In the middle of
the Bougainville crisis in 1997, in an effort to establish
some signs of good order and civil society on Bougainville,
AusAID accepted a submission to build a secondary college
on the northern tip of the main island at Tarlena.
Mrs Bernadette
Ropa, a local woman, was the main instigator of this project
and she called upon the Marist Brothers to assist her. School
was established in an old primary school building, with the
boys living in a diocesan centre at Tsiroge about three kilometres
away.
Brother Ken McDonald
established the boys’ dormitories and Mrs Ropa looked
after the girls’ at Tarlena. Later, AusAID agreed to
purpose-build a new school on the site of the bush classrooms
that originally made up the primary school. Thus was established
a secondary college of about 500 students catering for students
from years 9 to 12
Because the school
is relatively new, many of the initial establishment projects
have been completed. The school, however, still needs to develop
agriculture and self-reliance projects so that students who
may not be successful in obtaining one of the limited tertiary
education opportunities on offer in the country can have a
productive life back in the villages.
Marists have been
a part of the school since its completion. A community of
Bougainvillean Brothers take a special pastoral interest in
the students and assist in the running of it.
Tarlena is the
closest Marist-associated school to the main town centre on
Bougainville, Buka. It is, however, separated by Buka Passage,
and is serviced only by a very poor road. This means that
Tarlena would have the least effective means of communication
of all Marist projects in the District of Melanesia. The aim
is to improve this situation by facilitating radio communication
and email.
It is ironic that
Tarlena was the site of the first establishment of Marist
ministry on the island of Bougainville. Brother Ken Eaton,
who now lives in Ashgrove, can remember going there immediately
after World War 2, and establishing a teachers’ college
for local people to aid in the development of education on
the island of Bougainville