PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
06/06/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11439
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
6 June 1999 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT THE OFFICIAL OPENING OF THE CARDINAL STEPINAC NURSING HOME, ST JOHNS PARK, SYDNEY

E&OE.........................................................................................................................

Well thank you very much Mr Chairman, to my Parliamentary Colleagues,

Jackie Kelly, my Minister for Sport and Tourism, Janice Crosio the

Member for Prospect, Julia Irwin the Member for Fowler, other State

Parliamentary colleagues, Father and all the members of the Croatian

community. Can I say

how delighted that Janette and I are to be here this morning to share

this very special occasion with you.

I am conscious of the importance of this event to your community.

It's an opportunity to me, on behalf of your fellow Australians,

to say how much we honour the contribution of Australians of Croatian

descent to the building of the modern Australia.

The rest of us thank you for your dedication, for your loyalty to

Australia, for your hard work, for your sense of family and your sense

of community. And I think

what a wonderful thing it is here under a beautiful warm winter sunshine

here in Australia, for me the Prime Minister of Australia to be saying

thank you to all of you, to remember as I do your past, to honour

the fact that the people of Croatia fought proudly and defiantly against

communism for a very long period of time.

I think it's always important to remember the past without allowing

the past to govern the present or to govern the future.

Your present and your future is as part of the great Australian

nation. But in being

part of the great Australian nation you're not asked to forget

your heritage, your history, and what your people have been through

and therefore it is marvelous, as part of the Australian democracy

and the Australian way of life that is part of the Australian community,

you preserve just a little bit of Croatia here, not only in this village

but also in the broader Australian community.

I think today is also an opportunity to recognise the importance,

as people grow older, Australians who were not born in this country

and whose mother-tongue is not English, it is important to recognise

the value of retirement villages and nursing homes that care for them.

The Governor of Victoria, Sir James Gobbo, an Australian of

Italian descent, put it to me very well one day and I've never

forgotten his remark, when he said to me “John it's a bit

unrealistic to expect an elderly Italian lady to sit around the piano

singing the Road to Gundagai”.

And, of course, that is true not only in relation to people

of Italian descent, but indeed to people whose mother-tongue is other

than English. And as

one of the Directors of Nursing said to me on the way in, that she

had literally seen dementia peel away from people as they've

been able in their older years to communicate with the nursing staff

in their mother-tongue.

And as you rightly said in your introduction, as the years go by and

English becomes to so many people irrespective of their descent, their

mother-tongue the need for that will go.

But at present it is a very important element of properly caring

for the elderly within our community.

And it has been, let me say, the commitment of governments

of both political persuasion to provide continued help and support

for nursing homes and retirement villages of this kind.

And one of the measures of the humanity of a nation is the way in

which it does care for the old.

In twenty years time there will be far more Australians over

the age of 65. We will

live longer, we will be healthier as we live longer, and the need

to care for people in that age bracket will grow rather than diminish

and that has all sorts of implications for a whole range of public

policy issues, not only nursing home policy but a whole range of public

policy issues.

But today I'm here as the Prime Minister to say to you how much

we admire the contribution of your community to the building of the

Australian nation. We

are conscious of the circumstances in which many of you left your

homeland. I am very proud

of the fact that the Australian government was one of the very first

to recognise the independent Republic of Croatia only a few years

ago.

But even more importantly than that, you have come to Australia, you've

become part of the community, you've made your mark on the Australian

community, you've made your mark in business, in politics, in

sport. In so many endeavours,

the contribution of people of Croatian descent to soccer in Australia,

for example, it is quite remarkable given the proportion of the Australian

population that people of Croatian descent represent.

And in so many other fields the mark of Croatians on our country

is to be found.

But this is an occasion ladies and gentlemen not for long speeches

but for celebration. It's

an occasion to thank you for your contribution.

It's an occasion to celebrate the wonder of living in

Australia. The freest,

open, most tolerant nation on earth.

And in honour of these, the man after whom this village is named,

it's an occasion to salute the steadfastness of people of Croatian

descent to their Catholic faith, which many of them maintained in

their homeland in very, very difficult circumstances.

So can I say to all of you it's a great delight for Janette and

I to be present. It's

a great delight to share for a few moments membership of the Australian

Croatian family and the Australian Croatian community.

Thank you very much for what you have done for Australia.

[Ends]

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