14 February 2023, The Tablet

Retreat explores spiritual bond between Australia’s Aborigines and the Desert Fathers


Theresa Ardler said she was struck by the similarity between Aboriginal and Benedictine hospitality.


Retreat explores spiritual bond between Australia’s Aborigines and the Desert Fathers

Spiritual collaborators: Sr Antonia Curtis OSB  and Indigenous educator Gweagal woman Theresa Ardler.
Mark Bowling

The spiritual similarities of Australia’s Aborigines and the early Christian Desert Fathers will be explored in a new online retreat to be launched this month.

The retreat is a unique collaboration between Sr Antonia Curtis of the Benedictine abbey in Jamberoo, nestled in the southern highlands of New South Wales, and Indigenous educator Gweagal woman Theresa Ardler.

It’s more than two decades since 79-year-old Sr Curtis first read an article drawing a connection between the spiritual lives of Aboriginal people and the early Christian desert spirituality.

Since then, Sr Curtis has dreamed of creating a retreat bringing the two together.

“Last year I saw a picture of Theresa [Ardler] presenting the ‘Uluru Statement from the Heart’ to Pope Francis,” Sr Curtis said, referring to the key document written by Indigenous leaders calling for a First Nations Voice to be enshrined in the Australian Constitution.

A referendum on whether there should be a First Nations advisory body to the Australia’s federal parliament (called simply “The Voice”) is to be put to the Australians later this year.

“I found out Theresa Ardler had lectured in Aboriginal spirituality at Australian Catholic University…I thought here’s my opportunity,” Sr Curtis said.

“I proposed the idea and she was so excited about it.”

The retreat entitled “Sacred Connections” focuses on the values of silence and listening, reverence and community.

“I knew that these values are integral to the Aboriginal way of life and of course they are key values in Benedictine spirituality,” Sr Curtis said.

It was St Benedict who developed his own rule of monasticism based on the writings of the early Desert Fathers, those early Christians who became attracted to the desert as a way of escaping the world and living a private spiritual life.

Today, Benedictine communities still thrive throughout the world and Jamberoo Abbey, about two and a half hours drive south-west of Sydney, is the home of Australia’s community of Benedictines, who live largely in silence.

Ms Ardler said she felt a “link”, particularly in the hospitality that she encountered on her first visit to the abbey.

“What struck me then was the hospitality offered to guests and how like Aboriginal hospitality it was,” she said.

“Hospitality links right into silence and listening, reverence and community. All overlap and flow into one another.”

Sr Curtis said she believed Aboriginal people had a lot to teach about how to live collaboratively, to care for one another – values that she says were eroded in Western societies.

“We don’t have all the answers, despite our wealth, our technology and our modern ways of living and being,” she said.

“We are actually drowning in all of that whilst our Aboriginal brothers and sisters are feasting, as Patrick White wrote in A Fringe of Leaves.

“The quote is something like ‘…the whites were dying while the Aboriginals were feasting’. We need to ask our Aboriginal brothers and sisters to teach us how to live in harmony with the universe.”

Sr Curtis and Ms Ardler hope the online retreat will appeal to an international audience.

“I think anyone of any age and background or religious persuasion, as well as those with no religious persuasion; those marginalised from the Church; those who feel on the fringes, those who feel alienated: all would benefit from participating,” Sr Curtis said.

Ms Ardler said, “I hope this retreat might encourage people in other countries, as well as in Australia, to start communicating more with their First Nations people and encountering their spirituality and culture.”

Throughout his papacy, Pope Francis has reached out to indigenous peoples and challenged the world to show care and respect for their cultures – particularly their land that represents a sacred space and which they need to maintain their identity and values.

“Sacred Connections” consists of six conferences plus a video-recorded conversation between Sr Curtis and Ms Ardler.

Details and registration are available here


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