National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council

National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council NATSICC is the peak Indigenous advisory body to the Catholic Bishops of Australia. This occurred in October 2003 with 2006 being the next date for re election.

NATSICC HISTORY

The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Catholic Council (NATSICC) was formed in Cairns in January 1989 at the first National Conference of the Aboriginal and Islander Catholic Councils. In 1992 the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference officially recognised and welcomed it as the national representative and consultative body to the Church on Issues concerning Indigenous Cathol

ics. The members of the council stand down every three years and a new council is appointed. NATSICC's funding comes in the form of Voluntary contributions from Schools, Parishes and Religious Orders. In addition, Caritas Australia provides ongoing funding. Encouraged by Pope John Paul II’s words in the Post Synodal Apostolic Exhortation Ecclesia in Oceania NATSICC is determined to continue, as the peak Indigenous Catholic representative body, to actively support and promote Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander participation in the Catholic Church in Australia. WHAT DOES NATSICC DO? NATSICC acts as an avenue that helps Aboriginal and Torres Strait people to have a voice in the Catholic Church in Australia. Twice per year the council meets with the Bishops Committee for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to discuss concerns, suggestions and future projects. In addition, NATSICC is an advisory body to the aforementioned committee. In addition, NATSICC sponsors Indigenous Youth to attend the World Youth Day. This group is the only wholly Indigenous group sent from Australia. It is very important to have Indigenous representation at this international event. Every three years NATSICC holds a National Assembly that brings together Indigenous Catholics from all corners of Australia. Spirituality, culture and the way forward are among the things discussed at these gatherings. Previous events have been held in Broome, Darwin Adelaide, Brisbane, Kurajong and Alice Springs in 2006 which attracted over 700 participants. The next Assembly will take place in Melbourne 1-5 October 2010. NATSICC provides the only Liturgy approved by the National Liturgical Commission for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sunday (first Sunday in July). These resources contain suggested prayers, songs and homily and are sent to every Parish in Australia. To download a copy of previous year's Liturgy, please click on 'resources' on the left. A detailed list of NATSICC's Functions can be downloaded: Natsicc Mandate.pdf - 40kb. NATSICC is an incorporated body and authorised deductable gift recipient.

Just this for today......Holy Father, God of loveYou are the Creator of this land and all good thingsWe acknowledge the ...
12/02/2026

Just this for today......

Holy Father, God of love
You are the Creator of this land and all good things
We acknowledge the pain and shame of our history
And the suffering of our Peoples.
And we ask your forgiveness

We thank you for the survival of Indigenous cultures
Our hope is in you because you gave your son Jesus
To reconcile the world to you,
We pray for your strength and grace to forgive,
Accept and love one another,
As you love us and forgive and accept us In the sacrifice of Your Son.

Give us the courage to accept the realities of our history
So that we may build a better future for our nation.
Teach us to respect all cultures
Teach us to care for our land and waters

Help us to share justly the resources of this land
Help us to bring about spiritual and social change
To improve the quality of life for all groups in our communities
Especially the disadvantaged.

Help our young people to find true dignity and self esteem by your Spirit

May your power and love be the foundations
On which we build our families, our communities and our Nation.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord
Amen.

Prepared by Wontulp Bi-Buya Indigenous Theology Working Group 13 March 1997, Brisbane, Qld.

The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council acknowledges and respects that this day carries diff...
26/01/2026

The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council acknowledges and respects that this day carries different meanings for different people, shaped by culture, history, memory, and lived experience.

Today, we choose to listen before we speak, to stand beside those who carry pain, and to build Communities where truth, justice, and friendship can grow, trusting that in Christ we can become one family.

Download the NATSICC 2026 Australia Day Statement and reflection guide at https://tinyurl.com/NATSICC2026

In our 2026 Australia Day Statement, NATSICC calls upon Catholics to approach 26 January with honesty, humility, and a c...
22/01/2026

In our 2026 Australia Day Statement, NATSICC calls upon Catholics to approach 26 January with honesty, humility, and a commitment to listening, justice, and deep discernment about what it means to belong to this Land and to one another, under God.

NATSICC AUSTRALIA DAY STATEMENT 2026

Each year, as 26 January approaches, Australians reflect on this day in different ways. For some, it is a time of celebration and national pride. For others, it is a time of reflection, grief, or unresolved questions about our shared history. The National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council (NATSICC) acknowledges and respects that this day carries different meanings for different people, shaped by Culture, history, memory, and lived experience.

For many Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples, 26 January remains a day of mourning and a reminder of the ongoing impacts of colonisation. At the same time, many people choose to come together as community in ways formed by their own journeys and circumstances, either through Cultural practice, shared connection, or quieter acts of remembering and being together. These moments hold both sorrow and resilience, truth and hope.

In 1986, Pope St John Paul II addressed Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples at Blatherskite Park in Alice Springs, affirming the dignity, Cultural richness, and enduring place of Australia’s First Peoples. He reminded the Church that it cannot be fully itself without the contribution of First Peoples. Forty years on, this address continues to shape NATSICC’s call to the Church to approach 26 January with honesty, humility, and a commitment to listening, reflection, and justice. It also invites us to ask honestly whether, over these past forty years, we have done all that we might.

