Saturday 31 May 2014

Thomas Cup Heroes from St Michael’s..........
Thomas Cup heroes 1965. Tan Yee Khan (pic Left) and Ng Boon Bee (pic Right). Congratulating the heroes is Director Brother Ultan Paul   
1965 - SMI produces world beaters in badminton.....
Among the badminton heroes who wrested the Thomas Cup for Malaysia in 1965 were the invincible Michaelian duo, Ng Boon Bee and Tan Yee Khan.
(From  Left -Mr Lim Kean Hooi, Ng Boon Bee, Teh Kew San  (Captain), and Brother Director Ultan Paul) 


1959 & 1960  – SMI won the King’s Cup for Badminton. This was the preliminary victory of Ng Boon Bee and Tan Yee Khan which paved the way for greater things to come. 
In the 1990s another Michaelian Koo Kien Keat  achieved world class fame in badminton. Koo Kien Keat was a student of St Michael's from Standard 1 to Form 3. After completing his PMR in 1999 , Kien Keat was offered a sports scholarship to complete his SPM at SMK Bukit Jalil,KL, the national sports school. Kien Keat was torn between his desire to remain at St Michael's (where his heart has always been !) and to advance his badminton prospects at national and international level. His teachers and principal at St Michael's felt that his future and the national interest would best be served by his opting for SMK Bukit Jalil.
St Michael's salutes Ng Boon  Bee,Tan Yee Khan and Koo Kien Keat!
         (Fact File: 
         Koo Kien Keat is the son of Mr Koo Chiew Wa, who served at St Michael's as a lab officer for more than ten years until his retirement in 2000   ) 
Mr Koo Chiew Wa on the day of his retirement at SMI



Koo Kien Keat (L) and  his father Mr Koo Chiew Wa (R) 








Thursday 29 May 2014

Noel Arul –  Olympic Games,Melbourne
Noel Arul ,one of the greatest names in Malayan hockey


Noel Arul was the first Michaelian to represent Malaya at the Olympic Games (Melbourne 1960s) .He remains one of Malaya's greatest hockey stars.








Noel Arul was one of Perak’s most prolific scorers at hockey.
Pic shows an Ipoh hockey team of the 1950’s  captained by Noel Arul.

(Noel Arul- seated pic far Right)



(Next pic- to be uploaded )
SMI’s formidable hockey team of the 1950s with Brother Denis (Director) and coach Mr Teh Swee Kang. Among the players shown above are Noel Arul (far right), M.Santhanasamy (far left) and Albert Teh (2nd row second from right)  

(Next Pic)
      Anton Marshall, Perak hockey captain, was a Michaelian hockey legend par excellence in the 1960s. He was
a maestro on the hockey field commanding the flow of play, the bulwark of the team's defence and the perfect guide for younger players.  
       He was also for many years (1960s) the Sports Secretary at Sekokah Tuanku Abdul Rahman Ipoh where Sports Days were noted for their Olympian flair and pageantry.
         Anton Marshall was a great Michaelian on the hockey pitch and beyond!
Mr Anton Marshall (seated 3rd  from right). In the centre is STAR Principal Hamdan bin Sheik Tahir



Wednesday 28 May 2014

SMI Classes & Staff Pictures over the Years 


Staff 1929 with Bro James Byrne (Visitor),Father JB Coppin and Mr PJ Morsingh
SMI Scouts 1939. among them King Scouts
includng the future Justice Chang Min Tat

Staff & Students 1929


Staff 1939







Staff 1959 with Brother Dennis (Director).Also in pic are Brother U Paul,Brother Pius Kelly and Brother Michael.

A Primary School Class 1950s.
This was the facade of the school in the 1950s-60s   
Mr Tan Boon Kwee and Miss Chin seated with Brother Dennis (Director) 1950s


SMI Brothers with Brother Denis (Director), Brother Pius Kelly (Sub-Director - seated left) Brother Paul  (Back row- 2nd pic Right))





Tuesday 27 May 2014

1955-Brother Pius at the Helm
Brother Pius Kelly

A towering figure in height and in 
educational
stature leads the school.......


·        Brother Pius Kelly was the logical successor to Brother Denis Hyland.
·        Also from Ireland, he had served with distinction as the sub-director of the school since  January 1948.
·        A towering figure ,he was a school principal noted for his high expectations of character, discipline and devotion to duty in both students and teachers.



