Fr Ted Kennedy

Ted Kennedy at ANTaR 'Sea of Hands' celebration, Redfern Park, October 2002, by G. Smith
Ted Kennedy at ANTaR 'Sea of Hands' celebration,
Redfern Park, October 2002. Photo by G. Smith

Fr Ted Kennedy sided with the Redfern Aborigines around Mum Shirl and became a close collaborator in her work. His genius was to privilege the excluded in such a way that they became friends. His deep and profound love of the Aborigines in Redfern and all their relatives around Australia was expressed in his extraordinary memory of names and places and where those names belonged. He could identify where each family was based geographically and knew members of visiting Aborigines' families. This practical knowledge was matched with a keen theological insight and edge that came straight from a political reading of the gospel that left fellow travellers enthralled with its freshness and cultural critique. Ted had an eye for the angle that gave hope to the underdog and a passion to those who stood in solidarity with the underdog. Redfern parishioners - that strange, diverse and sometimes tortured group of all kinds, all colours and even various beliefs - somehow created a community that would have made Jesus proud.

from The Challenge of Redfern by Peter Maher


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