Contemporary Australia is home to the world’s oldest continuing cultures and to many generations who have come from across the world to make their lives here. It is a nation of many stories, languages, and traditions – a place that invites ongoing reflection about belonging, shared identity, and how ancient cultures are honoured alongside a diverse and changing population.

NATSICC recognises and knows first-hand the persistent disparities experienced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in areas such as health, education, housing, and life expectancy, and acknowledges that reconciliation remains unfinished work. At the same time, there are signs of hope. Across Australia, many local communities are rebuilding relationships through dialogue, cultural renewal, and practical cooperation on Country. The commencement of Treaty in Victoria/Narrm represents one significant pathway, among several, being pursued, while in South Australia the establishment of a First Nations Voice to Parliament has opened another avenue for participation and shared decision-making. Alongside these efforts, young people are increasingly expressing leadership through art, storytelling, and advocacy, offering fresh vision for the future.

Today, Australians find themselves living in a time of heightened complexity. Global uncertainty, acts of violence both on our shores and in different parts of the world, and the growing pressures faced by families have shaped a national mood in which questions of belonging and identity are felt more acutely.

In such times, NATSICC believes it is especially important to approach difficult conversations through a lens of faith and with care, compassion, and a commitment to listening.

Within the Australian Catholic Church, NATSICC has represented Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholics for nearly 30 years. With the voluntary support of schools, Parishes, and partner organisations, NATSICC continues to work closely alongside Australia’s Bishops to strengthen relationships and support meaningful pathways toward Reconciliation. Last year, more than 300 Catholics gathered on the lands of the Wonnarua People in the Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle for the NATSICC Pilgrims of Hope Assembly - a powerful expression of unity and shared commitment that offered a tangible sign of hope for the future of our Church.

Guided by our faith, NATSICC invites individuals and communities to foster respectful conversation, support truthful education, listen to young voices, and take practical steps to address racism, as part of building a more just and inclusive nation.

Echoing St John Paul II’s vision, Pope Leo, in the opening days of his ministry in 2025, said: “We want to be a small leaven of unity, communion, and fraternity within the world. We want to say to the world with humility and joy: Look to Christ! Come closer to Him! Welcome his word that enlightens and consoles! Listen to his offer of love and become his one family: in the one Christ, we are one. This is the path to follow together.”

As a Catholic faith community, NATSICC also recognises that genuine Reconciliation is not only social or structural, but deeply personal and spiritual. A sense of real inner healing – where truth is named, wounds are acknowledged, and dignity is restored – helps to foster true freedom through Christ. This healing does not erase pain or history but allows individuals and communities to move forward without being bound by it.

In Christ, healing opens the way for forgiveness, and the courage to walk together toward a future shaped by justice, mercy, and hope.

On January 26, we take up that call in Australia by choosing to listen before we speak, to stand beside those who carry pain, and to build communities where truth, justice, and friendship can grow, trusting that in Christ we can become one family.

Full Statement available at https://mailchi.mp/natsicc/australiaday2026
__________________________________________________

Our 2026 Australia Day Reflection and Discernment Guide uses Pope St John Paul II's address to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in 1986 as its Pastoral lens and can be downloaded here - https://tinyurl.com/NATSICC2026

Newly appointed NATSICC Chairperson and Western Australian Councillor Shirley Quaresimin shares a special message for Ch...
23/12/2025

Newly appointed NATSICC Chairperson and Western Australian Councillor Shirley Quaresimin shares a special message for Christmas.

“As we approach the celebration of Christmas, I extend my warmest greetings to you and your families. This holy season invites us to pause, to give thanks, and to reflect on the year that has been, all while turning our hearts toward the hope and promise of Christ born among us.

I am deeply honoured to write to you for the first time as Chairperson of the National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic Council. I am grateful for the trust placed in me, and I acknowledge the strong foundations laid by those who have served before.

I wish to sincerely thank outgoing Councillors David Miller (Queensland) and Sabrina Ann Stevens (Youth) for their generous service, wisdom, and commitment to our communities. Their contributions have strengthened NATSICC and will continue to bear fruit. I also warmly welcome Alarna Page (Youth) and Bernice Fischer (Queensland) to Council, and I look forward to their voices and leadership shaping our work into the future. Alarna and Bernice join the following members of the 2025 – 2028 NATSICC Council:

· Doreen Flanders (NSW and Deputy Chair)
· Jaimi Lee Armstrong (Tasmania and Treasurer)
· Sally FitzGerald (ACT and Secretary)
· John Lochowiak (SA and Public Officer)
· Dolly McGaughey (Torres Strait Islands)
· Regina McCarthy (NT)
· Sherry Balcombe (Vic)

Over the past year, NATSICC — supported by many dedicated partners — has achieved so much. Together, we:

