05 October 2013

A tribute to Father Pat.
Class of 85' Silver Jubilee Reunion

I am deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Fr Patrick D’Lima, SJ,
Long-time former Vice-Principal of our beloved St Paul’s High School, Belgaum.
My abiding memory of Fr Pat will be of him running laps of the school ground at dusk. Dressed in shorts, a loose T-shirt and sneakers, he seemed tireless, going at a steady, if not brisk pace. It was a simple routine, yet it illustrated the kind of man he was: persistent, hard working, setting an example, leading by example. Some of us who lived in Camp would join him on his run, and although he was in his 50s by then, we teenagers struggled to keep up with him.
Fr Pat was a keen sportsman, handy at hockey and football, and by some accounts even basketball, despite his short stature. He was a shrewd observer, and standing in a corner near the school office during assembly, he surveyed all before him with an eagle eye. Nothing escaped his gaze. Arriving late or barefoot attracted strokes of the fair ruler, as did the wrong uniform.
For six years from 1979-85, I was always attracting his attention, most often of the unwelcome kind.
For some reason, I had the feeling that Fr Pat did not like me very much. It didn’t help that I was always getting on his wrong side. When he came to our class, VII C, around 1982 asking for volunteers for bugling, I immediately raised my hand. He responded with equal speed. “Not you, put your hand down,’’ he said sternly. Looking at my skinny frame, he probably thought I would struggle to blow a note.
I was not to be deterred. I went for bugling practice with the rest of the selected candidates anyway. When Fr Pat came around a couple of days later and asked why I was there, the bugling master, a member of the Army band, saved me by telling him I was the best of the lot. So I stayed, and for a few years from then on performed my bugling duties with great pride and not a little arrogance.
I never forgave Fr Pat for making me a reserve player in the victorious Royceton Gomes Memorial Cup team of 1982. When I got the chance to play in one match, for only about five minutes as a substitute for Ivan D’souza, I scored a goal. Such was my anger at being left out of the playing XI.
As class monitor, I was often also the chief troublemaker, frequently inciting the class to shout insults at Fr Pat as he approached the class for his English lesson. He caught me reading a Hardy Boys novel during his class, and I got a good taste of the dreaded biscuit. I might add that it wasn’t the only occasion I tasted it, besides having my ears twisted and squeezed a good number of times.
When I ranked among the top 10 in the school for the 1985 SSLC exam, Fr Pat was genuinely surprised: “I don’t know how you do it,” he said to me.
It was only many years after I had left school that I understood and appreciated Fr Pat’s ability to bring out the best in his students, both in class and on the field. To tutor, mentor, train, inspire, challenge, discipline and reward as required.
As a hell-raising youngster, I delighted in giving him grief. I did not then appreciate, as I do now, the life of sacrifice and hardship that Fr Pat had willingly embraced, so that young fools like me could test his patience and reward him with our thoughtless and stupid antics.
Nearly four years ago, at the Silver Jubilee celebrations of our Class of 1985, I was looking forward to meeting Fr Pat and finally expressing my admiration and gratitude to him. Face to face. Alas, it was not to be. On the morning of the day he was to travel to Belgaum from Pune with some of our classmates, he suffered a fall and twisted his ankle. A group of our Pune-based classmates later went to his living quarters and felicitated him there.
I’m glad at least some of us had the privilege of meeting him one last time. Unfortunately, I was not among them. Chances are, Fr Pat would not even have remembered me. How many thousands, nay tens of thousands like me, would have passed through his tutelage? And owe at least some measure of their success in life to him?
I will never have a chance to tell Fr Pat what a great man he was. That he would already have been told by Him whom Fr Pat served all of his adult life.
R.I.P. Father. Thank you for everything.

 Sanjay J. Bhosale – Class’ of 85,         
 Canberra, Australia
 04/11/2013

                    p.s; Link to My class felicitation of Rev.Fr. Patrick D’lima,

My Class’, had the chance to say Thank You, Fr.


No comments: