Home>July 2021>70 years of the Jesuit Mission Bazaar and Maytime Fair

70 years of the Jesuit Mission Bazaar and Maytime Fair

Mary and her sister Liz at the Maytime Fair in 2018.

It took “all kinds of stuff” – including 360 dozen lamingtons – to build the fledgling Jesuit mission after the first Australian missionaries set off for Hazaribag in 1951, 70 years ago. For back home in Australia, a small band of supporters was gathering all the resources they could to raise money for the mission. One of them, Mary Brabenec, was just three years old when her mother Jeanette Connellan held the first ever fundraising function, in Melbourne.

“We had a house party, and in fact it became an annual event which raised money to set up the first Maytime Fair.”
Mary Brabenec

The fair is now a beloved institution which Mary and her entire family have been involved with for the past 70 years. She recalls a sign made one year by a Xavier College art teacher for the trash and treasure stall.

“He wrote an enormous, very highly coloured sign saying “All kinds of stuff”. And I said, ‘That's not very classy’ and he said, ‘It’s not classy. That's exactly what it is: it’s all kinds of stuff’.”
Mary

Mary, who had visited India in 1972, returned early last year. The progress made in the intervening years was self-evident, she says.

“You couldn't calculate how many hundreds of thousands of kids they've educated and the education of girls is just such an extraordinary achievement.”
Mary

In Sydney, 82-year-old Maureen Punch, recalls being asked as a teenager to run a stall at the Jesuit Mission Bazaar. She was president at the time of the Riverview Younger Set.

“We had drinks and ice creams and they had umbrellas around the quadrangle and Cardinal Gilroy came and opened the Bazaar with great fanfare.”
Maureen Punch

Years later, when her three sons were enrolled at St Ignatius’ College Riverview, she was asked to run the cake stall.

A curry stall at the Jesuit Mission Bazaar in 1985.
“We used to make 360 dozen lamingtons in the boys’ refectory and they would all sell.”
Maureen

After her children had left school, Maureen started selling second-hand clothing at the Bazaar and at a monthly market in Sydney.

“My mother was mortified that I was doing it – fancy handling second-hand clothes?“But I'm glad I did it because we made so much money for the mission.”
Maureen
Pamplona poem by Fr Andy Bullen SJ

The Ignatian Year celebrates the 500th anniversary of St Ignatius’ cannonball wound at the battle of Pamplona and his subsequent conversion to commit himself to God’s work. In addition, the 31 July is the feast day of St Ignatius and we invite you to reflect on Fr Andy Bullen's SJ poem Pamplona.

Click here to read Pamplona.

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