Friday, 27 December 2013

First Christmas Celebration of St. Marys' School in 1886!

It was towards the end of December 1886. Rev. Father Fisher, Rector of St. Mary's School then known as St. Mary's College graced with his presence the first family Christmas celebration in St. Mary's. It has been recorded in the House diary as follows:

 "This evening our boys had a regular Christmas Tree. Father Schafer had made the whole arrangement. A regular tree had been erected in the orphanage refectory. It was most beautifully decorated with many sweets and toys and lights. The boys first got a splendid supper (tea, cakes, fruits, sweets without stint, etc.). Then a raffle was arranged, and all the nice things were impartially distributed as drawn by lot. Christmas hymns were sung. All the Fathers were present, and young and old, Fathers and boys, were highly pleased."

The Diarist further adds: "This should be done every year. The house supplied the cakes and most of the fruit, and should continue to do the same in the future."  

Saturday, 23 November 2013

Inaugural Function Road Diversion Details

Dear Friends,
 
MCGM has started the concretisation process of Nesbit Road to coincide with our 150th year celebrations.
Access to school from JJ Road --> Nesbit Road railway bridge is CLOSED.  
Nesbit Road has been made one way from Sales Tax office across the Railway Bridge till it joins JJ Road. 
 
Below are two alternative access routes to the school.  You can see them using either the Google Maps links or the attached files.
 
Route 1 - From next to JJ Hospital via St. Mary's Road or Sales Tax Office
              http://goo.gl/maps/vEs9c
 
Route 2 - From Byculla Police Station via Love Lane (lane next to Prince Aly Khan Hospital)
              http://goo.gl/maps/fRnuX
 
Please Note:
1.  Considering the road works and traffic, you are advised to allow for about 10-15 minutes extra in your travel time.
2.  There are no parking facilities on the school grounds.
3.  Where possible car pooling, use of drivers or public transport is advised.

- Posted by 
Alumni Database Co-ordinator
St. Mary's 150 Years Office

Friday, 1 November 2013

A Sunday afternoon with St. Mary's 150th Year Facebook Page's competition winners!





A short while ago a competition was held on Facebook to identify Mr.Giles Rebello in a couple of staff pictures from an old school magazine. Kenneth Mascarenhas & I were the lucky winners. By coincidence we were both from the same class-"The Class of 1968". The prize was a Sunday Brunch for 2 at Neel-Tote on the Turf restaurant. A suggestion was put forward by the social media cell that we should both go together with our wives & invite Mr.Giles Rebello to join us. It was an excellent suggestion which we both appreciated tremendously. Kenneth approached Mr. Rebello as they live close to each other & he readily agreed to join us.



The brunch on Sunday, 27th. October 2013 was an extremely enjoyable & memorable experience for both of us. I met Mr. Rebello for the first time after leaving school in 1968-an unbelievable 45 years! I recognized our popular English teacher immediately and you won't believe he looked very much the same after all these years!

Kenneth and I spent a lovely afternoon with Mr. Rebello, Kenneth's wife Lynette and my wife Roshan. We talked of old times & how mischievous some of our classmates were. He recollected many incidents like the times when he u
sed to allow us to listen to the cricket commentary in the last row in his class and being very fond of cricket himself, he had to be immediately informed every time a wicket fell! He also remembered the famous "kheema gutli" & "bun chop" which was always available in the school canteen. We also fondly remembered many of our old teachers who are now no more.



After a delicious brunch we left with the promise and hope of meeting up again with many more of our teachers and batchmates during the 150th year celebrations of our beloved ST.MARY'S SCHOOL (ICSE). Kenneth dropped Mr Rebello home and he told us that he would definitely try to come to St Mary's for at least one of the functions during this landmark year.



- Article by Behram Colah (Batch of 1968)
     Pictures courtesy Behram Colah & Kenneth Mascarenhas
     (Edited version of the article)


   

Thursday, 17 October 2013

The Day St. Mary's Beat Sachin Tendulkar!!

Click on the pic for a larger view
In 1987-88, a year before the 125th anniversary of our school, St. Mary’s junior cricket team won the Giles Shield beating the fancied Shardashram (English) with “the seemingly invincible Sachin Tendulkar” (quoting the St. Mary’s coach Mr. Ashar). He called it nothing short of a minor miracle.
Then to top that achievement, under his able coaching and mentoring, in the following year, on the momentous 125th anniversary of St. Mary’s School (ICSE), the senior team regained the coveted Harris Shield, after a gap of five years. We have reproduced below the article that the Coach, a former Ranji Trophy player, Kiran Ashar wrote in the school magazine of 1987-88 in congratulations to the junior team for them having the Giles Shield. Little did he know that his senior cricket team would repeat the mammoth accomplishment next year!

