Cross Removed from Calvary as ACT Govt Executes Hospital Takeover
Canberra Catholics and staff of Calvary Public Hospital grieved as the compulsory acquisition of Calvary by the ACT Government took effect on 3 July.
The ACT Government took over the Catholic-run hospital from midnight, ending a five-week battle to save it from the takeover — including a failed Supreme Court challenge.
Now named North Canberra Hospital, all of the crucifixes and other religious symbols were removed and staff given unbranded uniforms to wear.
Most of the 1800 staff remain at the hospital, having switched their employer to Canberra Health Services, The Canberra Times reported.
At a farewell gathering on 1 July attended by the remaining Sisters of the Little Company of Mary, the congregation that established the hospital, members of staff expressed sadness that the symbol for Christ would be removed from above the building’s entrance.
Intensive Care clinical supervisor and educator Megan Reynolds told the Canberra Catholic Voice that looking up at the cross each day upon entering the building had given staff “the courage to keep going”, especially during the peak of the COVID pandemic.
“There was a lot of strength that came from that, and you don’t have to be Catholic to need that,” she said.
“Our message is we have ensured that we have fostered a culture that is holistic and inclusive here at Calvary.
“I hope we can continue with our motivation and integrity to provide the same high standards of care.
“I also hope we still see our pastoral care come around every day – they are so important, not just for patients but for staff as well.”
In his homily the day before the takeover, Canberra-Goulburn Archbishop Christopher Prowse criticised the haste with which the Christian symbols were removed from Calvary.
He said a nurse had described the feeling of seeing a cross taken down from inside the hospital as “gut-wrenching.”
Staying the Course
Archbishop Prowse blessed the hospital for the final time on 1 July and thanked staff who had endured a “traumatic” time since the shock announcement of the takeover on 10 May.
“You are so proudly part of this place, and these few days and this next couple of months are going to be possibly a bumpy ride, but I know in the years ahead — regardless of whether crosses are coming down and the Calvary logo goes — that you will carry the genius of the Calvary insight into humanity and to healthcare wherever you go,” he said.
Speaking early on 2 July as the large blue cross over the front entrance was removed, Calvary’s ACT regional director Ross Hawkins told the Catholic Voice it was a “very sad day”, but that Calvary would continue to work in the region through its smaller private hospital and other facilities.
“Calvary has acted with integrity, and while we completely disagree with what the ACT government has done, we will continue to act with integrity to ensure this transition is as smooth as possible for our people,” he said.
Mr Hawkins said the cross had been a source of solace and support for those who entered the hospital.
“It represents our strength and our journey — who we are,” he said.
“Staff and patients are dealing with all kinds of suffering, vulnerability, and loss here, and the cross is important. I see what it means to people.
“We are committed to this community, and while it is a real shame we have lost this wonderful facility, we are not going anywhere.”
Chaplains Mourn Loss
Fr Joshua Scott, the hospital’s Catholic chaplain from 2018-2020, told The Catholic Weekly that he had felt a “surprising” level of grief on Sunday, seeing a video of the giant cross being removed by a crane.
“Its imprint is still here, but seeing it being lowered down felt like a death, it felt like a coffin being lowered into a grave,” he said.
“The bricks and mortar there have soaked in the spirit of the sisters who founded it.
“What they instilled is that being Christ for others matters the most, that everyone who walked in those front doors mattered and deserved the best care.
“That’s the reason it was so much better than Canberra Hospital.”
The loss of Clare Holland House, a palliative hospice attached to the hospital, also felt tragic, he said.
“The moment you walked in, you noticed a feeling of gentle peace about the place.”
The current Catholic chaplain Fr Alex Osborne said he expected it will be “business as normal” for him.
Although the Blessed Sacrament is no longer being kept in the chapel and the sanctuary lamp was going to be removed, he said he is on call for emergencies and planned to visit later in the week.
State Control
He said that the staff’s biggest concern for the past five weeks was that the hospital’s culture would change once it comes under government control.
“It’s a very valid concern as culture is always influenced by leadership and management, but it is determined by how people live and work,” he told The Catholic Weekly.
“Even though the hospital is no longer Catholic, it doesn’t mean that our doctors and nurses can’t be Catholic.
