Under the pergola built by All Saints’ Church, Princeton are HomeFront staff and community members who made the Healing and Memorial Garden possible: (l-r), Dana Irlbacher, Bay Weber, Liz Wasch, Marc Allen, Frederick Wasch, and the Rev. Hugh Brown.
HomeFront dedicated a new healing and memorial garden on July 30 at the Family Campus of the Family Preservation Center in Ewing. The garden will be a space for meditation and reflection that also commemorates the death of HomeFront family members.
“The garden is a natural extension of our Family Campus. Both are places to help families rebuild their spirits after dealing with the pain and trauma of homelessness,” said Sheila Addison, director of the Family Campus.
HomeFront s new Healing and Memorial Garden is a community collaboration
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“Many Aucklanders have never heard of Bean Rock, but it’s visible from almost any vantage point along the Waitematā Harbour,” museum director Vincent Lipanovich said. “It’s a fascinating landmark and maintains its original purpose of keeping vessels safe as they travel in and out of the harbour.” Māori called the rock on which the lighthouse stands “Te Toka a Kapetawa,” and legend tells us that a chief named Tara marooned his brother-in-law there. It was later named Bean Rock when the harbour was first officially surveyed in 1840 by Lt. P. Fisher of the HMS Herald, assisted by the master of the vessel, P. C. D. Bean.