1955 – St Michael’s Primary School becomes a separate school with its own headmaster.Two years later, we had two separate primary schools  Primary 1 and Primary 2.
  
Pics of SMI Primary
Pic of Mr Lim Guan Choe – the first headmaster
Mr Teh Swee Kang – the first headmaster of SMI Primary 2
Mr Lee Guan Khew – succeeded  Mr Teh Swee Kang as headmaster of SMI Primary 2


Year after year these two primary schools were among the top schools in Perak in the newly introduced  standard five  assessment test, as well as scoring much fame  in inter-school games and athletics.




1948 - 1955
Brother Denis Hyland takes St Michael’s to New Heights




       Bro Denis Hyland
    (Director,1948 – 1955)





·      Brother Patrick’s successor was his lifelong friend, Brother Denis Hyland. Both had served as life-long teachers at St  Xavier’s Penang.
·      To him goes the credit for the final extensions to the main building,one at each end,completing the majestic proportions which make it such a striking landmark today.
·      Money was scarce and many argued against such a costly style of architecture but Brother Denis was adamant: the style had to be retained  and the money had to be found.
·      Posterity salutes his stubborn fidelity and determination.


One of Malaya’s first Sixth Form schools
          ....the first girls arrive


·         Brother Denis was the pioneer of Sixth Form education at SMI – one of the first schools in Malaya to introduce sixth form education, then called the Post School Certificate classes.
·         A new gateway to higher education was thus opened to the youth of Ipoh and  the Kinta valley towns.
·         Michaelians began to make their mark at the universities in Malaya, Singapore, and other Commonwealth countries.

  Brother Denis Invests  in the                   Future
· New Science Laboratories planned and designed by
Mr Lee Guan Meng









Pic Mr Lee Guan Meng


Pic






The Opening of the Science Laboratory Block by His Royal Highness Sultan Sir Yussuff Izzudin Shah ,Sultan of Perak
 on 18 September 1954. To mark the occasion a science exhibition was held , the first of many to be held over the  decades that followed.



·         With the advent of Sixth Form education and the growing emphasis on science and technology, Brother Denis saw the need to upgrade laboratory facilties.
·         He commissioned Mr Lee Guan Meng , Senior Science Master, to plan and equip  the laboratories and to spare no expense to ensure that Michaelians  have the best facilities.
·         Mr Lee  travelled throughout Malaya and Singapore to collect the best ideas and on his return he designed three specialist laboratories that became, and even today
still remain the pride of the school. 
·         Brother Denis aroused great enthusiasm for studies and throughout his term of office results in public examinations continued to be excellent. He also encouraged games and athletics.Two new basketball courts were built as well as a tennis court.
·         During his six years as Director, Brother Denis endeared himself to all Michaelians as a man whose main aim in life  was to make St.Michael’s second to none as a centre of learning. He was popular with  students, staff and Old Michaelians and the general public. He could  always count on generous support for many schemes for the improvement of the school

Monday 26 May 2014

1945 –   World War II ends

 St Michael’s bounces back............


The Director of Education visited the school in 1946.He remarked that it was one of the first schools in the country to be fully rehabilitated.


The 1947 School Certificate results were so outstanding that the Adviser on Education sent special congratulations!







Pic Brother Michael Jacques
Pic Brother Rupert



·         In the aftermath of the Japanese surrender Brother Edmund of Mary took immediate steps to reopen the school.
·         Brother Patrick (Director) returned from Singapore.
·         Brothers U Paul,Gabriel, Finan and Amedy came back from Kuala Lumpurl
·         Brothers Michael Jacques and John Matthew joined the community from St.Joseph’s Training College, Penang.
·         All the pre-war lay staff returned  with the tragic exception of Mr. E.E.Fitzpatrick who had joined the Volunteers and had lost his life in the fighting in Singapore.
·         The school reopened on 24 September 1945.
·         The school building was still occupied by government offices.
·         Some of the classes were held at the Convent dormitory while others were conducted at the Sam Tet (Marist) School.Ipoh.
·         Brother Patrick made it a point to take over every classroom that was vacated by a government department , so in about two weeks , by 12 October 1945, all classes were back at St.Michael’s again.
·         The following day the Brothers returned from the Parochial House to take up their residence in their community quarters after an absence of three years and ten months.
·         There were many problems to overcome.
·         Much of the school furniture and equipment had been destroyed.
·         Fortunately during the early years of the war a good deal of equipment had been saved so there was no delay in enrolling pupils.
·         The teachers of that period were truly enthusiastic and  gave their very best to get the school going again.
·         The Senior Class of 1946 were outstanding in this respect and set a fine example of responsible leadership.
·           Brother Patrick’s former pupil at St.Xavier’s Institution,Penang, Brother Michael Jacques, took charge of the school certificate class of 1946 with 26 pupils . He was ably assisted by Brother Rupert and a team of stalwart teachers. They produced quality results.

