Monday 22 April 2019


St Anthony of Padua –  Saint, Scholar, Sage - Our Inspiration
Saint Anthony of Padua (PortugueseSanto António de Lisboa), born Fernando Martins de Bulhões (15 August 1195 – 13 June 1231), is also known as Anthony of Lisbon,He was a Portuguese Catholic priest and friar of the Franciscan Order. He was born and raised by a wealthy family in LisbonPortugal, and died in PaduaItaly. Noted by his contemporaries for his powerful preaching, expert knowledge of scripture, and undying love and devotion to the poor and the sick, he was one of the most quickly canonized saints in church history. He was proclaimed a Doctor of the Church on 16 January 1246. He is also the patron saint of lost things.
He is the patron saint of Lisbon, Padua and many places in Portugal and in the countries of the former Portuguese Empire

WHY ST ANTHONY’S LIFE AND EXAMPLE ARE
RELEVANT TODAY


Our school is named in honour of St Anthony of Padua who is one of the greatest saints of the Christian world. He is also revered by millions of people of all faiths for the inspiring example of his saintly and scholarly life devoted to the preaching of the Holy Word and living the Holy Word especially by caring for the poor and the helpless. Indeed, St Anthony of Padua is our greatest role model because he is  an eloquent embodiment of our school’s motto “CARITAS NON FICTA”.
To this very day, there are very strong reasons why
St Anthony continues to be a great inspiration for young people.
  • ·       He was born in Lisbon (Portugal) into a wealthy aristocratic family but he joined the religious life and devoted his entire life to a higher cause – the study and preaching of the scriptures and the care of the poor. He shows us that the greatest wealth comes from a life lived well and devoted to a higher cause in life.
  • ·       He was an international  citizen who traversed Portugal,Morocco, Spain, France and Italy to carry out his mission in life. In the process, he mastered  several languages including Latin,Portuguese, Spanish,French and Italian. He is truly a model for young people in a multilingual world.
  • ·       He was a great scholar.  His interest was not only in scripture and theology. He was fascinated by the first stirrings of scientific research in the Middle Ages. He had a sure grasp of human psychology as revealed by his sermons which earned him the title “Evangelical Doctor of the Church”.
  • ·       He was a great communicator and educator. However, like his mentor St Francis of Assisi, St Anthony believed that the “dialogue of words” is not enough. Human beings are touched in heart and mind by action as declared by our motto “Caritas Non Ficta”.
  • ·       St Anthony symbolizes the first principle of the Rukunegara -faith in God and the power of prayer in our lives. Many miracles have been attributed to St Anthony in countries all over the world.
  • ·       Being Anthonian links us with many institutions and communities worldwide that celebrate the greatness of this person  .

·       He is especially invoked and venerated all over the world as the patron saint for the recovery of lost items and is credited with many miracles involving lost people, lost things and even lost spiritual goods.

                         CARITAS NON FICTA 



Blogger Louis Rozario Doss  studied at SMK St Anthony (1962-64) and at SMK St Michael ,Ipoh (1956-1961/1965-1966)Served as Principal SMK St Anthony (1996-1998)  & SMK St Michael (1998-2005)   Currently serves at Tenby International School ,Ipoh 

