Peter Tipene - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Mon, 11 Nov 2013 07:10:47 +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 Peter Tipene - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Mother offers forgiveness to son's attacker https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/11/12/mother-offers-forgiveness-sons-attacker/ Mon, 11 Nov 2013 18:30:47 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=51969

The mother of a young man who died, after being brutally assaulted in central Auckland, New Zealand, has already forgiven the man accused of causing the injury that to ended his life. Her son, 25-year-old Tarun Asthana died Monday 4 November, two days after suffering critical head injuries in an unproved attack outside a McDonald's Read more

Mother offers forgiveness to son's attacker... Read more]]>
The mother of a young man who died, after being brutally assaulted in central Auckland, New Zealand, has already forgiven the man accused of causing the injury that to ended his life.

Her son, 25-year-old Tarun Asthana died Monday 4 November, two days after suffering critical head injuries in an unproved attack outside a McDonald's in downtown Auckland. He on his way home after a night of clubbing with friends early on previous Saturday morning.
The family invited the Grenville David McFarland, who has been arrested for the attack, to see him in hospital.

At the Requiem Mass for Tarun, which took place last Saturday at Christ the King Catholic Church, in the Auckland, suburb of Owairaka, several hundred family members and friends paid their respects to the much-loved trainee teacher and part-time DJ.

Amid an outpouring of tributes and grief for Tarun, his family offered their forgiveness to McFarland, with a prayer said for both him and his family.
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Pa Petera hopes election of Pope Francis will make people take stock https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/03/26/pa-petera-hopes-election-of-pope-francis-will-make-people-take-stock/ Mon, 25 Mar 2013 18:29:00 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=42200

In 2006 nearly 70,000 Maori identified with Catholicism but Pa Petera, Father Peter Tipene, believes fewer and fewer Katorika Maori are turning up on Sundays. He says that with the election of Pope Francis it's a good time for the church - and for Maori who follow the faith - to reassess and take stock. Read more

Pa Petera hopes election of Pope Francis will make people take stock... Read more]]>
In 2006 nearly 70,000 Maori identified with Catholicism but Pa Petera, Father Peter Tipene, believes fewer and fewer Katorika Maori are turning up on Sundays.

He says that with the election of Pope Francis it's a good time for the church - and for Maori who follow the faith - to reassess and take stock.

At Christ the King church in Mount Roskill Pa Petera serves a multicultural community of Filipinos, Indians, Chinese, Pakeha, and Polynesia. In this cosmopolitan mix there aren't too many Maori present.

Maori Catholic priests, like the kotuku, are beautiful birds that are rarely seen. From Auckland to Cape Reinga there are just three, and Pa Petera, the 14th be ordained, is the only full-timer.

Pa Henare Tate, has retired to Motuti in the Far North while Pa Tony Brown is on sick leave, recovering from a stroke.

Five more serve in other regions.

Earlier in the week he told a funny story about his own family's expression of faith. "My own nieces and nephews, I'll take them away for the weekends and we'll have a great time and I'll say to them, 'Mass in the morning?' And they'll go, 'If we're up.' And I'm the parish priest! These mongrel nieces and nephews. They'll swear black and blue 'Oh, Pa's my uncle,' but they never darken the door of the church. Good, lovely people but going to Mass every Sunday or being part of a faith community isn't a big deal. There's no connection there."

He believes that's a situation replicated across the country. It's a sentiment which probably started from his own and successive generations have become lost to the church.

The rituals of miha, Mass, are important because they reinforce a relationship with Jesus Christ, he says. How the church can re-engage itself with Maori is a question he asks himself repeatedly. "It's a hard question. I am always thinking, 'what do I do to grab them back?' "

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