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Send your news and views to Katia Sciocatti | 082 783 6396 | stdomchronicle@gmail.com
Debbie Anderson, Manrico Barbieri, Robyn Borrageiro,
Lynda Brown, Matteo Buccimazza, Domenico
Buccimazza, Fiona Campbell, Frances Carr, Anne Casey,
Nontu Chapanduka, Nicole Ching, Gabriela Cipriano,
John Connolly, Hannah Coombe, Kaydee Corbella,
Karin Corbella, Carla Corielle, Porky Cunha, Blake
Davidson, Ainslie De Stoppelaar, Wendy Denyssen, Les
Diffenthal, Barbara Dowds, Anthony Dowds, Genevieve
Dupont, Marlene Ferreira, Carlos Ferreira, Robyn
Forbay, Inge Gilbert, Laurie Hall, Luke Hart, Jill Hockey,
Trevor Hodgson, Tamsyn Howard, Samuel Hughes,
Martin Hughes, Elaine Hutt, Kyra Jones, Caitlin
Kavanagh, Rachel Kerdachi, Carmen Kloppers, Cael
Knight, Giselle Koenig, Janet Kohler, Daniel Krauspe,
Cavan Kriek, Angela Kuster, Victoria Lelong, Monique
Lim, Allison Loubser-Goldblatt, Marie Manegold,
Rosemarie Marston, Darren Marx, Jennifer Meilhon,
Nhlanhla Mfeka, Laraine Millar, Kate Miller, Elaine
Miller, Ruben Mitchell, Michela Moretti, Phanile
Mpepeto, Somikazi Msomi, Chantal Murran, Paula
Mutanga, Kevin Nel, Byron Nel, Laurence O Donoghue,
Natasha Oldridge, Charlotte Patterson, Jenna-Wayde
Poilly, Stephen Poole, Luke Ramlakan, Yulanta Reddy,
Joshua Redman, Isabella Redman, Deverell Rider,
Rebecca Rogers, Fred Rogers, Barbara Roy, Maja
Rutkiewicz, Clare Rutkiewicz, Margaret Saunders, Emma
Schwikkard, James Schwikkard, Mlungisi Shangase,
Sandy Sims, Jacqueline Snook, Mychelle Taylor, Carey
Thambiran, James Thomson, Genevieve Van Heerden,
Anthony Willows, Margaret-Anne Wright.
And celebrating their milestone birthdays are: 50
th: Gary Galway, Ian Oliver and Craig McKenzie
60th
: Marlene Bent
70th
: Jennifer Snook and Sandra Van Heerden
80th
: Pat Rowe
To the following new parishioners: Lara & Kyra
Jones, Barry & Carolyn Meier and family, Rosanna
Lott, Brian & Mildred Hines and Kirsten & Garry
Bell and family. We hope you will enjoy being part
of the St Dom’s family.
To the Spiritual Life Committee and all those who
made our first Men’s Day such a success.
To Doreen Butt for making the beautiful yellow
overlays for the tables at the St. John Vianney
celebration dinner, and also to all those who
cooked, arranged flowers and helped to make the
evening so enjoyable for the visiting priests.
To Sherill Larson for her donation of a new mixer
for the Meeting Place.
To Sue Cameron for her extremely interesting
presentation on the ‘Tentmakers of Cairo’ at our
most recent Tuesday Forum.
A note from Nicky Mortier:
“I would like to say a special thank you to all
the people who prayed for me during my
The St DomSeptember 2018
(Established April 1991)
Mission Statement: Christianity through learning, caring and serving.
Church office: (031) 765 5515 www.stdom.co.za
The St Dom Chronicle – September 2018
Send your news and views to Katia Sciocatti | 082 783 6396 | stdomchronicle@gmail.com
recent illness. Your prayers helped to aid in my
recovery and I thank you for your kind words
and thoughts. I would also like to give a big
thank you to Marge and Jane who came over
to my home so I could receive Holy
Communion. This was really appreciated.
Thank you again for all your prayers and
support which helped me get back to health.”
Members of the SSVP St Dom’s Parish Hillcrest
wish to record a word of thanks to those
parishioners, adults and youth, who assisted in
last month’s packing. Quite a few of our members
who normally would help were unavailable due to
various reasons. The support was outstanding and
a significant number of our youth turned up and
their enthusiasm was wonderful to witness. These
parcels are distributed to different stations in the
Valley for distribution to the poor and needy.
