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Showing posts with label Penang Free School. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penang Free School. Show all posts

Friday, 14 October 2016

Penang Free School: Learning religiously - without religion !

 
Penang Free School: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penang_Free_School

Penang Free School, the first English school in the country, turns 200 in a week. It was, and remains, a school for the brave and the true. And for the Free.


WE’RE on the cusp of history. A week from today, the oldest English school in the country, Penang Free School, will turn 200. It’s a proud moment for the school. And for yours truly. I spent my formative years in that school.

It’s the kind of school that cliches are made off – you can take a student out of Free School but you can never take the Free out of the students. We will always be Old Frees.

The old boys are already celebrating. There have been golf tournaments, dinners and get-togethers lined up. There was a 73-day, 20,000km road convoy from Penang to Dittisham, Devon, in Britain, where the founder of PFS, Reverend Robert S. Hutchings, was born.

The six-vehicle convoy left on July 17 and arrived at its destination on Oct 3.

The huge school field is now covered with canopies waiting for the thousands of Old Frees who will gather there on Oct 21 to celebrate the grand old dame’s birthday.

The field is one of the things most Old Frees would remember. It was both a blessing and a bane. With two football fields, three hockey pitches and a cricket pitch, it was great for outdoor activities.

The track around the field was good training ground for long-distance runners. But for the errant ones in school, it was a pain. The teachers made you run around the field as punishment. If you were not athletically inclined, that was punishing indeed.

But it was the teachers who made the school wonderful. We had some of the best and most dedicated teachers – not just in the subjects they taught but also in sports.

There was Wilson Doss, the cricket-mad teacher. He played for Selangor, Penang and even in international matches and he would try to get every lad in the school to give the sport a try-out.

I have to admit to being an absolute flop at it. With only the experience of playing “rounders” with the neighbourhood gang, I would hurl the cricket bat away as I ran. And Mr Wilson would growl.

There was N. Vallupillay, the hockey coach with the kindest of souls. He, too, would try to get everyone to play hockey and among the top players he nurtured was former national captain Ow Soon Kooi.

With Vallupillay at the helm, PFS was the state’s school hockey champion for 20 years from 1964 to 1984. The rivalry with St Xavier’s Institution and the Bukit Mertajam High School was intense, sometimes even rowdy.

Vallupillay then moved to George Town Secondary School and voila, that school became another hockey powerhouse in the state.

Then, there was Johnny Ooi, yet another teacher who was very much into hockey and who took over when Mr Vallupillay left.

Ooi Bee Seng was the basketball man. Under his watch, more basketball courts were built and more of the students turned to the game.

Nai Bej Sararaks was the athletics guy. Every now and then, he would bundle a gang of us into his beat-up jalopy and drive us off to training. The one I vividly remember was when we ran up Penang Hill from what Penangites know as Moongate.

The man waited at the bottom of the hill as the bunch of us ran up to the top of the hill and later scrambled all the way down. He was there with some juice before taking us all back to the school.

There was no need then for sports schools or schools of excellence. The teachers delivered. It’s been some years but I believe the teachers in the school are still a dedicated bunch.

But the real wonder of the school is the belief on which it is built – that it should be free from religion and open to all.

It’s a very strange thing. At a time when almost all education was under the care of priests (or brothers), there was one Rev Hutchings who did not want to impose his religious beliefs on the local populace.

When Hutchings first petitioned for a “free school”, his aim was to provide a school to educate, feed, and clothe orphans and poor children. It wasn’t about religion – only about education.

Yes, there was a bit of “free” in the financial sense. Only those who could afford it were asked to pay $3, $2, and $1 per year. Poor children were exempted.

The country has come a long, long way from then. Education standards have slumped. We have been dithering over the direction we want to take. Sports in schools is no longer a big thing. Few teachers believe in the power of sports.

Instead, religion has come into schools in a big way. There is a lot of emphasis on religious education and rituals, causing our children to drift apart from one another.

There really is a need for more new “free” schools – schools where education and sports are where the emphasis is.

 
Why Not? By Dorairaj Nadason is The Star’s Executive Editor.

The writer, who can be reached at raj@thestar.com.my, still salutes the gates of the school when he drives by. She is, after all, alma mater – the mother who nurtured him.

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Friday, 11 January 2013

Remembering a plague fighter from Penang, Dr Wu Lien-Teh

A DELEGATION of 18 people from Penang will be heading to China to attend a commemorative symposium on legendary plague fighter Dr Wu Lien-Teh who was born in Penang.

Distinguished scientist: Dr Wu, aged 77, in a photo taken in Cambridge, England, in 1956

Led by Datuk Dr Lee Kah Choon, the delegates will comprise members from the state government, investPenang, Penang Global Tourism, Penang Medical College and the newly formed Dr Wu Lien-Teh Society of Penang.

The symposium will be held from Jan 18 to Jan 20 and it will be hosted by The First Hospital of Harbin Medical University in Heilongjiang, China, along with the third Boreal Congress of Cardiology.

The event will also see participants from various organisations, medical professionals, private individuals and also members of the Old Frees’ Association.

Medical reformer: Dr Wu (fourth left, front row) working with the Russians during an epidemic in 1921 Medical reformer: Dr Wu (fourth left, front row) working with the Russians during an epidemic in 1921
 
“The conference will focus on Dr Wu’s great sacrifices as well as his principles and philosophies that have survived until the present day,’’ said Dr Wu Lien-Teh Society of Penang president Datuk Dr Anwar Fazal.

He said they would also promote the state in multiple ways during the visit including tourism, medical health and educational opportunities.

“We will also propose Penang as the next venue for the Dr Wu Lien-Teh and Global Health Symposium in 2014,’’ he added.

Born on March 10, 1879, Dr Wu was one of the few recipients of the prestigious Queen Victoria’s scholarship in Malaya at Emmanuel College.

Among his awards were the Cheadle gold medal for clinical medicine and the Kerslake scholarship in pathology.

After furthering his studies at the School of Tropical Medicine in Germany and the Pasteur Institute in France, he returned to Malaya in 1903 to take up a post at the new Institute of Medical Research in Kuala Lumpur.

Dr Wu was very outspoken in his opposition to gambling and opium trade back then and served as the president of the Penang Anti-Opium Association.

His academic achievements and reputation caught the eye of Yuan Shih-kai of the Chinese Government in Beijing who offered him a post as the deputy director of the Imperial Army Medical College in Tientsin in 1907.

Dr Wu received recognition as a plague fighter who saved thousands of lives in north-east China in the early 1910s after an outbreak.

His new scientific approach prevented the killer disease from spreading.

In 1937, his villa in Shanghai, China, was bombed by the Japanese.

He then moved to Ipoh to resume his medical work.

Dr Wu was the first ethnic Chinese nominated for the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1935.

He died aged 81 after a stroke on Jan 21, 1960.

His death came barely a week after he moved into his new house in Penang for his retirement.

Until today, Dr Wu’s accomplishment is still recognised at the Penang Free School which named one of its school houses after him, bearing the green colour.

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