1946 – Enrolment crosses the 1000 mark
1947-  Enrolment  reaches 1120




 
 

Sunday 25 May 2014



The Japanese Occupation  remembered by Brother Ultan Paul
Source : Bro Ultan Paul in his Diamond Jubilee book

The Japanese Occupation by Brother Ultan Paul

Brother Patrick O'Donovan was waiting for me at the station, my first encounter with the man who was to be my Director for some nine years. We got into two rickshaws and very soon arrived at St Michael's about half a mile from the station. The first member of the community to greet me on the veranda was Brother Thomas Francis 0' Brien. He casually remarked, "You are wel­come to the community".
I very soon settled down to my room, which was partitioned off from the Sub-Di­rector's room - Brother Edmund McCullagh's , by a simple curtain. Things were quite primitive in many respects in those days. To remedy this Brother Patrick had undertaken the task of building an extension to the school, comprising classrooms, a chapel, suitable rooms for the Brothers and a Boarding section. Little did we realise that 3 September 1939 was to see the outbreak of World War Two.
We all went to Church for Benediction that Sunday evening in our Chevrolet Car .14 122 driven by our chauffeur Mr Choong Ah Yew. When we returned from church we sat down on the corridor listening to the latest news from BBC and were astonished to hear Neville Chamberlain declaring war on Germany. War was not to start in real earnest till some months later, but that very night while walking up and down on the front field, two police officers asked to inter­rogate Brother Rupert Kunselmann, a Ger­man. Brother Patrick accompanied him to the police station. We were expecting all sorts of eventualities and were agreeably surprised to see them coming back in good time.

It turned out that Brother Patrick had to give an undertaking to guarantee the good behaviour of Brother Rupert. This was readily given.

Brother Patrick struck me as one who had set his mind on improving academic standards right from the very start of his tenure of office. He once remarked when examining the report books of the boys on Mondays that I must have been very lenient in the correction. I then asked him to set a test for the students in English. He said he would not only do so but that he would correct it himself. This he later did and seemed pleased that all the boys in the classes passed his examination



When the Japanese arrived in Malaya...................
1.       We dismantled most of he laboratory fixtures – sinks, taps and pipes etc – and stored them under the stage, handing the key to the mandor – Anthony Samy, for safe keeping.
2       All the chapel pews and accessories together with the large bronze statue of St La Salle in front of the building, were also salvaged and stored in a special shed constructed by Fr Francois beside St Michael’s Church.
3.       Being German, he was the only Brother in Perak to be officially employed , not as a teacher, but in the Institute of Medical Research.
4.       He was asked among other things to produce soap, make an alcoholic drink from pineapples or some other fruit (he called it schnapps!),  and obtain car fuel from rubber seeds.
5.       He was fairly successful with the car fuel, provided the engine was started with petrol, but the sticky nature of the rubber made engine maintenance a problem.
6.       The station at Kuala Lumpur was teeming with Indian soldiers of the 25th Indian       Division and any chance of Brother Director Patrick getting on to the train      seemed rather slim.
7.       I suggested he stay put while I jumped across the barrier with his luggage, only to be stopped by an Indian soldier.
8.       My few words of Hindustani did the trick. I told him that Bara Sahib has to go to Ipoh to start a famous school and surely there was one pace for him. “Te Gai, Archa Sahib” said he and Brother Patrick got on to the train.

    I remember Brother Edmund Pasanha getting hold of a box containing his excellent history notes now sodden by  the rain and throwing the entire consignment over the balcony saying as he did so “that’s the end of the British Empire”.



