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Notes
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This work includes:
1. the Triumph of the Mynah Bird
2. Agents of the Aboriginal Holocaust
3. In the Beginning: The Australian Board of Missions, the Anglican Church and the Aborigines 1850-1900
4. The Golden Age of Missions 1900-1950
5. An Expanding Perspective 1900-1950
6. Of Massacres, Missionaries, Myths and History Wars
7. The End of An Era
8. A Black Church: 'Let My People Go'
9. A New Beginning: A vision from Yarrabah
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Other Formats
- Also e-book.
Works about this Work
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[Review Essay] White Christ Black Cross : The Emergence of a Black Church.
2008
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 2008; (p. 110-111)
— Review of White Christ Black Cross: The Emergence Of A Black Church 2007 single work non-fiction'On 13 October 1985 Arthur Malcolm was welcomed back to his north Queensland home community of Yarrabah. The previous day he had been consecrated in St James Cathedral in Townsville as the first Aboriginal bishop within the Anglican Church of Australia. Arthur Malcolm’s parents, both born around the larger Kowanyama region of Cape York, were brought to Yarrabah under the Queensland policy of family removals. Arthur, born in 1936, left Yarrabah at the age of 16 to attend the Church Army College near Newcastle. Nearly 50 years later he returned as an Anglican bishop with an Australia-wide responsibility for Aboriginal Anglicans.' (Introduction)
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[Review Essay] White Christ Black Cross : The Emergence of a Black Church.
2008
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 2008; (p. 110-111)
— Review of White Christ Black Cross: The Emergence Of A Black Church 2007 single work non-fiction'On 13 October 1985 Arthur Malcolm was welcomed back to his north Queensland home community of Yarrabah. The previous day he had been consecrated in St James Cathedral in Townsville as the first Aboriginal bishop within the Anglican Church of Australia. Arthur Malcolm’s parents, both born around the larger Kowanyama region of Cape York, were brought to Yarrabah under the Queensland policy of family removals. Arthur, born in 1936, left Yarrabah at the age of 16 to attend the Church Army College near Newcastle. Nearly 50 years later he returned as an Anglican bishop with an Australia-wide responsibility for Aboriginal Anglicans.' (Introduction)
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cAustralia,c
- Kimberley area, North Western Australia, Western Australia,
- Yarrabah Mission (1893-1960), Ingham - Cairns area, Queensland,