They also receive parcels of clothing which are
sorted and packed each month from the kind
donations of our parishioners. Once again a big
thank you from SSVP of St Dom’s.
SSVP pack 143 double parcels every month – one parcel has tinned food, tea, etc. and the other contains mealie meal, soup mix and rice.
Special thanks to the youth and adults who stepped in to assist the SSVP last month.
To Samantha Anderson who married Sheldon Blom
last weekend, and to Samantha’s parents, Dennis and
Anne Anderson.
To Travis Roper, Dylan Bissett, Caitlyn Oliver, Evie
Bisset and Jessica Campbell who were selected for
the KZN boys and girls touch rugby teams
respectively, and who will participate at the inter-
provincial tournament later this year.
Joshua de Almeida, who was selected to play for
Highways soccer sides that took part in an inter-
district tournament.
To the following children from the First
Reconciliation class, who will be doing their first
confession on 28 August. Parishioners are asked
to please keep these children in their prayers.
Dario Giai-Minietti, Luke Hart, Kyra Jones, Mizpah
Kelly, Olivia Milburn, Claire Miller, Ella-Rose
Naude, Luke Ramlakan, Charlotte Richard-
Coombes, Rhys Swart, Benjamin Turner, Samuel
Wheatley, Lindy Young Meier.
To the winners of August’s SVDP 100 Club Draw:
1st prize: Marie-Olga Martin; 2
nd prize: Hennelize
Munro; 3rd
prize: Kevin Edwards.
To Elaine Cheesman, whose husband Clem,
passed away recently.
To Liz Fenner, on the passing of her husband, Bob.
May their souls and the souls of all the faithful
departed, through the mercy of God, rest in
peace.
Reminder! Our very popular Car Rally takes
place this Sunday, 26 August. Please meet in the
church car park at 10am sharp. Bring along your
picnic baskets and braai facilities will also be
available. Entry per vehicle is R20.
Preparation for our 2018/2019 Dizimo
Stewardship campaign starts this week with
letters and dedication forms being handed out to
The St Dom Chronicle – September 2018
Send your news and views to Katia Sciocatti | 082 783 6396 | stdomchronicle@gmail.com
parishioners. Please collect your envelope from
the table outside the church this weekend and
next weekend (1 & 2 September).
The Ladies’ Guild are now appealing for
lollipops/suckers for the KwaThintwa
Christmas party. Small juice boxes are still
needed. Please drop them off at the church office,
marked for the attention of Lynette Kuster.
Pilgrimage to Ngome Marian Shrine
The Spiritual Life Committee are organising a pilgrimage to Ngome Marian Shrine on the weekend of 23 November 2018.
The cost of the accommodation from Friday evening to Sunday morning, including meals, is R1200,00 per person.
Kindly contact Linda at the parish office or Marcia de Klerk on 083 775 1581 to secure your place as space is limited.
About Ngome Marian Shrine
Ngome Marian Shrine, which is dedicated to 'Our Lady, the Tabernacle of the Most High', is situated in KwaZulu-Natal, just 326 kilometres north of the city of Durban and 85 kilometres east of Vryheid.
A place of regular, if not near constant, pilgrimage, Ngome is one of many Marian apparition sites around the world.
In one of the early apparitions, received by Sister Reinolda, Our Lady said to her:
“I wish that a shrine be erected for me in the
place where seven springs come together. There I let my graces flow in abundance. Many people shall
turn to God.”
Ngome was originally a 338 hectare farm bought by the Benedictines, a Catholic monastic order (Order of Saint Benedict (O.S.B.)) in 1944, and was mainly used for cattle ranching as a source of income for the mission station at Nongoma, the closest town, some 46 kilometres away.
A small school, known as the Mayime School, was erected on the farm to enable the children in the area to get a basic education. The classroom was used as a chapel where the Catholics came together on Sundays to celebrate Holy Mass or to participate in a service conducted by a catechist.
In 1966 the building of a small chapel was completed and blessed on the Ngome farm in the area where the seven springs were situated.
In 1984 a bigger chapel was built in a hexagonal shape, on a solid rock about one hundred metres away from the small chapel erected in 1966.
