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Dear Parents and Caregivers,
Last Sunday, we celebrated the final week in the Church’s liturgical year with the celebration of the Feast of Christ the King. This feast day became part of the Church’s liturgical calendar in 1925. Pope Pius XI added this feast to send a strong message. Pope Pius lived in a time where the attitudes of communism, secularism and later totalitarianism sought to make man, not God, the most powerful force in the world. A century later, those ‘-isms’ have been replaced by others such as materialism, consumerism or secularism. They too continue to demote God. The Feast of Christ the King stands in defiance of these aspects of our culture. And it also stands before us as a challenge.
It asks us: “WHO – or WHAT — really rules our lives?”
As we prepare to enter the season of Advent we could spend a great deal of time pondering and praying about these questions. And maybe it is timely that we should? The Feast of Christ the King reminds us not only to consider what we understand about Christ as King but also what is our understanding of Christ’s kingdom. What is the kingdom we refer to when we pray “thy kingdom come?”This kingdom doesn’t have a castle or a court. It isn’t a place of royal fanfare. It isn’t even found on a map. It is a kingdom that dwells within the human heart. And it’s great defining landmark is the cross.
Christ is the conduit that links our humanity to the divinity of God.
We in turn pray for a kingdom of sacrificial love — a place where the greatest honor isn’t in how much you have or how much you control, but in how much you give up. The kingdom is one where true power lies in being powerless.
The title “Christ the King” has outlasted most of the world’s monarchies. Kings, of course, have fallen out of fashion — there are only about 26 real monarchs now ruling in the world. Most of them are just figureheads. But the one we honour through the Feast of ‘Christ the King’ isn’t.
This is the same King we prepare to welcome in a few weeks on Christmas Day. During the next few weeks as we begin our search for the perfect gifts to give our children, the Feast of Christ the King reminds us that one of the greatest of all gifts we can pass on is the foundation of a lived faith.
Enjoy a week bringing to life our school motto Christ Our Way and Life.
Tina Murray
Principal
CHRISTMAS CARDS - As we prepare to enter the season of Advent, we ask that our students refrain from exchanging Christmas Cards until their class / grade end of year celebration. Classes will be scheduling celebrations before the end of the year that will provide an opportunity for students to personally and meaningfully exchange the cards they have made during our Feast Day celebrations. This initiative has been inspired by the Year 6 students who are involved in planning the activities for this special school celebration. Our students are encouraged to consider making cards rather than exchanging cards that are store bought. The purpose of this request is to respond to Pope Francis’ call to care for our common home by resisting the urge to purchase excessively and to minimise our environmental footprint. We thank you, in advance, for your support of this arrangement and hope that you will reinforce with your children the importance of being a responsible consumer of the earth’s limited resources.
COOLING THE SCHOOLS - Mary Immaculate has been selected as a Champion School to kick off Greening Australia’s ‘Cooling the Schools’ program. With a heat score ranking in the top 100 schools in Greater Sydney, Mary Immaculate is looking forward to creating greener, cooler places where both children and nature can thrive.
Greening Australia will be visiting students in Years 4 and 5 to talk about how building and clearing has led to the heating of schools and communities. Most importantly we will be empowering the children to work together to take action, combat the increasing heat and create ‘cool’ spaces.
The students will plant 200 native trees, shrubs and understory plants and learn how to care for them. The students will also plant in the Aboriginal Garden and learn how our nation’s first peoples used some of these plants as food, medicine and tools.
Greening Australia’s Cooling the Schools program is supported by the NSW Government to plant thousands of new trees across Greater Sydney schools and parklands. The trees form part of the Premier’s Priority Greening Our City initiative to plant one million trees in the local area by 2022.
We are very grateful for Mrs Alfords’ leadership of this initiative within our school.
Photo by Sebastian Pfautsch, Senior Lecturer Urban Studies, WSU.
This photo was taken at a typical school in Western Sydney last summer with a thermal imaging camera.
ARRIVAL / DEPARTURE FROM SCHOOL - Please ensure your morning/afternoon routine takes into account the busyness and possible congestion at peak times. Please ensure you attend to signage regarding Bus, No Stopping, Kiss and Drop and Parking zones around the school site and model safe behaviour for your children by always crossing the road at the designated monitored crossing. Last week a student attending another school missed their bus because a Mary Immaculate parent had parked in a bus zone. Please ensure that in trying to drop off or pick up your own child / ren that you remain conscious not to disadvantage someone else.
It is important to be aware that police regularly make random checks of these areas and will impose fines and demerit points for non-compliance.
Tina Murray
Principal
SCHOOL BANKING
NEXT
School Banking Day
Wednesday 2 December 2020.
