Friday, May 27, 2022

June Temme- A Missionary Life


Aboriginal women carrying water buckets on their heads.

June shares her story with us.
I am an Australian. 
I was raised on my parents sheep farm
 in Victoria, Australia. 
In 1955 I married Rev. Dr. Hubert Temme
 who had just graduated from Concordia Seminary
 in Adelaide, South Australia.
We were to be the first Missionaries 
at a new Aboriginal mission called 
Yalata in the desert of South Australia.  
The Government had given the Lutheran Church 
one and a half million acres and 30,000 sheep
 for the 500 primitive natives to roam 
as they were nomads.
When we arrived we lived with the station manager
 and his wife until they built us 
a small house on the mission compound.  
There was a nurse for the natives 
and an assistant for my husband. 
We had never seen an aboriginal before 
and now they were our parishioners.

As there was no electricity and no phone,
 I felt like a pioneer woman in the 1800's. 
But, it was the 1950's. 
I learned to cook on a wood stove 
and use kerosene lamps in the evenings. 
Keeping fresh fruit and vegetables was almost
 impossible because of the extreme heat. 
Sometimes as high as 120 degrees.
I went with my husband 20 to 30 miles 
through the scrub from the mission 
where he conducted devotions to the Aborigines.  
We hung a screen on a tree and ran a projector 
from the car battery to show them
 Bible stories which they loved.
After the stories I handed out Government rations
 to each family consisting of flour and sugar
 to make damper (bread) in the hot ashes on the ground. 
They also loved the potatoes, onions and tea. 
I distributed clothing to them on a regular basis. 
The Lutheran Women of Australia sent them to us,
 and I sorted and stored them until needed.
Dressed for a Corroboree (Native Dance)

The mission was a mile from the 
Eyres highway (a dirt road in our day) 
which ran from Adelaide, South Australia
 to Perth, Western Australia-
 approximately 1,700 miles. 
We were quite isolated as our nearest neighbor
 on one side was the Station Manager and his wife.
 The doctor 130 miles away was a 
Lutheran Minister's daughter 
and was part of the Flying Dr. service
 to serve the outlining stations 
and attend to the sick locally.  
In an emergency,
 the pilot flew her to the mission.
My first child, a daughter, 
was born in a bush hospital 80 miles 
from the mission where two mid wife sisters
 ran the hospital by themselves. 
Dr. Merna Mueller flew there for the birth. 
It was quite an experience.

Mission life was quite a challenge, 
but prepared me for future parishes
 in three continents. 

 

June (Noske) Temme was born in Tarrington, Victoria, Australia

 just a few years before the start of World War II.

 “Led by God, the Blessed Journey of a Minister’s Wife,” 

is the account of her extraordinary life growing up on a farm in wartime

 and later traveling and working with her late husband, Hubert Temme.

Their work began as missionaries to the Australian Aborigines

 in the desert of South Australia. 

From there, they continued their work, not only in Australia but in America,

 Hong Kong, China, the Bahamas, Grand Cayman 

and places all around the globe before 

finally settling down in Florida for their golden years.

June, now a widow,
 lives in Ashburn, Virginia.
We thank her for sharing such an
interesting time in her ministry. 
Her book- Led By God is available on Amazon.








 

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