Homecoming: Citation (2004)

August 1, 2014 by Brenton Stacey

Adele Nash

Recommendations from family and friends based on enjoyable experiences drew Adele Nash to Avondale College. And the timing of the introduction of the Bachelor of Arts degree in communication just a few years before her Year 12 graduation from Nuriootpa High School in South Australia: “perfect.”

Adele Nash

Adele Nash: the 2014 Homecoming honour year honouree for 2004.

Adele began creating and sharing news about the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the message of hope after graduation, becoming editorial assistant at Signs Publishing Company. She edited The Edge young adult magazine in addition to her responsibilities with the church in the South Pacific’s newsmagazine Record. Adele continues in a publishing role at the church’s North New South Wales Conference, to which she moved in 2010. She began as communication and marketing assistant and is now communications coordinator.

Sharing good news about local churches and the members of those churches is one of Adele’s passions and a blessing in her life. “It’s important for people to see that Adventists are doing some amazing things, and it often helps inspire others to make positive contributions to the world around them,” she says.

Adele has won two Australasian Religious Press Association Awards—a silver in the “Best Article Applying Faith to Life” category in 2010 for a feature about the Bird familyone family’s Black Saturday bushfire experience and a highly commended in the “Best News Item” category in 2009 for a report entitled “Leaders support targeting binge drinking.”

The interview for the “From the ashes” feature was “one of the most interesting—and challenging—experiences I’ve had,” says Adele. The family were dealing with the loss of their home and the loss of their neighbours, who had died in the fire. “They had such an amazing, strong and unshaken faith in God. Their focus on looking for hope and being sure they would find it impressed me.”

The class of 2004 honours Adele Nash for the quality of her reporting of Seventh-day Adventist news, particularly for how it inspires others in their faith.—Bianca Reynaud, public relations assistant, Avondale College of Higher Education

Teen dreams

May 15, 2014 by Brenton Stacey

Alumni publish young adult novels

Brenton Stacey
Public relations officer
Avondale College of Higher Education
Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia

Publications by two Avondale alumni are not only providing stock for the young adult section of bookstores and libraries but also promoting creativity and literacy.

Danielle Weiler and Trudy Adams

Writers and graduation classmates Danielle Weiler and Trudy Adams.

Trudy Adams and Danielle Weiler, both graduates of 2007—Danielle served as president of the class—have published six novels between them.

Trudy promoted creativity and literacy to young adults in Kurri Kurri at the launch of her third novel, Broken Melody (Even Before Publishing), this past year. She presented awards donated by local businesses and organisations for a writing competition she held in conjunction with the high school. Broken Melody tells of a girl torn between a dysfunctional past and a promising future. It explores “the battle in a person’s mind when they have been consistently told they are worthless,” but it also shows “that with help and time, that battle can be won.”

Trudy published her first novel, Desolate Beauty (Ark House Press), in 2009. Her second, Judging Meghan (Even Before Publishing), followed in 2010.

When she is not writing, Trudy works as the coordinator of the Kurri Youth Centre and blogs—hers covers a range of issues affecting young adults, including bullying, self-esteem and stress.

Danielle has published each of her novels—Friendship on Fire (2011), Reckless (2013) and Assembly of Shapes, released this year. She writes to encourage readers “to have hope in whatever situation they find themselves.” Some readers, she says, find the themes tough, “but that’s life.” Her hope is readers “focus on what they can do to help these young adults.” Danielle is currently writing a Christian young adult novel. Her aim: to make it “authentic and modern without being preachy.”

Trudy and Danielle’s novels are available through Amazon.com.

Toilets come up trumps

April 2, 2014 by Sara Bolst

Winner of alumni-sponsored prize brings health to Amazon villages

Dr John Cox
Editor, Reflections
Avondale College of Higher Education
Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia

 One Mission Brazil 2014 edit

An honouree of the Avondale Alumni Association has led another team of students on a One Mission project — this time to build toilets in northern Brazil.