Conducts CIE A Level Seminars/Workshops on Literature,English, History & Law

email: louis49@gmail.com   Mobile: 010-3905011




Friday 19 April 2019

Memories of St Anthony's by Mr Narayanan Suppiah


Memories of St Anthony’s  (1947-1985)by Mr Nara       
   

Mr Nara (left) with lifelong friend Anthony Kee


 Full Name: Narayanan s/o Suppiah

Born: 5th September 1939
Place of Birth: Lumut
1947 – Entered Primary Year 1 at St Anthony’s Primary School,Teluk Intan
1957- Completed Form 5 at SASTI
March 1959 - Joined the school staff at SASTI as a laboratory technician
1985 – Transferred to SMK Hutan Melintang
1994- Retired from the Government Education Service
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Interviewed by:   Louis Rozario Doss
Date: 23rd March 2019
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Q Mr Nara, who among the several primary school teachers, would you like to talk about first?
Among  the first teachers who had a strong impression on me were the siblings, Miss Almeida , and her  brother ,Mr Bruno Almeida. They were both talented in academics,in music, and in sports. They took a personal interest in every student and we loved them for  making school life so open,so joyous and something to look forward to each day.Both of them were temporary teachers starting on their life’s career paths. Mr Bruno Almeida, was an old boy of our alma mater.He joined the police force and retired with distinction as the Chief Police Officer (CPD) of Penang State.
Q That first question is meant to jog your memories. Have you any other nuggets of the past for us?
Mr Teoh Boon Gim was a legendary figure as our Maths master. He was the only person in Malaya who could draw a circle with just one free hand – without the support of any mathematical instruments!
Q Tell us about your years in the science labs of SASTI.

I worked under and with some of the most remarkable personalities I have met. When I first joined the staff, I worked under Mr Tan Chin Huat, an Anthonian himself. He was the Head Laboratory Technician, the person who guided and trained me for my future role as the Head of the Anthonian laboratories. He was a truly dedicated officer who worked for the school all his life until the age of 55. When I took over as the Head of the Lab Staff, my mentor was another towering school figure, Mr Martin Yong. Under Mr Martin Yong, the science laboraties were reshaped and renovated for the new science-oriented world our school was moving into. The Chemistry and Physics labs were first created and designed by Mr Martin Yong. In 1959, the labs achieved the status of “pure science “ labs. This was another feather in the cap for the school, again made possible by Mr Martin Yong’s innovative leadership. Mr Yong also helmed the leadership of the St John Ambulance Brigade after the departure of Mr J.D. Weller. Our SJAM unit was among the best trained units in Malaya at that time. In 1961, Mr Martin Yong, was appointed as Head of the MOE's Post-Primary Continuation Programme for Lower Perak  based at SMK St Anthony. Later, he was based in SMK Raja Muda Musa which became the new base for the programme. Mr Ewe Teng Khoon was his successor as Head of the Science Department.

Q You worked under the shadow of Brother Damian, a great Biology teacher and Sub-Director of the School  before he became Director. What are your memories of Brother Damian?

Brother Damian Oliver,Director

Brother Damian  Oliver was a great inspiration to all Anthonians, and especially to our future doctors,biologists and, young scientists in general. He made the laboratories truly up-to-date in terms of apparatus and teaching charts to make the learning of science a thrilling experience.He was a spell-binding teacher. You could see the students totally mesmerized by his teaching style. He was a master at both narration and experimental demonstration. As sub-director and later Director of the school,he  also understood teachers and staff well and was compassionate towards them especially when they shouldered family responsibilities which required time-off from school.
Q What are your best memories of school life?
The two strands that stand out are my exploits as a Boy Scout and as a member of the St John Ambulance. As Boy Scouts, our troop went on trips and tours along the banks of the Perak River, into rubber estates and to Seri Muara -the river mouth where the Perak River reaches the sea. As a St John   member, I mastered the first aid skills and became a marching machine! We were on civic duty at many government functions.  I also enjoyed playing an array of sports ranging from athletics and hockey to rugby. I represented St Anthony’s in the Combined Schools Championships and was awarded schools colour in hockey and athletics. The teachers who were the prime movers behind our prowess in hockey and athletics were Mr Teoh Boon Jim and Mr Anthony Rogers. I also played cricket and football for the school. Under the care of Mr Boon Gim and Mr Rogers, we travelled to sports events in the world of our time- Ipoh,Tapah and Kampar.Among the star sportsmen among our seniors   were two of Mr Anthony Rogers’ brothers    Aloysius and Dairiam Pillay.They were both super athletes in their days. In later years(1960s-70S), Mr Anthony Rogers did his Ph D in English and rose  to eminence as Head of English in the Curriculum   Development Centre,Ministry of Education,Malaysia.      
Q   What other highlights of school life in the 1950s  in your estimation deserve to be remembered by all Anthonians?
I must mention three things. The whole school used to celebrate our victories in the Combined Schools events in Ipoh,Tapah and Kampar.

