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Winifred
Kiek 1884 - 1975 Congregational minister
Winifred
Kiek (1884-1975), Congregational Church minister, was born in Manchester,
England, daughter of Margaret (born Harker) and Robert Jackson,
who were Quakers. She won a scholarship to Manchester Pupil Teacher
Training Centre at 16, matriculated in 1904, graduated BA from the
Victoria University of Manchester in 1907 and then worked as a teacher.
In 1911 she married Edward Sidney Kiek, Congregational minister
at Newcastle-under-Lyme. She severed her connection with the Society
of Friends and became a Congregationalist. She had three children:
Sidney Noel (1912), Margaret Lucy (1914) and Laurence Edward (1918).
In 1920 Edward Kiek was appointed principal of the Congregational
seminary, Parkin Theological College, Adelaide, and the family moved
permanently to Australia. From that time, Winifred Kiek's career
flourished. Her academic, ecclesiastical and creative achievements,
as well as her leadership of many local, national and international
women's organisations, are a testimony to her remarkable ability,
energy and spirit. They are also testimony to material and personal
circumstances which combined to give her opportunities that were
not available to many women: she had domestic help for most of her
life and she had a husband who expected her to be his intellectual,
spiritual and emotional companion. However, she did not shirk traditional
female roles and from time to time acted as housekeeper to the students
of Parkin College. She took seriously the task of parenting and
published her ideas in Child Nature and Child Nurture (1927).
In 1923 Kiek became the first woman to graduate BD from Melbourne
College of Divinity. In 1929 she was awarded an MA by the University
of Adelaide and in 1930 lectured part-time at Parkin College. In
1927 she was ordained as a minister of the Congregational Church,
thus becoming the first woman to be ordained to the ministry of
any church in Australia. She believed that exclusion of women from
the ministry was 'unfair to them, unfair to the churches, and may
even be a sin against the Holy Spirit' and had published these views
as early as 1921. She ministered at Colonel Light Gardens from 1926
until 1933, at Knoxville from 1938 to 1946 and preached somewhere
on most Sundays for the rest of her life. Several of her sermons
were published in the Christian World Pulpit. She held executive
positions in the Congregational Women's Fellowship of Australia,
and the Congregational Union in South Australia honoured her by
twice electing her as its vice-chairman.
Kiek joined the National Council of Women, the Women's Non-Party
Association and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union in 1920 and
remained active in these organisations most of her life. In all
of them she assumed leadership roles, convening committees, leading
deputations, lobbying, researching, writing and attending conferences.
Her chief areas of work and interest included legal rights of women,
especially in relation to marriage and divorce, moral education,
the welfare of children, the operation of the Children's Court,
with which she was involved as a probation officer from 1926 to
1946, increased parliamentary representation for women, the abolition
of the 'white Australia policy' and, above all, peace. She was a
life-long crusader for peace and championed internationalism, supranational
law, collective security and the internationalisation of colonies
and munitions factories. She was a key figure in the Peace Week
organised by the International Peace Campaign in Adelaide in 1938,
and prepared papers for the Campaign's Women's Peace Conference
in 1939. Her contribution was acclaimed by peace workers, including
those who did not share her Christian convictions.
Kiek's work for the Australian Council of Churches and the World
Council of Churches in the 1950s on the role and status of women
in the church was commemorated by the establishment, in 1965, of
the Winifred Kiek Scholarship which provides specialised training
for Christian women from Asia and the Pacific.
Kiek was a delegate to international conferences of the International
Alliance of Women in 1949, 1955 and 1960, of the World Council of
Churches in 1952, of the Pan-Pacific and South East Asia Women's
Association in 1952 and the Asian Church Women's Conference in 1966.
She died in 1975 aged 90.
Judith Raftery
Margaret Knauerhase Winifred 1978.
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