Odailson (Dada) Fialho, who received the Alumni Association’s Community Service Prize this past year, led the team on a seven-week trip around South America, helping to provide improved water and sanitation to remote villages. The team worked with the Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), the humanitarian organisation which has been offered financial support by the mayors of two districts in Brazil.

The ADRA project has improved health and sanitation in some of Brazil’s most remote villages, where water-borne diseases are a major cause of illness and death. Teams from the Avondale College of Higher Education student club One Mission have worked with ADRA over the past three years to build 49 toilets, a classroom and a health clinic. Villages in surrounding districts have appealed to ADRA to do the same for them.

The 27 students on this year’s team raised $35,000 for building supplies, as well as $5000 each for airfares and other expenses. Preceding their work on the health and sanitation project, the students visited Brazil, Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay, Chile and Peru. From Peru, they travelled for several days down almost the full length of the Amazon River, first in a small boat, then in a larger boat they shared with 500 passengers, sleeping each night in hammocks on the open decks. At a port on the lower Amazon, they met ADRA staff members, then boarded a mission boat for a seven-hour trip back up the river to the area where they were to work for the next three weeks.

Mission trips such as these have real challenges. The Amazon is infested with alligators and piranha. There are dangers from snakes, ants and malaria-bearing mosquitoes. There are the challenges of living in primitive conditions, coping with an unfamiliar diet and managing tiredness. And there are dangers from the tools the group uses, such as chainsaws and machetes. But no student has suffered a serious illness or injury during any One Mission trips.

Team leader Dada describes the trips as bringing positive changes to the lives of many of the students. “The trips also motivate significant numbers of students for future leadership roles,” he says. Three students from the Brazil team have already volunteered to lead future mission trips.

Dada, a Brazilian, came to Avondale to learn English, but stayed on to complete a degree in theology and ministry. “I am grateful to Avondale for the opportunities it has given for mission service, especially to my home country,” he says. Being involved in One Mission “is one of the best things that has ever happened to me.”

“I want to thank everyone who has prayed for us. And I want to thank Avondale for encouraging and supporting One Mission.”

I found God at Avondale

February 14, 2012 by Advancement PR

Josh Brown graduated from Avondale in 2007 with a Bachelor of Arts/Bachelor of Teaching degree. He teaches English and History at Macquarie College, Newcastle, NSW, and is currently studying for a master’s degree via Deakin University.

I grew up in a nominally Christian home with a very limited church experience. When I finished high school Avondale offered me a one-year scholarship which I accepted, intending to transfer to university after that year. But in my first year at Avondale God came into my life in a real and tangible way. I found myself journeying with other Christians, many of them also encountering the power of God for the first time.

Josh Brown in his office at Macquarie College. Photo: Brad Cox

It was the power of the Word that really changed my life. I began reading the Bible in a new way. Like putting on 3D glasses, God’s Spirit brought the Word to life in a way I had never imagined. Paul’s words echoed in my ears: “I am crucified with Christ.” I was so empowered by the thought that it was no longer I who lived, but “Christ who lives in me.”

As I experienced this new freedom in Christ, what had been a dead manuscript became a living, breathing love letter that changed my life. A light bulb had come on in my life and one year at Avondale became four. I took the step of baptism to publicly display my new commitment to Jesus. I learned what it was like to be part of a church family and graduated with memories that will last me a lifetime.

 

Released from hell

February 14, 2012 by Advancement PR

This is the remarkable story of a person at Avondale who grew up in one of the many countries of the world racked by violence and terror. Identities are withheld.

I was born into a well-to-do family, but never ever knew love or affection from my parents. They said I was ugly, that the hospital must have given them the wrong baby, and that I was not one of theirs. They disowned me and treated me as a house servant. I was excluded from the family photos, beaten, and when the rest of the family went for outings, I would be left at home and told to clean up the mess. I became bitter, confused and angry. In my darkest times I would retreat to my room where I found consolation by absorbing myself in my favourite school subject. This was my way out of anger. I also had a vague awareness that there was a God who loved and cared for me, and I believe this saved me from turning to violence like many other youth in my country. I often cried out to God in my desperation.