• Released an Australia Day Discernment Guide, inviting Catholics to engage with Australia Day through an Ignatian lens, attentive to the lived experience of First Australians.
• Worked with the National Centre for Pastoral Research to include Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholic data within Catholic Census maps.
• Launched NATSICC Anointing Packages, supporting clergy in culturally respectful ministry.
• Hosted the Cultural Centre at the Australian Catholic Youth Festival, in collaboration with the Archdiocese of Melbourne and the ACM, and facilitated a workshop engaging young people in faith and culture.
• Contributed to Reconciliation Action Plan committees, Synod processes, and event planning groups, and provided Welcomes and Acknowledgements across the country.
• Presented the NATSICC Service to Community Awards on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Sunday, celebrating faith-filled service.
• Rebuilt the Cross-Cultural Competency in a Catholic Context online course, including a module addressing the Voice Referendum.
• Continued the distribution of Palliative Care Packs and Hospital Packages, offering comfort and dignity in times of vulnerability.
• Relaunched the One Journey, Together initiative to support dialogue and engagement across the Catholic community.
• And most significantly, hosted a very successful NATSICC Assembly in the Hunter Valley, welcoming over 270 participants from across Australia in a powerful gathering of faith, culture, and shared hope.

None of this work would be possible without the continued goodwill and voluntary contributions of Parishes and Schools across Australia. Your generosity, prayer, and practical support remain vital to our mission. I also extend heartfelt thanks to the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference (importantly our Bishops Commission for Relations with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples) Catholic Mission and Caritas Australia for their ongoing support of NATSICC and our work.

As we look toward 2026, we do so with anticipation and purpose. In the year ahead, NATSICC hopes to
• Host a formation retreat, nurturing faith, leadership, and cultural identity.
• Mark the 40th Anniversary of Saint John Paul II’s historic address to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in Alice Springs, reaffirming his call for recognition, dignity, and belonging within the Church.
• Engage in early planning toward the 2028 International Eucharistic Congress, ensuring Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voices are present and heard in this significant moment for the Church in Australia.

Recent events in Bondi, Sydney, remind us how quickly our lives can change and the importance of caring for one another — especially in moments of shock, grief, division, or fatigue. Christmas calls us back to the humility of Christ, who comes not in power, but in vulnerability and love. May we continue to walk alongside one another with kindness, patience, and compassion, holding all those affected in our prayers, and remembering that reconciliation, healing, and hope are built through respect, mercy, and love.

On behalf of NATSICC Council, I wish you a blessed and peaceful Christmas, and may the coming year bring renewed strength, deeper faith, and shared hope as we continue this journey together.

Shirley Quaresimin
NATSICC Chairperson

23/10/2025

NATSICC congratulates Dean Chisholm, who this afternoon will be ordained as a Deacon in Darwin.

Dean has walked this journey faithfully for many years. His ordination is not only a personal milestone, but a moment of great pride and joy for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Catholics across Australia.

He joins a select group of Aboriginal men who have been called upon to undertake this sacred and important role in the Church — to serve their people and communities through word, sacrament and witness.

We give thanks to God for Dean’s vocation and commitment, and we pray that the Holy Spirit continues to strengthen and guide him as he serves the people of God with love and compassion.

Congratulations, Deacon Dean!

A live stream of the service will be available at Catholic Diocese of Darwin

Australian Catholic Bishops Conference
St Martin de Porres Catholic Aboriginal Community

The Catholic Diocese of Darwin is diverse and geographically vast, covering 1,350,000 sq km.

03/10/2025

Our 5 days together comes to a close.

The 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope done for another 3 years! A wonderful 5 days on Wonnarua Country. Safe trav...
03/10/2025

The 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope done for another 3 years! A wonderful 5 days on Wonnarua Country. Safe travels to all delegates as they make their way home. Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle Australian Catholic Bishops Conference Southern Cross Care NSW & ACT Australian Catholic University (ACU) Caritas Australia Catholic Mission

01/10/2025

Day 3 of 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope took us out onto Country. Blessed with perfect weather, the group traversed the Catholic Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle and the Lands of the Wonnarua.

01/10/2025

A short overview of what we got up to on Day 2 - Tuesday 30 September - of the 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope. Thanks to the team at Southern Cross Care NSW & ACT for putting this together!

Day 2 of 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope done and dusted. Lots of yarning, laughs and meeting new friends!
30/09/2025

Day 2 of 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope done and dusted. Lots of yarning, laughs and meeting new friends!

All quiet at the moment, but not for long as we prepare for Day 2 of 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope   Southern...
29/09/2025

All quiet at the moment, but not for long as we prepare for Day 2 of 2025 NATSICC Assembly - Pilgrims of Hope Southern Cross Care NSW & ACT

Our NATSICC Assembly “Pilgrims of Hope” is off to a flying start today on Wonnarua Country, Hunter Valley! We extend a w...
29/09/2025

Our NATSICC Assembly “Pilgrims of Hope” is off to a flying start today on Wonnarua Country, Hunter Valley! We extend a warm welcome to all our friends who have travelled from near and far.

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