Brother Denis Hyland,Director 

Brother Denis, our Director, used  to  declare a half-holiday   to celebrate our victories on Mondays as our outings usually took place on the weekends. Few of us had telephones at home but news of our sports victories surprisingly used to reach the homes of Lower Perak even before we arrived back in Teluk Anson! How come? Without any internet-based social media? Another frequent cause of celebration at school was the athletic prowess of the Supreme Anthonian Quartet  - (Dr) Cheah Song Kang,Linus Pereira,Benedict Gomez   and Wong Seng Heng . This legendary relay team was the talk of Malayan schools in 1955 when they broke all national and state records in the 4 x110  yards . They were the glory of the Anthonian sports scene in the 19 55/56 years.  Thirdly, I remember Chan Looi Chong
, an outstanding badminton star at school.He went on to become a National Badminton Coach in the 1960s.     
Q Would you like to pay a special tribute to any of your other teachers?
Yes, I remember Brother Aloysius, a 250-pound Irishman, who introduced rugby at our school. Although the sport did not take root at our school, we all enjoyed its brief spurt of life under Brother Aloysius.  Another colourful personality was Brother Patrick O’Connor who founded the Anthonian Military Band and was a pillar of the St John Ambulance Brigade.       
Q What are your unforgettable memories of your life and work at St Anthony’s?
I have two things I will never forget. For many years, I was not just in charge of the science labs.I was given a job not usually done by lab staff. This was the school timetable. I created and managed the timetable for more than twenty years. This brought me into the inner corridors of decision-making in the school – something I never really wanted for myself but was thrust upon me by circumstances. The second unforgettable event took place in 1967  - on school Sports Day. You won’t believe this. The teachers were all on strike – under the orders of the National Union of Teachers.This was a nationwide boycott of all extracurricular activities. Brother Damian,our Director, firmly decided that the Sports Day would go on as planned. The teachers were all there – purely as spectators  in the tents. The entire Sports Day was run by two of us from the labs – Mr Tan Chin Huat and myself. We were only assisted by the students. It was a great day for our Anthonian students to show that they are made of the best stuff in terms of leadership and enterprise.  Bravo,Anthonians!

Blogger Louis Rozario Doss did his Form 1 -3 years at SMK St Anthony,Teluk Intan.(1962-64)
He completed his secondary education at SMK St Michael,Ipoh. He was Principal
of SMK St Anthony (1996-1998) and went on to serve as Principal of SMK St Michael,Ipoh (1998-2005).
He is currently the Head of Sixth Form (CIE A Level) at Tenby International School,Ipoh.
HP 010-3905011 email:louisrozariodoss@yahoo.co.uk




Thursday 18 April 2019

Memories of Mr Anthony Kee (1950s - 1990s)
























Mr Anthony Kee King Huat has dedicated his youth and prime years to SMK St Anthony since the 1950s and continues to serve the school and the Lasallian mission as a  member of the Board of Governors of the school. Mr Kee was educated at St Anthony’s  (  1949 -1959) and on completing his Senior Cambridge School Certificate in 1959 joined the Education Service as an administrative assistant,  a capacity in which he served till his retirement in June 1997.  That gives us a total of 37 years in the portals and corridors of St Anthony’s. No one person  has so comprehensive a vantage view of the story of our school as Mr Anthony Kee. His exuberant Anthonian spirit has so often impelled him into roles and contributions that go far beyond the duties in the school office.He has been called upon every so often to counsel and discipline students and to defuse problems faced by parents. Most of all, he has served as financial adviser to more than thirteen principals , and continues to give the benefit of his rich administrative and financial expertise to the school to this day. 
Memories of St Anthony’s, Teluk Intan –
Mr Anthony Kee
Full name: Anthony Kee King Huat
Educated at St Anthony’s Primary & Secondary School,Teluk Intan (1949 - 1959)
Date of Birth: 25.6.1942
Date of Appointment at SMK St Anthony: 5.1.1960
Retired on: 25.6.1997 (37 years of service at his alma mater)
27th June 1997: Awarded the Lasallian Gold Medallion by the Brother Visitor of the Lasallian Schools (Malaysia-Singapore-Hongkong)

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Date of interview: 23rd March 2019
Interviewer: Mr Louis Rozario Doss
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In recognition of his services to the Lasallian fraternity, Mr Anthony Kee was awarded the Lasallian Medallion on his retirement in 1997.

