Skip to main content

Ba: It Was Hard To Say Goodbye After 70 Years

Fr John McEvoy reports on the three farewell ceremonies held in Ba parish for the Columban missionaries as they leave Christ the King after 70 years of service.

At the end of 1952 and the beginning of 1953 – 70 years ago – the Columbans took over the spiritual administration of Ba Parish. Our relationship with the people of this huge parish was forged through hard times and good times, through trials and cooperation, through struggles and togetherness over the years.

However, on Saturday 25th February 2023 we severed these bonds and ties with Christ the King Parish, Ba and with the people so many of us Columbans walked and worked with over the past seventy years.


Farewell to Ba

Columban priests working in Fiji, together with our students and lay missionaries, made their way to Ba for this farewell. Fr Peter O’Neill, Columban Regional Director of Oceania, travelled from Australia. Most of the diocesan priests from the Western Division of the Archdiocese and many parishioners from the surrounding parishes and even from Suva graced the occasion with their presence.

Parishioners gathered at the parish centre from every village and community of the parish – the ten large villages in the highlands, the six villages on the coastlands and the six communities that make up the town area of the parish.

First and foremost, all packed into the church of Christ the King for a thanksgiving con-celebrated Mass at which the main celebrant was Fr Peter O’Neill, while the homily was given by Fr Felisiano Fatu, Fiji Councillor, and Vice Director of Oceania.

The people of the parish felt the need to say their goodbye to the Columbans in a way that they knew best – by offering us a most solemn and elaborate Fijian Traditional Ceremony.

This ceremony entailed the offering of many whales’ teeth (Tabua), the yagona plant, the offering of mats and the offering of a pig and root crops for the feast (magiti).

Into this mix the parishioners offered another whale’s tooth seeking forgiveness from the Columban for any neglect or wrongdoing by them over the years. This is called in Fijian matanigasau.  Fr Pat Colgan on behalf of the Columbans accepted their Tabua of forgiveness speaking in their own Ba dialect.

The Columbans then reciprocated offering their matanigasau to the people seeking their forgiveness for our mistakes and the hurts we may have caused the people of the parish.

Every aspect of the occasion was done with perfection costing time and sacrifice and expense on the part of the people and on the part of the parish itself. A special Columban Gate was erected to the entrance of St Teresa’s School, so we would be remembered in Ba Parish, and a commemorative plaque was unveiled on the church wall.

The liturgy, singing, readings were flawless. Perfection was the hallmark of the day under the direction of Fr Pat Colgan, the last Columban Parish Priest of Ba, who on the previous Tuesday saw Fr Pio Matotolu, a priest of the Archdiocese installed as the new parish priest of Christ the King Parish in Ba.

After the formal ceremonies were complete, representatives from other ethnic communities; the Indo-Fijian and the Rotuman communities, and others from the town and villages personally expressed their thanks and memories of the Columbans who worked among them. All this indicating the multi-ethnic and racial mix of the parish.

Then the entertainment stated with dance and song provided by the youth of the parish. A life band from a nearby town was a real hit and had the people dancing almost nonstop until way after dark. Before lunch the Columbans present were obliged to cut the ‘Thank You and Farewell’ cakes.

Between 500-600 people were fed effortlessly by the women’s groups of the parish.

On the previous night the Board of Governors of Xavier College, invited the Columban priests to a relaxing and sumptuous meal, in the auditorium of the college. Again, this was in recognition that the Columbans founded Xavier College back in 1953 and staffed the college until 1987 when they handed over the management to the Montfort Brothers of St Gabriel.

The college is now governed by a Board of Governors/Trustees from the Parish for the Archdiocese of Suva.

As dark descended parishioners from the villages reluctantly boarded their buses for home, bringing with them their empty pots and food baskets but well satisfied with the celebrations of a long day.

Now that the dust has settled, and that we are all back home at our respective ministries I can reflect again what this farewell has meant to everyone present. The fact that the people put on such a farewell for us showed how much they appreciated the contributions and sacrifices the Columbans have made in the parish and in other parishes in the West of Fiji over the years.

They really put their hearts and souls into these ceremonies, I have rarely seen these ceremonies done with such solemnity and dignity. Such full Fijian ceremonies are rarely seen nowadays except for the most special of occasions.


The last Columban parish priest of Ba, Fr Pat Colgan takes the bilo.

We will miss Ba Parish, but we can be proud of our legacy left there in the fields of education, evangelisation, Interfaith dialogue, championing justice and peace issues, promoting Inter- Religious and Inter-Racial Harmony, and always concerned for the plight of the poor.

Yes, indeed it was hard to say goodbye after 70 years.