WELL DONE BOYS!
I hardly knew what I was letting myself in for, when I accepted the offer as cricket coach for St. Mary’s by my friend and colleague Mr. Milind Rege.
My first priority was to persuade the school authorities; to help us lay a proper turf wicket, which would be conducive to better results. This was readily agreed to by the PTA, who sanctioned a generous amount for which I am very grateful.
I started with the very difficult task of selecting the Junior and Senior sides for the Giles and Harris Shields respectively.
A special mention must be made of Mr. Munir Vahanvaty who very kindly offered the use of the Bohra Cricket Ground till the school wicket was ready. The friendly matches were played with the Bohra Cricket Club was a strong indicator of the talent of the boys.
Practice started in earnest once the school wicket was ready. Special emphasis was placed in the fielding techniques though equal importance was placed in the other departments, as most of the boys were ignorant of the rudiments of the game.
We won all the matches in the Harris Shield convincingly, till the semi-finals where we lost to Anjuman-I-Islam High School. Here I must mention, the team sorely missed the services of our skipper Joydeep Singapuri, Aftab Vahanvaty and Kavi Desai who were unable to play because of the I.C.S.E. exams.
The Giles Shield can be called the “Triumph of the Year”. We outplayed our very worthy rivals, and in the finals defeated the much fancied and feared Shardashram (English) by a wide margin.
The team’s success can be attributed to Venkat Kunnath – our consistent run-getter, Dinesh D’Souza who gave a brilliant all round performance, dimunitive Yuvbir and Mohan though small in stature, contributed greatly to the team success. Khurram Darbar bowled well throughout and struck in a big way when he took the prized wicket of the seemingly invincible Sachin Tendulkar. Sanjay Parekh was magnificent behind the wickets. Manish Shah batted superbly in the finals.
With every player playing to the best of his ability, the team pulled off, what everybody thought was a minor miracle.
My special thanks to the Principal, Rev. Fr. Berkie, the PTA, Sports Director Father Austin, Mr. Rana, Mr. Cedric and last but not the least Sitaram our grounds man without whose encouragement and help this would not have been possible.
“Only the test of fire makes fine steel”.
Boys, even though I seemed harsh at times, it was only for your benefit and out hard work has reaped rich rewards. I hope you’ll continue to do well and someday win laurels not only for your school, but also for your country.
From Sir With Love,
Kiran Ahsar
Cricket Coach

- Article from the St. Mary's School (ICSE)'s 1987-88 magazine.

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

Life from the eyes of a Marian from the Pre-independence Era!



Reverend Father Richard Lane-smith a pucca Anglo-Indian and all of 85, lives a retirees life in the quaint neighbourhood of Colaba. He is arguably the oldest Marian in the city of Mumbai. He studied at St. Mary’s School from 1934 to 1943 in the pre-independence era which he describes so beautifully through his words. He was in the school band and recalls the band being popular among the citizens of Bombay and they were often called for various public performances by the Government at their functions at Esplanade, Fort etc.

Father Lane-smith became a Jesuit Priest (from Jamshedpur Province) and has had an illustrious career as a teacher, Vice-principal and Principal of various Jesuit Schools all over India. He feels (I’m sure incorrectly, having met him) the Jesuit community views him with some trepidation as he always believed in calling a spade a spade, a principle he lives by till today.
But he is best known for having been the vice-principal of Campion School of Bombay for a couple of years. He recalls those times with a big smile, as he spent those years along with a principal who not only was an ex-principal of St. Mary’s School but also his classmate at St. Mary’s. That principal and a very dear childhood friend of Father Lane-smith is none other than our school’s first non-Jesuit Principal Mr. Kenneth Dyer.

Father Lane-smith has some very fond memories and some not so fond memories of his schooldays at St. Mary’s. He recalls one particular incident not so fondly but it taught him a lesson which helped him later in life as a teacher and Principal. In those days in the 1930’s the students used a quill type of ink pen where the ink flowed between two metal nibs. One of the nibs broke and Father Lane-smith was having visible trouble writing and keeping up with the teacher who was dictating. When the teacher noticed the same, instead of handing him another pen from her drawer, she pointed the same out to the whole class and Father Lane-smith was the laughing stock of the class for the next few minutes. Father Lane-smith never forgot the incident but it helped in treating children in a better fashion during his long and illustrious career as a teacher and Principal.

