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The Eileen O’Connor Centre has opened in Coogee, Sydney (The Catholic Weekly/Giovanni Portelli Photography)

The Eileen O’Connor Centre has opened in Coogee in Sydney’s east, honouring the life’s work and legacy of the co-founder of Our Lady’s Nurses for the Poor. Source: The Catholic Weekly.

Also named the Brown Nurses due to their trademark brown cloaks and bonnets, O’Connor established the congregation in 1913 with Fr Timothy Edward “Ted” McGrath MSC to help Sydney’s most vulnerable receive medical care. 

The beloved “Little Mother” herself lived in constant pain from debilitating illness until her death in 1921 aged 28.  

Despite her limited opportunities for education and religious formation she was named a Servant of God by the Holy See in 2018 and, in October 2024, Sydney Archbishop Anthony Fisher OP travelled to Rome to present the required documentation supporting her cause for sainthood. 

Inside the centre, built close to the house where O’Connor lived, visitors can see recreations of her bed and living space, as well as personal effects from her life, such as hair combs, a camera from the 1890s, crucifixes, and even a manicure set.  

The centre was blessed by Bishop Terence Brady, with several guests in attendance including the local postulator for O’Connor’s cause for sainthood, Fr Anthony Robbie, several Our Lady’s Nurses for the Poor, Coogee MP Marjorie O’Neill, and other friends of the congregation. 

Sr Gabriel Bast OLN, who joined the Our Lady’s Nurse for the Poor in 1957, said she hoped the centre’s guests will “get to know Eileen better”.  

Even if she doesn’t become a saint, she’s still a very holy person,” she said. 

The centre is a lively and open space filled with a selection of O’Connor’s possessions and walls adorned with some treasured messages of hers.  

Sr Gabriel said she was happy the centre was arranged in such a way that everything important in O’Connor’s life is visible at once.  

Project Manager Andrew Summerell said the centre is more light filled than most museums and hoped it would become cherished as a retreat away from the busy city and “a real blessing for people.” 

FULL STORY

Centre memorialising Eileen O’Connor’s legacy opens in Coogee (By Tara Kennedy, The Catholic Weekly)