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Dear Parents and Caregivers,
This week we celebrated two significant days that are set aside for the spiritual heroes of our church.
The Feast days of All Saints Day and All Souls Day celebrate the communion of saints and remind us that we have access to a massive list of prayer partners who pray with us and pray for us. The list includes the official 'greats' of our church history, but it also includes family and friends whose holiness and love directly touched and enriched our lives.
We need both heavenly models of holiness, as well as, earthly models of holiness. Saints are all around us. They are the women and men whose generous spirit reflects the Gospel’s call to love and service. Some do it by making the ordinary holy through a spirit of simplicity and humility. Some do it by showing extraordinary courage in sickness and adversity. Some do it by railing against injustice and working to bring equality and dignity to all.
One of the messages from these feast days is a call to holiness. This sounds overly simplistic and obvious, but it is at the basis of all we do as a church and as the ‘People of God.’
Pope Francis told those gathered in St Peter's Square on 2 October 2014 to, "Do not be afraid of holiness, do not be afraid to aim high, to be loved and purified by God, do not be afraid to let yourself be guided by the Holy Spirit. Our God wants us to be part of a Church, that knows how to open their arms to welcome everyone, which is the home not of a few, but the home of all, where everyone can be renewed, transformed, sanctified by his love, including, the strongest and the weakest, the sinners, the indifferent, and those who feel discouraged and lost."
Of course, we all have different ideas of holiness. In the Beatitudes, the wonderful litany of "Blessed are" states, "holiness is equated with being poor in spirit, meek, mourning, hungering for righteousness, merciful, and clean of heart."
"Holiness does not consist in doing extraordinary things," Pope Francis said, but in leaving it to God, he stressed that "the meeting of our weakness with the strength of his grace, will give us the confidence to engage in active service to others."
Holiness can be seen all around us in the world and we are surrounded by future saints who are living among us in the messiness that comes from living life within a community.
Today more than ever we need strong and vibrant communities where we can pray and be formed, communities that send us forth, not keep us in. The saints these communities create are boys and girls, women and men whose lives flow seamlessly from prayer to action. We need to hear their stories and be inspired by their witness. The saints provide the Church with a sort of kaleidoscope through which we can see Christ’s splendor from a thousand different angles. The saints, in a thousand bursts of color, refract some part of Christ’s infinitely brilliant light in their own time and place. The saints help to make known the Christ who has been revealed and yet remains in part hidden.
The invitation for us, through our vocation, is to reflect a bit of Christ’s immeasurable light in our own unique hue. What is it in us that can help to make something of Christ visible here and now? Christ in His earthly life was not from Eagle Vale. He was not a schoolteacher or a banker. He wasn’t a mother or father. He wasn’t an artist or an engineer. He wasn’t elderly. Although our own unique circumstances are different from the details of Jesus’ own earthly life, as his disciples we are challenged to ask ourselves how Christ’s light can shine through our own lives? We need our saints. They give us the courage to believe that we too can make Christ Our Way and Life.
Tina Murray
PRINCIPAL
KINDER 2021 ORIENTATION
Tonight, we commence our Kinder 2021 Orientation. Our original plans have had to be significantly adjusted due to COVID restrictions, but we very much look forward to the first Parent Session via Zoom and the commencement of student sessions next week.
SCHOOL BANKING
NEXT
School Banking Day
Wednesday 11 November 2020.
Stem Club – Year 3 and 4
Each Wednesday at Lunch 2, Miss Carter holds a STEM Club for students in the Hall. Last term, Year 4 students were invited to join the club. Miss Carter then picked 20 names out of a hat and those students were able to participate in these fun activities at Lunch 2. This term, Year 3 students were invited to join STEM Club and 15 names were chosen out of a hat. Students then work in teams to solve problems and complete challenges with each other.
STEM is an approach to learning and development that integrates the area of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Through STEM, students develop key skills including: problem solving, creativity, critical analysis, teamwork, independent thinking, initiative, communication and digital literacy.
Some of the challenges the children have been completing include creating boats that can float, programming B-Bots to move around obstacles, designing and making paper planes and testing how far they can fly, creating a tower out of marshmallows. The students then have an opportunity to evaluate the design of their product and share the results.
WHY DO YOU LIKE STEM CLUB?
I get to create projects and learn to work with other people. Piper H
We get to build things and I get to learn new things about engineering, technology and science. Lucas B
I like getting creative and building and discovering new things. Jailan V
I like creating things through trial and error and that there is no right or wrong way to do something. Adelle B
I like the way you have to use your creative mind to build things out of materials like paper and then testing to see if they work. Austin S
I like to spend the time creating new things with my friends. Patrick F
I like the way we use recyclable resources to create new things so that we don’t contribute to landfill. Maria-Helen T
I love that I get to create things with other people. Angelina T















LILLIAN DEL GIUDICE
ASSISTANT PRINCIPAL
Last Friday, we were blessed to have over 30 students receive their badges and join our Mini Vinnies Team for 2021. It was a beautiful liturgy and we were finally able to visit the church!
Anastasia and Isabelle in Year 6 reflected on their journey as Mini Vinnies representatives this year during the liturgy. Their reflection was heartfelt and they succinctly identified how they are called to serve. I have included part of their reflection below...
"We are told to show our love and hope through our words and actions. Experiencing and participating in Mini Vinnies during this year, we have learnt that there is more we can do to impact others lives and not just raising money:
- We are called to serve our younger students in the school;
- Fulfill God’s will, understanding that being a part of these teams isn’t just about a solo act, it’s about working together;
- without being in these groups, we wouldn’t have been able to experience talking to the younger students and showing them how we are all called by God;
- While talking to fellow peers, we go to each class weekly to continue giving gratitude slips. They are used to write what we are grateful for while we live through these uncertain times;
- We realise to not take for granted the food and shelter that we have, which makes us more focused to help others less fortunate through Mini Vinnies activities;
- Although we haven’t been allowed to raise awareness and fundraise for people around Australia, we all believe that we have made impact on many people in our School Community".
Mrs Kirsty Simpson
Religious Education Co-Ordinator

Congratulations to 5 Green, the only class to earn a Gold Star last week. Again, well done to all the students who remembered to return their books and bring their Library bags. Let’s try again this week – there are nearly 300 outstanding loans from students. We also ask that you please look at home for some of our Library Loan bags – we usually have a good supply on hand for those students who may forget their Library bags, but our supplies are low. Thank you.
Chess Tournament - The first four rounds for Year 6 are complete, and we are on to Year 5. The top 16 students in Stage 3 will be playing off to see who will be our 2020 MIEV Chess Champions. Years 3 and 4 will start in two weeks. There have been some amazing matches already, we have some very clever strategists!
Scholastic Book Club -Thank you for your support of this programme, there will be one more, Issue 8, before the end of term, so you can do some more Christmas shopping.
Daily Reading - Don’t forget to try to make time to read with your children for at least ten minutes a day – maybe after dinner or just before bedtime.
"There are many little ways to enlarge your child's world.
Love of books is the best of all."
Happy reading!
Mrs Sue Bryant
Teacher-Librarian