This Sunday, Mary MacKillop will become Australia’s first saint to be canonised. But what exactly does that mean? Glad you asked, I have no idea either which is why we’ve enlisted Mamamia contributor journalist Lucy Brook to compile this 2 minute Cheat Sheet, All About Mary:
Who was Mary MacKillop?Mary Helen MacKillop was a Roman Catholic nun born in Australia on January 15, 1842 – the eldest of eight – to Scottish Catholic immigrants. The family lived in a modest house on Brunswick St, Fitzroy in Melbourne. Mary’s childhood was somewhat unsettled – her father, Alexander MacKillop was an unsuccessful businessman who frequently dragged the family into debt, and Mary became increasingly responsible for her young siblings. By 14, she was the sole breadwinner, working as a clerk for Sands and Kennedy Stationers in Melbourne.
What did she do?
After meeting her “spiritual director” Fr Julian Woods, Mary tapped a deep longing to assist and educate the poor. Following a teaching stint in Portland, Vic, Mary, her sisters Annie and Lexie and Fr Woods founded a Catholic school in Penola, SA.
In 1867, Mary became the first Australian nun to set up an order – the Sisters of St Joseph of the Sacred Heart, known as “Josephites”. By 1871, 130 sisters were working in more than 40 schools and charitable organisations across South Australia and Queensland, with expansions into NSW and NZ occurring in later years. Mary MacKillop died in 1909. Today the Sisters of St Joseph still work in many towns in South Australia.