When I was fourteen my father said I didn’t belong in the family and expelled me from home. For two weeks I slept on the streets at night while attending school by day. When a school friend discovered I had nowhere to live, he arranged with his parents for me to stay in their home in the country. I lived there for the next four years until I finished high school. We belonged to an ethnic minority that was often harassed by the military, so we rode our bikes to school by devious byways to avoid the army patrolling the main routes. Soldiers killed my friend a couple of years later, after which his family treated me as their son.

One day during my first year at university I was riding my bike along a country road when a military helicopter flew overhead and started firing in my direction. I leapt from my bike and took refuge behind a tree, but the helicopter began to circle the tree firing at me. The soldiers evidently enjoyed using me as target practice, because they kept circling and firing at me for over an hour. I could hear the bullets thudding against the tree and ripping through the foliage as I dodged in terror around the trunk, praying “God save me!” Finally they flew off, leaving me shaking and traumatised.

Soldiers beat me up several times while I was at university. Once a group of soldiers mistook me for a terrorist, took my ID (which they later returned), and attacked me with their batons and rifle butts.

One day I was standing with my best friend at the university gates when an army truck stopped and a soldier jumped out and accused us of being anti-government partisans. We showed our ID, explaining that we were law abiding university students. The soldier responded by shooting my friend dead on the spot. The soldier then thrust his pistol into my mouth and started questioning me. I was speechless with fear. Just as I thought my last moment had come, the soldier unaccountably took the gun out of my mouth and returned to his truck, which drove off. I firmly believe God saved me from these situations for a purpose – though at times the memory of these experiences still gives me trauma.

I graduated with first class honours and was appointed to a teaching position at the university. But the violence everywhere and the continuing danger to my life were such that I longed for a more stable environment. I prayed earnestly and applied to several countries for a scholarship to enable me to study in safety; and I was blessed with a scholarship offer from a very desirable country.

I now faced a dangerous journey to a city with an international airport. I travelled secretly, by devious routes, my modes of transport including a bicycle, a farm tractor, a bus and a boat. An unexpected delay saved me from travelling part of the way on transport that was shot up by the military.

To get a visa for my new country I had to obtain police clearance in my home country. For this I was subjected to a three-hour police cross-examination while two other police kept hitting me from behind. The interviewing officer refused to give me clearance without a bribe equivalent to a year’s wages. I didn’t have that much money. In the end I was able to find someone who knew a person who had a contact who knew a very senior officer who was able to give me a reference enabling me to obtain police clearance and a visa.

At last I was on my way to the airport. As I walked with the other passengers across the tarmac to board the aircraft a security officer recognised me as a member of an ethnic minority, pulled me from the line and demanded a very large sum of money, almost all I had, as a condition for boarding the plane. I handed over the money and was waved on, with only a few coins left and a small amount of foreign currency to start life in a new country. I cannot describe the relief and gratitude I felt as the plane took off.

I completed a postgraduate degree in my new country and took a job as a high school teacher. I was so grateful to God for looking after me and bringing me to a safe country where I could live in peace and relative comfort. How different from my student days in my home country, where my only clothes for the whole time I was studying at university were two shirts and two pairs of trousers, and my bed was a bare plank.

My gratitude to God was such that I now felt a desire to go to church. One day as I was driving I passed a small church and felt impressed to stop. The sign advertised services on Saturday, which surprised me. That weekend I returned for the 11 am service.

The deacon welcomed me warmly and came to sit with me in church. He explained that the church was celebrating the Lord’s supper that day and invited me to observe the footwashing service. He then asked if I would like him to wash my feet, as Jesus washed his disciples’ feet. Here was I, who had been disowned by my family and threatened as a member of a despised ethnic group, being accepted by a total stranger who was kneeling to wash my feet. It brought tears to my eyes. The other church members also received me warmly, and I continued to attend. Not long after this I migrated to Australia, where I had Bible studies and was baptised.

Today I rejoice that I have experienced such a loving, generous God, who says, “When they call to me, I will answer them; I will be with them in trouble” (Psalm 91:15 NRSV). “Do not worry about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:6, 7 NRSV). My favourite text is Philippians 4:13: “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me” (NKJV).