Vatican’s first ever World Cycling Team hears stories of truth-telling and reconciliation

29 Sep 2022

By The Record

A group photo with the Vatican Cycling Team.
Vatican Cycling team with Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation, Archbishop Balvo, Bishop Long and Kirsty Robertson, Caritas Australia’s CEO. Photo Aurora Sice/Caritas Australia.

As part of their visit to Australia to compete in the 2022 UCI Road World Championships, the first ever Vatican World Cycling Team last weekend joined Caritas Australia to learn about truth-telling and reconciliation. 

Vatican Cyclist Rien Johan Schuurhuis, 40, last weekend competed in the World Cycling Championships in Wollongong.

In a statement from Athletica Vaticana, Mr Schuurhuis said he was cycling to bear witness to the values of fraternity and inclusion that are intrinsic to cycling and that convinced the official Vatican Sport Association to take part in the competition.

The participation of Mr Schuurhuis is a “first time” of historic relevance for the official Vatican Team, for cycling, for the entire sporting movement and for Australia itself.

Mr Schuurhuis is married to Chiara Porro, Australia’s Ambassador to the Holy See. They have two children.

Rien Schuurhuis, the cyclist who represented the Vatican at the UCI 2022 in Wollongong. Photo Aruroa Sice/Caritas Australia.

The Vatican team, along with Archbishop Charles Balvo, the Apostolic Nuncio to Australia, visited Caritas Australia’s office in Sydney to spend a morning with Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation, to learn about Australia’s history of kidnapping Aboriginal children from their families and communities. 

The guests learned about truth-telling and reconciliation in Australia directly from survivors of Kinchela Boys Home, Uncle Roger Jarrett (#12) and Uncle Richard Campbell (#28).

“The pain [of being kidnapped] is indescribable…being taken as a kid, you just lose everything, your love and your heart just goes. You’re put in that place where you’re just a number, and it’s very painful, it’s still painful today,” said Uncle Roger Jarrett.  

Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation (KBHAC) is a longstanding partner of Caritas Australia and was formed by the survivors of Kinchela Boys Home in Kempsey, New South Wales, who were forcibly removed from their families during the Stolen Generation.

Vatican Cycling team with Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation, Archbishop Balvo, Bishop Long and Kirsty Robertson, Caritas Australia’s CEO. Photo Aurora Sice/Caritas Australia.

It seeks to address the trauma of being forcibly removed from their families, as well as the multigenerational trauma that adversely impacts on the lives of their families and descendants.     

“It is integral to our commitment to reconciliation and truth-telling that we prioritise the voices of our partners and amplify the stories of those who have been most impacted,” said Kirsty Robertson, Caritas Australia’s CEO. 

“For us it was more important to have done this than to be standing on the podium on Sunday,” said Rien Schuurhuis, a Dutch-born professional cyclist who made his world debut representing the Vatican in Wollongong on 25 September.