had become laboured and he could barely speak but his eyes had lit up briefly at my arrival from Auckland.

Between us, we never left his bedside until almost 8pm when we went to a nearby room for a bite to eat. That is when he let go. We were gone barely a minute when a nurse summoned us.

I don't know whether someone in the terminal stage of congestive heart failure can make the decision to let go but if so, it would be typical of him to wait until he was alone. He would be thinking of us, sparing us the alarm of his last gasp.

Considerate is the word that comes closest to describing him. He was considerate not just in the thoughtful way of anticipating other people's ordinary needs and wishes, which he did constantly. He was considerate in conversation.

Like most people of the generation that grew up without television he knew how to make conversation, and when you were with him he was not comfortable unless there was conversation. For him the art came naturally.

He was interested in everything you thought and everything you were doing. He was not interested in talking about himself. Continue reading

  • John Roughan is an editorial writer and columnist for the New Zealand Herald.
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Same sex adoption - different rules for men and women? https://cathnews.co.nz/2012/06/19/same-sex-adoption-different-rules-men-women/ Mon, 18 Jun 2012 19:30:55 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=27726

If the the law is changed to allow same sex adoption will the new law treat female couples and male couples equally? Under existing law it is illegal for a single male to adopt a female. If the law is changed to allow same sex couples to adopt, will a male couple be allowed to Read more

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If the the law is changed to allow same sex adoption will the new law treat female couples and male couples equally?

Under existing law it is illegal for a single male to adopt a female. If the law is changed to allow same sex couples to adopt, will a male couple be allowed to do so?

Is there a distinction to be made between the effect on a child of being raised by two women, and the effect on a child of being raised by two men?

The law already makes a distinction between men and women says John Roughan, single men can get an adoption order only for boys.

He points out that the act (section 4, subsection 2) expressly excludes adoption of a female by a sole male applicant unless there are exceptional circumstances.

"I suppose the legislators had heterosexual men in mind. It will be interesting to see what Ms Kaye and co-reformer Kevin Hague will do with that clause if they produce a bill to include male couples" says Roughan.

Read John Roughan's column in The New Zealand Herald

John Roughan is a Weekend Herald Columnist

Image: The Ave.us

 

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