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The founder
Father Lawrence Rodrigues S.J. (1895-1990)
Father Lawrence Rodrigues was born on August 10th,
1895. He was a goan priest of the diocese of Damaun who joined the Society
of Jesus for Calcutta. His great years were at Boitakhana, where he ran
the Little Flower Press, and the St Ann's School and Orphanage. He was
a man of vision. He had a great capacity to raise funds and he knew how
to use them profitably. His purchase of the land of St Lawrence High School
was an example of his far sightedness. It was a part of his vision of building
up a strong local church. So too was Dhyan Ashram - a place for spiritual
retreats - and his efforts to buy land for Morning Star College, where
candidates to the priesthood could be trained. After Boitakhana, he worked
for many years in the villages of the 24 Parganas, in the South of Bengal.
He spent many years in retirement in St Xavier's College, Calcutta, and
died at the age of 94 on March 27th, 1990.
The origins of St Lawrence High School.
(Quoted from an interview of the founder by Mr
S.V. Raman.) I was in charge of St John Chrysostom High School,
at 146 Bow Bazaar Street. It was both a boarding and a day school. This
was in the 1930s. But the place was congested. There was no playground.
The ground floor of the school building was occupied by a printing press,
on the first floor were the classrooms, the third floor was for the boarders.
The only thing that could be done was to build another school. I came to
know that St Xavier's College was selling a plot of land at Ballygunge.
I approached the Rector, Father Roeland, who offered the plot for two lakhs.
I went to Martin & Co. Martin himself was still there and took an active
interest. His engineers prepared the plans. They said it would cost two
lakhs. I said all right. Archbishop Perrier came to bless the school in
January 1937. Fr Arimont was named Director of the school. That's how it
began.
As a priest in my early thirties in Mapusa, Goa,
I had a great desire of becoming a Jesuit. One day enjoying a walk with
a friend of mine, I heard him saying : "What will you do when you become
a Jesuit ?" Just then we were facing the fortress hill of Aguada near Panjim.
On top of that hill was a chapel in honour of St Lawrence the Martyr. The
feast of St Lawrence on 10th August was celebrated solemnly with the firing
of 21 guns and a procession to the bar formed by the monsoon sands across
the river. Without a second thought I said, "If it does happen that I become
a Jesuit, I will build a very big school in honour of St Lawrence."
I collected money through lotteries which were
organized every Sunday at Boitakhana. There was a committee in charge.
Lots of people used to come. Tickets were sold at 25 Paise or one Rupee.
The first prize fetched sometimes up to Rs 3000. That was a lot of money
those days. That's what made the lottery so attractive. It was easier then
than now because there were no taxes attached to such activities. This
is how I collected all the money required for the purchase of the land,
the building and the furnishing of the school. Of course, the Little Flower
Press also came to the rescue with its earnings.
Most of the residents of the boarding came from
Dhaka, Padrishibpur, Chittagong and other places of the present Bangladesh.
Increasingly also a good number came from various areas of the 24 Parganas
District. The Boarding was reserved for Catholics only. The day school
was open to all. In the Boitakhana days, however, there were relatively
few non Catholics. What the school has become now, is the result of the
hard work of the teachers and fathers of St. Lawrence.
Read
From
the beginnings to our days
(Quoted from an interview of the founder by Mr S.V.
Raman.)
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