Showing 3 results

Archival description
Prendiville, Bartholomew, 1924-2004, Capuchin priest File South Africa
Print preview Hierarchy View:

1 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Canonical Election of Regular Superior of the Cape Town Mission

Copy confirmation by Fr. Brendan O’Mahony OFM Cap., Provincial Minister, of the elections of Fr. Didacus McGrath OFM Cap. as regular superior, and Fr. Bartholomew Prendiville OFM Cap. and Fr. Athanasius (Noel) Winston OFM Cap. as councillors of the Irish Capuchin mission in Cape Town, South Africa.

O’Mahony, Brendan, 1934-2020, Capuchin priest

Reports of the Chapter of the Cape Province Mission

Reports of the chapter of the Irish Capuchin mission in the Cape Province held in the Church of St. Mary of the Angels, Athlone parish. One of the volumes is a summary report on the chapter. The other report contains the following sections:
Report of the regular superior (Fr. Didacus McGrath OFM Cap.)
Reports on the following parishes and topics:
Parow Parish (Fr. Didacus McGrath OFM Cap.)
Tyger Valley (Fr. Aquinas O’Carroll OFM Cap.)
Elsies River (Br. Martin O’Sullivan OFM Cap.)
Athlone Parish (Fr. Athanasius Winston OFM Cap.)
Welcome Estate (Fr. Wilfrid Aherne OFM Cap.)
Manenberg (Fr. Albeus McQuillan OFM Cap.)
Postulancy report (Fr. Seán Cahill OFM Cap.)
Langa (Fr. Matthew Gormley OFM Cap.)
Belgravia (Fr. Bartholomew Prendiville OFM Cap.)
Bridgetown (Fr. Ronald Grace OFM Cap.)

Visit of Hendrik Verwoerd to Katima Mulilo

Photographs showing the visit of Dr. Hendrik Verwoerd (1901-1966), Minister of Bantu Affairs in the South African government (he was later Prime Minister), to the Holy Family Mission at Katima Mulilo in the Caprivi Strip (situated in present-day Namibia but then under South African control). A typescript note is extant in the file. It reads: ‘The purpose of his visit to the Mission was to assess the possible implications of implanting the infamous Bantu Education Act into the Caprivi where, at the time, all the schools were administered by the Capuchins with the aid of a very meagre subsidy from the S.A. government. Dr. Verwoerd (the “architect of apartheid”, was assassinated during his reign as Prime Minister) enforced the Bantu Education Act, in the late 1950s, as a means of preventing black South Africans from receiving an education anywhere near the standard enjoyed by other ethnic groups, e.g. whites and coloureds’. One of the photographs shows Verwoerd (identified with an 'X') with various religious including Bishop Timothy Phelim O’Shea OFM Cap. and Fr. Bartholomew Prendiville OFM Cap., superior of the Katima Mulilo Mission. See also CA AMI/2/10/3/110.