Das wichtigste Gebet ist das Gebet um die Beharrlichkeit bis zum Ende. Siehe hier

Samstag, 15. November 2025

In honor of Old Cow-Thomas


Naligen or Thomas, as he would be called after his baptism, was an Aborigine of the Nyulnyul people in Northwestern Australia. It seems he was born sometime in the 1860s near Beagle Bay. As a young man, Naligen was blackbirded on a guano ship off the Australian coast, getting to know white people in the worst possible way as he and his fellow natives were basically treated as slaves by the European crew.

Upon returning home after some months, he heard of other Europeans who settled in Beagle Bay. At first, he wanted to avoid them at any cost, but a friend told him they were laib wamba, good men who let the blacks live in freedom, treated them well and instructed them. They were the French Trappists of Beagle Bay. At first he did not have any desire for the white man's religion, but the example of the monks won him over, especially as he was told that God loved the Aborigines just as much as the Europeans. After his baptism, Thomas received the sacraments faithfully, despite still spending much time away from the mission hunting in the bush or scavenging the beaches. The Trappists had to leave in 1901 as their lifestyle wasn't compatible with the mission, but the employment Thomas had found on the mission as a handyman continued under the Pallottine Fathers from Germany. He took care of their cattle, for which he was affectionately nicknamed "Old Cow-Thomas".
Thomas died a victim of the Spanish Flu that arrived in remote Beagle Bay in December of 1919, making him one of many Aborigines who fell victim to the disease. Thomas welcomed death serenely, fortified by the holy sacraments, as he went to his Creator who loves the Aborigines just as much as the whites.

Keine Kommentare:

Kommentar veröffentlichen