Saint Ignatius College (Zimbabwe)
St. Ignatius Chishawasha | |
---|---|
Ignem Mittite In Terram Set the World on Fire | |
Location | |
Chishawasha, Mashonaland Zimbabwe | |
Coordinates | 17°27′S 31°08′E / 17.45°S 31.13°E |
Information | |
Type | Private, boarding |
Established | 1962 |
Headmaster | L. Madyangove |
Gender | All-male high school, coed A-levels |
Age | 12 to 18 |
Pupils | 400 |
Houses |
Kagwa Lwanga Mkasa |
Aerial view | Aerial view of St Ignatius |
Website | IgnatiusChishawasha |
St. Ignatius College is a Jesuit, Catholic, boarding high school near Harare, Zimbabwe. It is all-male in forms one through four and coeducational for A-Level students. It is a linked to St Ignatius' College in England in its founding (1962) and has continuing links to St Augustine, Edinburgh.
History
St. Ignatius College was founded by the Jesuit Fathers after they had seen the need to educate marginalised black students. According to Sister Stephanie, IBVM, (a founding member of Mary Ward House) the black community faced a number of challenges due to the draconian policies of the colonial racist regime. The college was meant to cater for the educational needs of the marginalised black people.
The first building to be constructed was the administration block in 1961 which housed the Jesuits before the construction of the Community House later in 1967. The next buildings to be constructed were the ZJC Block and Junior House. In 1967 the St. Ignatius College Chapel was constructed.[1]
There is a scramble to get into the 6th form at St,Ignatius, as many of the top students in the nation apply.[2] Also, there are various exercises the boys participate in to exemplify the Jesuit goal of training men and women for others.[3][4]
Notables
Sister Stephanie helped establish Mary Ward in 1967 and remained teaching at St.Ignatius for over 40 years. At the start French and Latin were taught and clubs included drama, canoeing, and Boy Scouts.[1]
Long-standing teachers include Fr. Gregory Xavier Croft, S.J., who spent who developed science education throughout Zimbabwe. He co-authored Science for Zimbabwe, one of the first science textbooks written after independence in 1980. He retired from Ignatius in 1991 but continued teaching physics at St. Alberts in Mount Darwin, Zimbabwe, and St. Boniface in Magunje. He died peacefully in Garnet House, Harare, in 2000.
Fr. Anthony Watsham, S.J., was a biology teacher and world authority in entomology. He spent much of his free time in the company of animals, dogs, birds, and a baboon named 'Bibiana'. A painter of great imagination, he decorated the Jesuit house at St. Ignatius with abstract art. One of his greatest academic achievements was the study and documentation of the parasitic wasps that live inside figs.[5] He was awarded an honorary life membership of the Entomological Society of Southern Africa[6] and became a Fellow of the Royal Society in London.[7]
Notable alumni include Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku, Dr. Petina Gappah (an international law expert based in Switzerland and award winning writer of An Elegy for Easterly),[8] and Jesuit Fr. Chiedza Chimhanda (rector of St George's College, Harare).[1]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 History. Accessed 5 July 2016.
- ↑ NewsDay. Accessed 5 July 2016.
- ↑ Religion in Zimbabwe. Accessed 5 June 2016.
- ↑ For others. Accessed 5 July 2016.
- ↑ Watsham. Accessed 5 July 2016.
- ↑ Rostrum. Accessed 5 July 2016.
- ↑ Religion in Zimbabwe. Accessed 5 July 2016.
- ↑ Gappah, Petina (2009), An elegy for Easterly : stories, Faber and Faber, ISBN 0-86547-906-2
Coordinates: 17°45′S 31°13′E / 17.750°S 31.217°E