Kindergarten Transition 2021
Over the last three weeks we have welcomed 83 children to our Kindergarten Transition Program for 2021. Some adaptations had to be made to the program due to COVID restrictions. However, it has been a wonderful opportunity for the staff too get to know the children and to work with them during this difficult year. All of the children were very excited about their first experience of Big School and we thank their parents for their support of this program. The children participated in a variety of activities over the three weeks including literacy, numeracy and fine and gross motor activities. We thank the staff for their assistance in the successful implementation of this program and we look forward to welcoming all of the children when they officially start Big School in 2021.










Upcoming events:
- Feast of the Immaculate Conception: Tuesday 8 December 2020
- ACTIVATE Fire Retreat Day - School: Wednesday 9 December 2020
- Year 6 Farewell Liturgy and luncheon: Tuesday 15 December 2020
- End of Year Mass: Wednesday 16 December 2020
Feast of the Immaculate Conception - This year we will be celebrating our Feast Day very differently. We will be having a school celebration due to COVID-19 restrictions. Students will be invited to wear mufti on this day with a blue and white theme for Mary. Additionally, our P&F will be holding a sausage sizzle with a popper for all the students.
Most importantly, we will be holding a very special prayer for our Feast Day in the hall with activities to follow.
ACTIVATE Fire Retreat Day - The Wollongong Diocese Catholic Youth Ministry Team has launched an online version of the spirituality program designed for all Year 6 students across the Diocese. This year our students will be participating in a Spiritual Retreat Day at school. We will be running the online version of this program and providing lunch for the students.
Year 6 Farewell Liturgy - Our ‘Year 6 Farewell Liturgy’ will be held during the day on Tuesday 15 December 2020. This event will be recorded as the current COVID restriction for our Church continues to be 91 people. Students will participate in a special luncheon in the hall afterward, with a sharing of memories. This will be uploaded on Google Classroom for parents and children to share the event together. Further details will be forthcoming via a letter to all students.
End of Year Mass - Our ‘End of Year Mass’ will be available for viewing on Wednesday 16 December 2020. This mass will be attended by the Year 6 cohort and relevant Year 5 students and recorded for all students to view. Students will gather after Lunch 1 on the final day to officially farewell those leaving our school and forming our traditional ‘Guard of Honour’. Parents are unfortunately unable to attend or enter the school grounds on this day.
Mrs Kirsty Simpson
Religious Education Co-Ordinator

Congratulations to Kinder Gold, the only class to earn a Gold Star so far this week, and their very first, well done! Borrowing is now finished for this year, we need to start collecting all outstanding loans to return to the Library so we can stocktake and have the shelves ready for next year. Please search your rooms, book shelves etc at home to see where any Library books or Classroom Readers might be hiding! We ask that you also have a look for any of our Loan Library bags too, or any bags you no longer need - we like to have a collection of spare Library bags on hand for those students who forget their bags, so we are happy to receive donations. Thank you.
Even though we will not be borrowing, it is important for the children to keep reading. All those lovely books at home on the shelves, books for Christmas, and don’t forget the local Library – if you are you not already members of the Campbelltown Library, it is free to join. We have some forms in the Library, or just call in to the Eagle Vale Leisure Centre and ask there.
Scholastic Book Club: The last campaign for the year was sent home last week, if you wish to order please do so before this Friday 27 November, to give the orders time to arrive before the end of school. Thank you for your support.
Chess Tournament: Our 2020 Chess Tournament is now coming to an end. We had two amazing matches yesterday to determine our Year 6 finalists!. That match will take place next week. Year 5 finalists will be determined this week, and the Year 4 matches are well under way. We are hoping we will also have time for Year 3 before the end of term.
Digital Citizenship: A digital citizen is anyone who uses digital tools such as computers, mobile phones, or the internet in their work, school or for fun. Just like citizens of a city have to adopt rules and standards of behaviour in order to live together, those of us in the digital world should do the same. Our school rules – Be Safe, Be Respectful, Be Responsible – apply to our online community as well as our school community. Don’t forget to take a look at our Oliver home page - oliver.dow.catholic.edu.au/miev, and check out the links to the Australian Government Cyber Safety site.
“The interactive nature of many of the new media facilitates more
dynamic forms of learning and communication, thereby contributing
to social progress" and as parents and educators we should... "encourage all
people of good will who are active in the emerging environment of
digital communication to commit themselves to promoting a culture
of respect, dialogue and friendship.”
Pope Benedict XVI, 2008
Happy reading!
Mrs Sue Bryant
Teacher-Librarian
HOT DOG DAY - WEDNESDAY 2 DECEMBER 2020 - LUNCH 2
Dear Families,
On Wednesday 2 December the P&F will hold a Hot Dog Day fundraising event at Lunch 2. The cost will be $2 per hot dog.
Please Fill out and return the order form by Thursday 26 November.
P&F Association