Another incident that he recalls is bit of a funny one. Father Hennessey was a very prim and proper priest with a pronounced English accent. When he was looking after the boarders he had this peculiar habit of lining up the boarders on the school grounds after they finished dinner. And then clear his throat and say a simple, “Go on” and the boys would promptly march off. One night, as soon as the boarders lined up, one of the boys cleared his throat and mimicking Father Henessey said, “Go on”. The other boys having thought Father Henessey said it, promptly marched off. This happened the next night as well and wanting to find the culprit red handed, Father Henessey let it continue for a few more days till he was absolutely sure which boy was mimicking him. On the next day, the boys around this particular boarder realised it was their classmate saying “Go on”, chuckled and Father Henessey immediately caught the culprit. He summoned him to the office. The boy was scared about the canning or any other punishment that he might receive. But when he went to the office, exact opposite happened. Father Henessey told the boarder that he was an excellent mimic but he must stop and boarder was let off without a punishment. Needless to say the boarder never mimicked him again. Again, a valuable lesson learnt for a future teacher.


But Father Lane-smith’s favourite anecdote is that of when he as vice-principal and Mr. Kenneth Dyer as the principal of Campion School went to visit on school business to Mr. Zaveri (Owner of TBZ) a St. Mary’s Alumni’s office at Zaveri Bazaar. Both Mr. Dyer and Father Lane-smith were greeted with dear respect and guided through all the jewellery to Mr. Zaveri’s office. Once seated and post initial chit chat, Mr. Dyer remarked, “My GOD, Mr. Zaveri, how does it feel to be surrounded by so much wealth”. To which Mr. Zaveri replied, “Sir, all this is merely what you said, WEALTH, what is here today could be gone tomorrow and would be back day-after, but the wealth of knowledge and teaching that you and my school has given me is priceless and shall stay with me forever!”. Father Lane-smith was astounded by this reply and recalls it very well and comments, “such a reply could only come from a Jesuit student”. I agree with Father Lane-smith, that Jesuit education truly provides the right morals, values and principles in a child to make them exemplary citizens of the world. 

- Article by the Social Media Cell

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

OLD AND HAPPY FAR OFF TIMES AND STUDENTS LONG AGO

St. Mary's School's dear retired teacher Mr. Giles Rebello then (left) and now (right) 

I am a retired teacher, five years already. Sometimes a longing fills me for the old times, and only a sharing of the memories of old and happy far off times will ease the ache in my heart.

My teaching years were exceptionally happy and quite rewarding. Though I confess I was ‘bullied’ into the teaching fraternity by the late Archbishop A. Dyer (KD), I eventually became the fool ‘who came to scoff but remained to pray’.

What I offer here is NOT ADVICE to young teachers just embarked on their careers but a potpourri of pleasant reminiscences. Yet, if advice were sought, I offer them this brief bit of counsel; ‘GIVE UP! Otherwise you will only end up being a pain in the neck to your students or a torture to yourself…….. or both, If you are in the service only for the ‘cakes and ale’ you are not doing justice ….. you are a fraud!!

My forty teaching years have been a mixture of the bitter and the sweet; but the blend was a welcome cocktail of the genial gin of sweet success and the angustra of the bitter anguish.

In this happy Odyssey I was ‘aided and abetted’ by a colleague Kenneth Dyer, whom everyone called Kenny and whom some called ‘The Beast’.

We both realized that the perennial feud between teacher and taught was always there, and to break it we would have to invade enemy territory by joining the students in their games, their fun and their frolic. Sometimes [I confess- ‘mea maxima culpa’] we even originated the ‘larks’. Some Pestalotzical Principals might anathemise me for my educational techniques; but I really wouldn’t bother; the forty years were an adventure that I would want to live again. The narrations here are not offered for evaluation but for a friendly sharing on a rain-holiday.