The Japanese Era at St Michael’s Institution ,Ipoh
by Brother Vincent Corkery

The Japanese forces landed at Kota Baru 8 December 1941 just as the senior classes at SMI were finishing their Cambridge examination.  The scripts reached Cambridge safely, but the results were not published till 1945 – the longest wait for anxious candidates.
Within days the retreating British regiments reached Ipoh and were billeted at St Michael’s. The annals of the British Army record that it was at St Michael’s that two British regiments – the East Surreys and the Leicesters – were amalgamated into ‘The British Battalion’.  The British troops left early morning 23 December accompanied by a group of Michaelian St John Ambulance members and their teachers, to provide first aid under very dangerous war conditions. The teachers included Mr Lim Kean Hooi and our popular scout master Mr E. E. Fitzpatrick. Sadly the latter died in action. 
Within a few hours Japanese bombers arrived and bombed the railway station and hit a munitions train which kept exploding for days, sending large pieces of molten metal over the school, some hit the building.  The school was machine-gunned by plane after plane.  The Brothers took refuge in a make-shift shelter in the back field. When they returned to their rooms, their belongings were drenched by a sudden downpour. They decided to vacate to the parish house at St Michael’s Church.
Over the next few days they made trips back to the school to retrieve personal belongings, books and records, also the chapel benches and the bronze statue of La Salle high up in the front of the school. 
Br Rupert Kunzelman, a German, was senior science master and he got help to remove all the fittings from the science labs.  These were locked away beneath the stage and the key was kept safely all through the war by the school mandor, our ever faithful Anthony Samy.  When school reopened SMI was the first to have functioning science labs again.  Arrangements were made for Anderson students to use SMI labs in the afternoon till such time as their labs were equipped.
The Japanese entered Ipoh on Christmas Day 1941 and took possession of the SMI building. They decided to transfer the state government from Taiping and make SMI the seat of government for Perak. 
The Brothers’ Quarters on the top floor were reserved for the Governor and staff, and they constructed an air-raid shelter for their use in the existing ground floor lecture theatre.  A huge amount of earth was used together with wooden pillars and beams to make it fully secure.  After surrender this earth was most welcome in constructing the basketball courts.
The school chapel became the state council chamber [Dewan Negri], and the hall became the state treasury.  The large metal door under the stairs on the ground floor seems to have been used for special security, while the metal safe nearby was used by the Governor, and later by the Brother Directors of SMI.
The main stairs has still got the metal clips used to hold the carpet for visiting VIP’s including the Japanese Prime Minister General Tojo.
The first room on the middle floor was used for interrogation, and perhaps torture.  Malaysia’s wartime heroine Sybil Kathegesu was interrogated here at one stage of her detention.  A man who worked in one of the nearby offices claimed later he saw her being flung down the stairs.
Five feet deep circular holes were dug in the back field as air raid shelters, while the front field was greatly diminished in size with the construction of extra roads.  After the war these roads had to be dug up and the stones formed the foundation for our basketball courts. 
A large Japanese flag was placed at the centre of the field and this was the focal point for a daily ceremonial assembly.  Two flag poles have survived.
The Brothers 
With the outbreak of WW2 in 1939, two German Brothers on the staff, Brothers Paternus Seipel and Arkadius Spiekel, were transferred to Manila which was neutral territory, to avoid being interned.  Later they were among a group of 15 Brothers massacred by the Japanese in the chapel of De La Salle University in Manila 12 February 1945. [N.B. Br Rupert was allowed to stay because he had joined the staff before Hitler came to power]
In Ipoh all 8 eight Brothers found refuge at St Michael’s Church. However Br Patrick O’Donovan, Director and two other Irish Brothers Thomas O’Brien and Edmund McCullogh, were soon detained by the Japanese and later transferred to Taiping Gaol, still later to Pudu Gaol in Kuala Lumpur.  In August 1941 they were released when it was realised that Ireland was a neutral country. 
Br U Paul Rosario was transferred to Kuala Lumpur after a year or so, and here he was able to follow Japanese language classes and qualify to teach at St John’s Institution, then a Japanese school.
Br Patrick O’Donovan spent the remaining years of the war in a remote jungle settlement in Bahau, Negri Sembilan, together with 30 other Brothers, as part of a large group of civilians evacuated by the Japanese from Singapore.  Here conditions were extreme, with many dying of malaria and malnutrition.  As soon as the Japanese surrendered Br Patrick was accompanied back to Ipoh by Br U Paul, and at once began the daunting task of reorganising the school.
[Postscript: The epic story of Bahau is available in leading bookshops under the title THE JUNGLE IS NEVER NEUTRAL by Br Patricius O’Donovan. It was on the bestsellers list for some time]