Sister Reinolda May
Sister Reinolda, who was born in 1901 in south-west Germany, entered the convent of the Missionary Benedictine Sisters at Tutzing in 1922 and after receiving the missionary cross, left for South Africa on 21 June 21 1925.
In 1936 Rome allowed the Benedictine Sisters of Tutzing to assist women in childbirth, with Sister Reinolda becoming the first sister in Zululand to take a course in midwifery.
In 1938, the Benedictine Mission Hospital opened in Nongoma and the newly qualified Sister Reinolda was put in charge of the maternity department.
She won the hearts of the Zulu people by her kindness and generous readiness to help and her expertise as a midwife attracted expectant mothers from afar.
The pastor of Nongoma described Sister Reinolda as a very solid missionary sister in the truest sense of the word and of inestimable help.
It was in 1955 that Sister Reinolda had her first apparition and encounter with the Blessed Virgin Mary, who said to her:
"Call me Tabernacle of the Most High. You too
are such a tabernacle, believe it! I wish to be called upon by this title for the glory
of my Son. I wish that more such tabernacles be prepared. I wish that the altars be surrounded by praying
people more frequently. Don’t be afraid, make it known.”
Over the following years, she had ten encounters with Our Lady; the last being in 1971.
These apparitions, coupled with Sister Reinolda's and others dedication to the cause, resulted in Ngome Marian Shrine being what it is today, a place of prayer and grace where 'we thank our Lord and Saviour and His Mother Mary, Tabernacle of the Most High, for the many graces pilgrims receive'.
(Source: http://www.ngome.co.za/about)
You can read more about the history of Ngome and Sister Reinolda by logging onto the website at
www.ngome.co.za/history
The St Dom Chronicle – September 2018
Send your news and views to Katia Sciocatti | 082 783 6396 | stdomchronicle@gmail.com
Sue Cameron on the
“Tentmakers of Cairo” Written by Jenny Meilhon
Master Quilter, Sue Cameron of our St Dom’s parish
presented a fascinating insight into “The Tentmakers of
Cairo” at our recent Tuesday Forum on 7 August.
Tentmaking is an ancient craft and one that was
practised by St Paul, as mentioned in The Acts of the
Apostles (18: 2-3).
The Tentmakers of Cairo sustain a spectacular
aspect of Egypt's living heritage. Their ancestors made
the majestic travelling tents of the Ottoman Empire,
and today they produce intricate textile artworks that
are unique to Egypt. The tentmakers are known as
Khayamiya and the tents they make are called khayma.
Using only a needle, thimble, and large pair of
tailor’s scissors, these skilled artisans flip, fold and
stitch fabric with virtuoso precision. Although master
craftsmen, they are undervalued in their country and
remain very poor as an order for a large ornate tent
could take a year or more to complete for which
payment is only made on completion.
The craft is handed down from father to son and
after school the children are taught the way to sit and
apply the age-old craft. Sadly the tourist companies
refuse to take visitors to the street where the
tentmakers have their small shops, using the excuse
that it is too dangerous for tourists – the real reason
being that the tentmakers are unable to provide
“baksheesh”, or payment.
To help provide exposure of this ancient craft, the
SA Quilters Guild invited two tentmakers to
demonstrate and exhibit their work at the National
Quilt Festival in Port Elizabeth, which is where Sue
became acquainted with them and was enthralled with
their work.
In addition to her presentation, Sue was persuaded
to bring some of her own work to the Forum for
participants to view. On display, among her other
prize-winning quilts, was her “Tree Spirit” which won
the “Best of Country” Award at the 2016 World Quilt
Competition.
An example of a large tent used for special celebrations
One of the Tentmakers at work
Sue Cameron with her quilt entitled “Celebrating my family”.
The Last Laugh(s)
Every single morning I get hit by the same bike. It's a vicious cycle. Not all math puns are bad. Just sum. My astronaut girlfriend has dumped me. She said she needs space. There's a fine line between a numerator and a denominator. Only a fraction of people will find this funny. I got fired from my job as a taxi driver. It turns out my customers didn't like it when I tried to go the extra mile.
The St Dom Chronicle – September 2018
Send your news and views to Katia Sciocatti | 082 783 6396 | stdomchronicle@gmail.com
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