The class teachers were obliged to accompany their students for what is called ‘Visual Instruction’, which consisted of ‘educational’ films, already gone stale ‘ad nauseam’ through the years. So, to beguile the forty minutes in the auditorium, we organized two student camps. At intervals, at a given signal one camp would yell and howl and wail like Red Indians on y the war path. Then silence – so thick you could almost slice it¡ Another signal and the other camp took over. In afternoon the Principal, who was partial to cat-naps, stole unnoticed into the darkHall to take about twenty winks of his quota. He must have been in his fifteenth wink when he was startled by the banshee-howling; he must have thought he was a member of the Spanish Guard and he was asleep and the Alcazar was being stormed¡ having regained his composure he rose to his full height of four feet eight inches, caught the nearest unsuspecting howler, gave him ‘one-two’ and made him kneel down; then stalked out of the hall like a conquering Cortez; he said no word of the incident to K.D. or me. We pacified our consciences by offering Peter the victim an ice-cream. ‘Forget it, sirs.’ Peter gallantly responded; ‘the raps were worth the fun we’ve had’. Some hard boiled pedagogical pundits might turn up their noses at a teacher’s complicity in such boyish pranks, but we didn’t care, for we were still boys in heart and soul.

Teaching English Literature, which included among others, such authors as Shakespeare, Dickens, Tennyson and Chesterton gave KD and me good scope to keep our students mentally alert and attentive. But, as a playful aside we also engaged them in the art of repartee and debate whenever the texts offered occasion. This was a great gamed and the scores between us and our students were fairly even.

KD was tackling a Shakespeare comedy that year. He gave the students ten minute assignment, an as critical as you can make it pen picture of a FOOL of their own imagination. A few attempts were read out until a ‘gem of purest ray serene’ was discovered; an utterly vitriolic caricature of a fool! KD duly praised the student for his imagination but gave this admonition, ‘the next time you meet your fool you must apologize to him.’ ‘Yes sir,’ said Mansur and sat down. A few seconds later Mansur got up with a precise, ‘I am very sorry, Sir’ KD took the hint. He straightened up; he stalked towards Mansur, he stretched out his hand. Perfect silence in class!! ‘I accept this apology Mansur, and….. Congratulations! I wish I could have originated a remark like yours!". A teacher of weaker caliber might have slapped the student for his insolence and killed his genius in one fell stroke; today Mansur is a Professor at the Oxford University. We realized that some students may be as clever as, if no cleverer than, we; and, if we didn’t give them that credit for their wit and wisdom, we would not be doing them justice. I believe that one was to win a student over is to let him score over you, unlike some of my tribe who are like Shakespeare’s ‘I am Sir Oracle, and when I open my lips let no dog bark’. If I sometimes confiscated a toy or a comic-book I heard hushed whispers loud enough and meant for me, ’second childhood’, ‘for his grandchildren’, ‘hang them on his Christmas tree’ or ‘you will never grow old’ [hummed in Nat King Cole’s style]. Even as I write this I smile and relish the memory that my students were alert, attentive and quick….and they could trust me.

On the other hand i gave them as much as i got. I was assessing the examinations answer papers. In one of them, scrawled on the last page in block capitals was “Please pass me sir GOD bless you”. On assessment the student had secured 54%. When the student got his answer script back he was enraged at being cheated of fourteen marks. I said in defense: “You requested me to pass you and granted your request”. Of course, I finally gave the student proper credit…. but i enjoyed giving him a fright.

This time I was at the receiving end. I sent a student to a nearby store requesting him to buy me half a packet of Charminar cigarettes. He was a long time coming but when he did and handed me the cigarettes I understood the reason for his delay. He had neatly cut up the packet and made an exact half-packet in which he had arranged ten half cigarettes! When I complained about his having wasted some of the smoking value of the cigarettes he replied, “If you had said five cigarettes” it would have been a different matter, Sir”. How right he was and i knew i was beaten.

KD once got it back in a similar fashion. HShakespeare Paper had this rubric at it’s hear: Answer Questions I & II and any three other questions. One daring student answered the two compulsory questions; then he went to write three other questions of his own and answered there. KD, always meticulous about details, (including courtesy and justice to students) knew he had blundered: the rubric should have read: Answer Questions I & II and any three of the remaining questions. The student was given credit for his full answer paper! With such magnanimity KD found it easy to win over his students.

The students often showed ingenuity and were rewarded even in smaller matters. The question “How may knocks on the knuckles?” was once answered pat ‘None, Sir.” And the boy was spared; or KD’s question ;’On which day will you come for your lunch-recess detention:” got this reply, ‘On Christmas Day, Sir,’ and with a big smile and a smacking of the students’ lips.Our Shakespeare classes gave us the best opportunities for our brand of teaching and of fun. If a skeptic should wonder if our students learned anything at all we refer him to the Rseults Sheets c/o The University of Cambridge. The following might satisfy our skeptic.