Mr Anthony Kee (Left) with Brother Matthew Bay,Director,Lasalle Schools Perak


Mr Kee,tell us about the teachers who had the first impact on your life as a student at St Anthony's. 

   I should like to begin with the late Mr Austin Ambrose who was my class teacher in Standard One. Apart from having been a model of excellent (Singaporean) English, Mr Ambrose was very particular that one should use only the right hand for writing purposes! This was an unusual predicament for me. I was probably born a left-hander. I was left-legged at football and left-handed at badminton. Nevertheless, as I look back over the past many years, Mr Ambrose has won the battle of right versus left. Like me, many Anthonians owe their handwriting orientation to the late Mr Austin Ambrose. This example is only one of many in my life where students will excel when teachers have high expectations of their students. Most appropriately, in later years, when the primary school was separated physically from the secondary school,Mr Austin Ambrose,was appointed headmaster of St Anthony’s Primary School.  I also remember Mr J.D.Weller who was an extremely versatile teacher and a great pillar of St Anthony’s in the 1950s and early 60s. He was ,together with Mr Martin Yong, a great stalwart of the St John Ambulance. He was proficient in both English and Malay – something rare in those days. He was also a wonderful geography teacher.

 
Q What are your memories of Mr Au Kee Soon?
Yes, I remember distinctly that he was the first headmaster of our original Primary School before the separation. He made his mark on every student by his firm insistence on good handwriting. In those days, before the arrival of computers, laptops and handphones, elegant and legible handwriting was one of the marks of a good education. It was part of the culture of an educated society.
Q You  have often spoken of Brother Benignus. What is his claim to fame in the history of our school?
    Brother Benignus is a remarkable model and inspiration to all educators. He was an educator extraordinaire in many ways. First, in those days , young people who joined the Lasalle Order came into the missionary life with the MCE/OSC – what we call the Senior Cambridge qualification (Form 5) today. They had a basic teacher training qualification as well. If they aspired to do a degree, they had to do it as an external part-time course. This was a great burden for any conscientious teacher,what with a whole teaching-marking load as well as co-curricular and administrative duties. Brother Benignus was one of the early trail-blazers who proved that the degree was attainable. He successfully combined school duties and degree studies and obtained the Bachelor of Arts (Honours) degree in Classics ( majoring in  Greek) from the University of London. 
     At school, Brother Benignus was  one of the most versatile teachers. He taught a whole array of subjects ranging from English and History to Scripture and Mathematics! He also taught us Gregg shorthand and typewriting after normal school hours.  As an English teacher, he was an indefatigable campaigner for better essay writing. He would arrive at school for the first two periods to discuss an essay topic and collect the fully written essays by 9.00 a.m. By 11 a.m that very morning, the essays would be returned to us fully marked,graded and with enlightening comments on the areas for improvement. 
    Brother Benignus was a master journalist who initiated the school magazine – “The Anthonian”  from its inception in 1955. Every school magazine in the later 1950s and 1960s bears the imprint of his flair for journalism. We owe everything to him for initiating and sustaining this journalistic tradition which has preserved for posterity the memories of generations of Anthonians.
Q You have worked under 13 Principals at SMK St Anthony. Did you have to dance to different tunes?
I wouldn’t go so far as to say they were so different in style and substance. There was a high degree of consistency among the principals over the years. This is partly because of the strong Anthonian ethos established by the Lasalle Brothers . The lay principals who succeeded the Brothers deserve high credit because they all respected and honoured the cherished Lasalllian traditions. Among all the principals I worked under, I am sure we must make special mention of Brother Damian Oliver, Director (1965 - 1974) who raised the school from its plateau in the 1960s to its pre-eminence as a Sixth Form school in the 1970s with the national status of a premier school. It was during Bro Damian’s time that St Anthony’s overtook its rivals in Lower Perak to become the school of first choice for most parents. He also stands out as a man of great personal humility who was able to command high respect through his benign approach to people and their problems.You always felt respected when he spoke to you and listened to you. There was never a time when he lost his temper or raised his voice. He believed firmly in the biblical wisdom that “a soft answer turns away wrath”. 
Q What are your memories of Father Matthias Ki? What role did he play in the development of St Anthony’s School?

