Jerusalem, New Zealand

Jerusalem was once an important kainga (fishing village) on the Whanganui River in New Zealand where a Roman Catholic mission was first established in 1854. Known to Maori as Hiruharama, Jerusalem was the isolated site where in 1892 Suzanne Aubert (better known as Mother Mary Joseph), established the congregation of the Sisters of Compassion. They became a highly respected charitable nursing/religious order. A convent remains on the mission property, as well as the church which replaced the original building destroyed by fire in 1888, and Sisters of Compassion still care for them. New Zealand poet James K. Baxter and many of his followers formed a community at Jerusalem in 1970 and Baxter is buried there.

External links

Sisters of Compassion Jerusalem website

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
andheri
ahmed saeed
eleanor powell
robert schuman
mimi rogers
dyrehavsbakken
caspian plover
grammy awards of 1987
grammy awards of 1991
historic pictures of 1906 san francisco earthquake
terek sandpiper
khorovod
papa john's pizza
programmed cell death
ceremonial dance
hora
triangular matrix
slender billed curlew
j. d. tippit
count of champagne
mathworld
battletech:characters
snow hill tunnel
seibal
the adventures of pete and pete
novelty and fad dances
peyote song
iwato
nonary
july monarchy
european computer driving licence
donald healey
datakortet
mobile processor
law (disambiguation)
cervicitis
g theory
peter safar
neurophysiology
higher nervous activity
doyra
ionotropic receptor
ampa
nmda