One year the Shakespeare text was ‘Julius Caesar’. On the 15th March (the Ides, when Caesar was murdered) I thought I’d remind mu students of the historic anniversary. But I had under-rated my boys. As I entered the class I was stormed with a shower of paper darts, pellets and daggers; a host of deadly looking masked ‘conspirators’ shouted: ‘Down with Rebello! Tyranny is dead@ Proclaim it in the market-place! Fire! Burn! Kill!”. The blackboard was covered with gruesome murderous slogans all threatening death to me and proclaiming freedom to all and sundry….even from Simon of the School canteen!

But the Blue Riband for the Shakespeare series must be handed over to Isaac, who, through classroom lectures and the Elocution Competitions, had been exposed to plenty of the Startford Bard’s plays. We had been contemplating a little dramatization for that week but Isaac forestalled us. He came to class, late as usual. At the door he declaimed pompously, ‘All the world’s a stage and all the men and women merely players. They have their exits and their entrances’. (Enter Isaac). Then Isaac paraphrased. ‘Dost thou not know Sir Toby, my dear Andrew? (Isaac brandishes a sticky hand in Teacher’s direction. Teacher stunned) Waddling drunkenly into the class Isaac flipped an ice-cream into the air and caught it deftly ‘A catch! A catch! (deep bite on the ice-cream). Then he parodied, ‘If ice-cream be the food of fun, eat on. (One more bite) Let me have more of it, (another bite). The Isaac glared at the students: ‘Isee you stand like greyhounds in the slips, straining on the start’. (Last bite. Smug smile on Isaac’s face). The ‘clown’ would have gone on and on with scenes of more Shakespeare’s plays ifthe school peon had not interrupted his excellent impromptu performance. Like a Macbeth, Isaac turned on the peon with: ‘Avaunt and quit my sight. Let the earth hide thee. Thy bones are marrowless….’ The peon took fright and fled, possibly thinking that the whole bunch, Teacher included,was loco!

I would have gone on and on like Isaac, but for our Editor. And for your patient sharing so far, I am much beholden to you!

- Article by Mr. Giles Rebello 
  Retired Teacher of St. Mary’s School (ICSE)
  Reproduced from the School's Annual Magazine of 1989 


Tuesday, 3 September 2013

1967: ZUBIN MEHTA - THE MAESTRO AT HIS ALMA MATER

Zubin Mehta taking a stroll down memory lane with Rev. Rector of St. Mary's
 It was November 4, 1967 and it was a proud day for St. Mary's High School. ZUBIN MEHTA, the Toscanini of younger generation of conductors like Pierino Gamba and Lorin Maazel, visited his old school in the school uniform at that. Each was very proud of the other. After an intimate exchange of noble sentiments Zubin left the school and on that very evening gave the last of his three momentous concerts in Bombay. 

If the Koyna quake shook Bombay to its roots on December 11, the three concerts by Zubin Mehta in the proceeding month did very much the same thing. Its great son conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, had given Bombay its most thrilling cultural experience. Bombay was galvanised and to a man and the audience rose to give Zubin a staggering ovation.


Zubin Mehta greeting Rev. Rector of St. Mary's School
Zubin was born in Bombay on April 29, 1936 in a house where music flowed like wine and conversation was the gossip of the gods. His father Mehli, whose talent Zubin inherited, was a very great violinist literally up to his chin in music. His mother played the piano. To Zubin music naturally became not just a passion or a study but a way of life.

In October 1954, Zubin left Bombay, studied for 3 years in the Vienna Academy of Music, won the First Prize for the Conductors Competition in England and commuted as permanent Conductor of the Montreal Symphony and the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He soon won international acclaim conducting, among other things, Verdi's "Aida" at the Met & Puccini's "Tosca" in Florence. 

In Bombay he played symphonies by Tchaikovsky, Dvorak and Mahler and tone poems by Richard Strauss with such vigour and lyricism that it completely entranced the audience (which included the author of this article). The Liszt Piano Concerto with Andre Watts, a great American pianist, gave the author gooseflesh. He thought of the delicate tracery of a tree against a summer sky as Zubin picked out intimate details of winds, brass and string in Mahler's Symphony.

Only 31 years old, and Zubin has brought glory to his country in a field where competition is so stiff that only a rare talent can survive. Not only has he survived but is on the peak. Small wonder then that we take so much pride in his glory and joy in success.

- Excerpt from an article from the 1967 Magazine of St. Mary's School ICSE.

Note: Detailed biography of the Maestro: Zubin Mehta - Official Biography