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The Kiddies

As a wise friend once said when i asked if his new wife knew he smoked pot: Yeah, she knows ... She doesn’t know the extent …          I knew MSC was involved in mission work in the NT, didn’t fathom the extent … until i started researching this.

Historically, MSC has been the main religious group conducting missionary work in the NT.  That means: MSC was the face of Australia’s interaction with NT’s indigenous tribes re education, religious inculcation, assimilation.  All conducted according to government-backed policy.

Pop question: What percent of adult First Nations People were converted to Christianity?

Ans: zero

Yeah surprised me at first, too, but when you think about it …

Hi, i’m some alien guy here to spread the good news that the Virgin Mary gave birth to Jesus who died on the cross to save usus1800 years ago -  then ascended into heaven!

Yeah … no.  We're good, mate - we’ve got our own beliefs - the Everywhen

Maybe that’s how the great Aussie Yeah-no thinking came into being ... ?

The Jesuits, best-in-the-business at connecting to indigenous tribes - learn the language, do the Sunday mass in it, permeate into the culture, incorporate it, the whole bit - they had first crack, naturally … French Trappists, no slouches, also set up shop, separately

They both gave it their best shot … then … gave up ...

Abandoned their humble mission structures - said: it can’t be done

That left THE Church in a pickle.  If your stated goal is world mind-control - you can’t throw ya hands in the air coz a whole continent of First Nations humans says: yeah - no

The responsibility was then delegated by the THE Church to MSC.  They didn't want it - their focus was PNG.  But you can accuse THE Church of whatever you like, you can’t accuse them of not being a disciplined hierarchy.  If you’re told to do something, then it’s like someone said to De Niro’s character in Casino, but more-so: consider it a papal bull

MSC, reluctantly, through the agency of Francis Gsell, took on the job - then, depending upon your criteria, succeeded in converting large numbers of First Nations People …

The adults were still a dead-end of course, in fact trying to convert them was banned from the On-Hgher-up-ers as a waste of resources. The magic trick?:

Get into the kiddies

aka: the Stolen Generation (1905-67)

The MSC missions in NT were the Vocational Training Camps for stolen kids. They were their main customers.  Although Govt/MSC child-stealing was officially discontinued as a policy in 1967 (lingered into the 70s, unofficially), kids taken in the 60’s would have been 11-years old through to teenagers from the mid-seventies to eighties - so that formative years impact-zone stretches into recent history.  That shit doesn't go away, btw.  Those people, now late-50+ years-old, are still dealing with the impacts ...

Stolen-generation was mainly about removing mixed-blood children from their parents.  The (misguided) thinking was that in order to protect a dwindling pure-blood population from extinction, the half-castes needed to be segregated & assimilated into the White-population.

But when that program was discontinued, it then became Aboriginal children in general that were brought under the protective umbrella of the Catholic Church.  AlthoughThe Church will argue that they were not stolen as such,such the- Francis Gsell bought them with tobacco, steel (for weapons), & various trinkets.  The children were then offered accommodation/education at the missions where they were raised as Catholics.  In effect, the earlyelder-system, seventies,which manyhad adult indigenous worked on the surrounding ranches, so the missions functioned as a place where they could leave their kids whilst they were awayrun for extended60k periodsyears, aswas cowboyssevered. or maids.I was replaced with The Church.

As such, MSC missions would serve as a melting-pot for the children of different skin groups, united in the love of Jesus …

How did that work out?  Let’s take a look …