Father Matthias Ki

Father Matthias Ki had a great impact on the progress of all the Catholic Mission Schools in Hilir Perak.He was the Parish Priest in Teluk Intan in the 1960s and early 1070s. He was a great entrepreneur who raised funds for St Anthony’s and the Convents in Hilir Perak. He took good care of the Brothers and the Sisters by promoting a strong bonding among all the religious educators in Hilir Perak.They often gathered at the Parish House in the church grounds opposite our school for convivial meals and get-togethers.
Q Do you recall the life story of Father Ki?
He was  born in China in the 1930s  to a tribal Hakka family. He began his seminary studies for the Catholic priesthood but his studies were interrupted by the closure of all religious seminaries following the Communist Revolution in 1949. Matthias Ki was among the seminarians who left mainland China to complete their preparation for the priesthood. Some left for Hongkong and Taiwan but Matthias Ki managed to join the College-General in Penang where he completed his seminary studies.He was ordained for the priesthood in Malaya and was posted to Teluk Intan initially as an Asssistant to the Parish Priest before he became the Parish Priest in the 1960s and 1970s.
Q  What was Father Ki’s legacy to the Catholic educational mission in Lower Perak?
Father Ki played a pivotal role in setting up Assumption School in the 1960s to take care of boys and girls who did not do well academically in the Standard 6 and Lower Certificate of Education (Form 3)  examination. He was a truly far-sighted pastor who did not believe in excluding the less-academically inclined from the education system.
Besides that, Father Ki was the middle-man who helped secure the land in Sungei Nibong on which our primary school was relocated in the 1960s. He was also the key figure in the setting up of  St Anthony’s Branch (Primary) School in Langkap. Father Ki did this with the Orang Asli children in mind. He wanted a school which would give priority to the social and economic upliftment of the marginalized Orang Asli community. In that sense, Father Ki was a man very much ahead of his times.

Q What are your memories of the lay principals who succeeded the Lasallian directors at St Anthony’s?
All our lay principals lived up to the highest expectations of the school community. Some of them were Lasaliians in terms of background but several came from non-Lasallian backgrounds.Nevertheless, they fitted in very well with the school’s traditions and some of them  stand out as among the greatest principals of St Anthony’s. One of these was  Tuan Haji Omar bin Mazar Ali, our first Malay principal. He was a high caliber administrator who was very firm and fair to all. He was instrumental in upgrading the school administration and SOPs in office administration. Another principal who helped upgrade the school’s infrastructure was Tuan Haji Azahari  Arbi who was later promoted as District Education Officer of Lower Perak. Yes, looking back, I must pay a special tribute to all our lay principals for sustaining the Lasallian traditions at our school. 


The evergreeen family of Mr Anthony Kee.- a wonderful branch of the wider Anthonian family


Q  What is your message to your fellow Anthonians throughout the world?
I wish you all the very best in your endeavours. Be doing and daring,as we are enjoined to do in our school song, but let us always be guided by the spirit of charity in all we do. Spare a thought for your alma mater.Come back to visit your school from time to time. Help the school to move forward in the service of the young. Support the worthy causes associated with our alma mater. “Render with joy to your mater her due!” 

Mr Anthony Kee with Nanda, Mr Aru  and Blogger Louis  


Blogger Louis RozarioDoss   (First Right  Front Row)

HP 0 10-3905011  email:louisrozariodoss@yahoo.co.uk