“A Catholic ethos will only ever cease when Catholics stop living it out.
“Although the change of ownership makes this harder in some ways, we must still try our best to live out our ministry of care and healing.”
The new hospital general manager Elaine Pretorius said it will function as a separate entity from Canberra Hospital but “will sit under a single banner.”
The takeover faced a storm of opposition, including senior doctors and nurses at the hospital, the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation, and Australian Salaried Medical Officers’ Federation ACT, and the Human Rights Law Alliance.
More than 40,000 people signed the Canberra-Goulburn Archdiocese’s petition to save the hospital.
___
Originally published in The Catholic Weekly. Photo: ACL
3 Comments
Leave A Comment
Recent Articles:
25 January 2025
2.5 MINS
How can we foster genuine and peaceful dialogue with others who may share different opinions to us about the appropriateness of Australia Day being on 26 January?
25 January 2025
2.5 MINS
We are approaching two very important commemorations – Australia Day on 26 January and International Holocaust Remembrance Day on 27 January. We do this at a time when our nation is facing a crisis of social cohesion, with a lack of moral clarity and will to act in our government.
24 January 2025
2.3 MINS
We can be enormously grateful for Australia's Christian heritage this 26 January. Happy Australia Day!
24 January 2025
1 MINS
A significant remarkable cultural shift has quietly occurred in the last year or so, restoring recognition of 26 January as our national day. Please feel free to print and circulate the attached prayer guide designed to help Christians pray ahead of Australia Day.
24 January 2025
3.3 MINS
Trump’s pardon for the majority of Joe Biden’s January 6 political prisoners ends four years of left-wing lies and subsequent political persecution.
24 January 2025
2.2 MINS
The first person to take issue with Donald Trump’s insistence that there are only two genders was an Episcopalian priest. Of course. Bishop Marianne Budde used her Washington pulpit, tilted to the left, to berate the President for — of all things — agreeing with Moses.
24 January 2025
4.2 MINS
The United States has been captivated by the fires sweeping across Los Angeles, California, destroying nearly everything in their path. A question many have raised goes as follows: “Did God do this?”
email just sent to Andrew Bolt
———
Andrew
The ‘Ministry of Truth’ operates here in Canberra.
Yesterday, a private Christian school advertising its student-successes was to told to remove its ads on busses.
The say, because it is ‘political. I believe, because it is ’embarrassing’,
ACT government orders ‘political’ school bus ads to be removed
ACT government orders ‘political’ school bus ads to be removed
Brindabella Christian College ads were ‘political in nature’.
[Canberra Times article]
Meanwhile in Canberra.
The ACT’s new rainbow buses revealed to promote same-sex marriage ‘yes’ case
The ACT’s new rainbow buses revealed to promote same-sex marriage ‘yes’ …
Two rainbow buses will enter service in Canberra ahead of the postal vote on same-sex marriage.
[ Canberra Times article on rainbow buses]
Yesterday, at what was once Calvary Hospital, crosses at the hospital, and everything ‘religious’ were removed.
Cross Removed from Calvary as ACT Govt Executes Hospital Takeover – Daily Declaration
Cross Removed from Calvary as ACT Govt Executes Hospital Takeover – Dail…
Marilyn Rodrigues
Canberra Catholics and staff of Calvary Public Hospital grieved as the compulsory acquisition of Calvary by the …
[Daily Declaration article]
Similarly what was the Calvary, Clare Holland House, Canberra’s Palliative Care Hospice, has just been taken over by the Green-Labor ACT Government. Coincidently? Canberra is about to get ‘Medically Assisted Dying’.
Kind regards
John Miller
Romans 1:18-36
I was weeping yesterday afternoon. Deep grief for Calvary Hospital and the staff. The word calvary is only used once in the Book of Luke to describe the hill (Place of the skull – Golgotha ) which Jesus died on. Yesterday I found the word Calvary comes from the Latin word Calvaria which means skull.
Father Tony Percy’s comments and story is particularly gut wrenching!!!! Jesus have your way at Calvary.
https://youtu.be/7RbfEz59ha0
Seeing the cross removed from Calvary Hospital reminded me of a picture of a cross being removed from a church in China. What country do we live in ?