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Fr. Marshall
Moran of Patna Province visited Nepal in October 1949,
and while he was in Kathmandu, the possibility of a Jesuit school in
Nepal had been discussed. In November
1950, General Mrigendra Shamsher Rana, the Director of Public
Education in Nepal, visited Patna to inform Fr. Moran that the
Government of Nepal was interested in a school to be run by the
Jesuits at Godavari. In the winter of 1950-51 Fr. Joseph M.
Egan, the Provincial of Chicago, visited Godavari on the Feast of
the Epiphany, January 6. He found the proposal to open a school at
Godavari was viable and promptly gave his approval. Fr. Moran
together with Frs. Francis Murphy and Ed Saxton arrived in Kathmandu
on June 6, 1951 and proceeded to Godavari. Godavari is about 15 K.M.
outside of Kathmandu.
They brought along with them the
provisions to meet the immediate needs to settle down in Godavari.
Though there were a number of buildings already existing on the
proposed school site, they were not suited for starting a school.
The pioneers underwent a lot of struggles to convert the rooms into
class rooms with amazing speed and efficiency. On July 1, 1951 the
first batch of sixty-five students were admitted into the school at
St. Xavier’s Godavari. As a result of the steady growth of the
number of students, the Primary Section was shifted to Jawalakhel on
9th September 1954. The purpose was to have the primary section at
Jawalakhel and the high school section at Godavari. In the years to
come many more changes were adopted to satisfy the growing demands
of admissions into the Jesuit school. Eventually St. Xavier’s
Jawalakhel became a full-fledged high school and St. Xavier’s
Godavari became fully a primary boarding school that accommodated
the strength of 280 boarders in the course of time. These changes
had their beginnings from the year 1969.
There was some scepticism about the
motives, but the new Government officials were supportive and well
disposed and made informal visits themselves from time to time.
There were changes made to get the older boys more involved
in their local communities and to take advantage of the increasing
opportunities. In Godavari, the junior boarding continued till 1996.
In 1992 the Education Commission of
the Nepal Jesuit Society started discussing how to make St. Xavier`s
Godavari more relevant. In 1996, after long discussion, reflection
and discernment, the Jesuit Fathers of Nepal took four decisions for
Godavari School. The first was that it would go co-ed to show our
concern for girls. Boys AND girls would be admitted in the school.
Second that it would be a neighbourhood school to show our concern
for people around us. The school primarily would take boys and girls
from the Godavari area. Since there are so many good local schools
in different parts of Nepal, they thought that it would no longer
necessary to run a "National" school. Third, to help the students
further, it was decided that Godavari would become a high school.
Because of the limited resources and to achieve the above three
goals it became necessary that the school become a day school, and
the phasing out of the boarding began in 1996. In the year 1996,
after a series of reflections reading the signs of the time, the
Jesuits in the Region made a few major decisions.
1.
The School would go co-ed to show our concern for the girl students.
2. The School would cater to the students of the neighbourhood.
3. St. Xavier’s Godavari would become a high school eventually.
4. The hostel would be phased out completely by the year 2002 to
accommodate only day scholars from the neighbouring villages.
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