Before The Japaneses Occupation 1940 -Notes from Brother Patrick's Diary



3.9.39
Heard over the radio “England is at war with Germany”. Mr Chamberlain’s speech announced the reasons. He ended up with “ God bless you all and may Heaven defend the right”
5.9.1939
First British ship – The Athenia, Donaldson was torpedoed off the Aebrdos. Four hundred were lost.
(Fm http://members.iinet.net.au/~gduncan/maritime-1.html : ATHENIA (September 3, 1939)
The first civilian casualty of World War II, the Cunard passenger liner Athenia of 13,581 tons, (chartered from the Anchor Donaldson Line) was sunk without warning west of Scotland by the German submarine U-30 (Oblt. Fritz-Julius Lemp) on the opening day of the Second World War, the captain believing it to be an armed merchant cruiser. The ship was carrying evacuees from Liverpool to Canada. There were 1,103 passengers not including crewmembers. Survivors were rescued by the British destroyers Electra, Escort and Fame and the freighters City of Flint the yacht Southern Cross and the Norwegian tanker Knute Nelson which brought its survivors to Galway. In all, 118 passengers were drowned. Also on board were 316 Americans of whom 28 were lost. Oblt. Lemp was never court-martialled for this error but next day Hitler ordered that under no circumstances were attacks to be made on passenger ships. The City of Flint (4,963 tons) was later torpedoed (on January 25, 1943) with the loss of seven lives. On May 9, 1941, Oblt. Fritz Lemp and fifteen of his crew were lost when the U-boat he then commanded, the U-110, was captured. This was the most important prize of the war. She was carrying the much sought after Enigma  machine which helped Britain to break the top secret German  military codes.)
5.7. 1940
Two officers from Penang visited the school to inspect the accommodation in view of occupation by Australian troops whenever they should arrive. They were satisfied with the ground and first floor but we proposed the new wing which was accepted graciously. The tuck-shop and OMA are to serve as kitchen & dinning apartments.
9.8.40
Received a note from the Sec to BR enclosing a proclamation from Mr Rea, BR to the effect that St Michael’s was to be requisitioned from Sept from 1st Sept
28.8.40
The Br.  Resident revealed his proclamation stating that the date of arrival of troops was indefinite.
5.9.40
The secretary to the BR wrote stating that orders from the Military HQ Singapore were received to the effect that immediate preparation should be made at St Michaels’ for occupation of the troops.
7.9.40
Mr. Hicks Head Master Anderson School phoned to tell me that he had received message from Mr O. Sullivan I of S Perak to the effect that he has information from Military H.Q S’pore saying that the troops were not to come before another month.
9.9.40
There were many rumours about occupation of the school by the military and that consequently there would be no re-opening. Many phone inquiries were made
22.9.40
Mr Pitt. Director of Engineering stores accompanied by an officer came to inspect the preparations for military occupation. The officer informed me that the school would probably not be needed now. He thanked me very much for the help and facilities we had offered. However, he requested the use of our playing fields for games to which I very willingly acceded.


"It is indeed sorrowful to note that when the Japanese swept through Ipoh on 28th December 1941 and the school premises were occupied, destruction of the laboratory even while it was blooming with vigour of youth was a foregone conclusion. But the Science Department was not to be cheated of its labours and endeavours: and the courage and fidelity of the Brothers especially of Rev Bro. Rupert has much to be commended in this respect. Risking much and running many hazards. Rev. Bro. Rupert, after interviewing many a haughty Japanese officers, managed, with the help of a few Brothers and loyal boys of the school, to remove most of the science laboratory equipment to safer quarters in the parish priest's  house, resorting even to hand-carts which Rev. Bro Rupert had to push along the streets. In many instances, Rev. Bro. Rupert had to dismantle the various fittings  e.g. electrical fittings and pipings himself. The bigger articles in the form of furniture, etc, found harbour in the homes of the boys and friends of the school. All this had to be done gradually and it was not until March 1942 that most of the school laboratory’s equipment was salvaged: and in a small out-house, 10 ft sq in the Church compound. Rev. Bro. Rupert set up his laboratory by the kindness of Father Francois, the parish priest. Instruction in science was then given to several boys in spite of the fact that the Japanese might swoop down on them at any time. This, however did not continue throughout the Japanese occupation."

( Diary entry by Bro Patrick)