The Sacred Heart of Jesus High Schools and their Founders - PART 1
 
Anjuna is laced with 26 wards – one of them is GAUMVADDI. It’s a unique ward 
because it is also known by nine other ward names as follows: 
 
1) BAIRO SAM JÕAO or St. John’s ward named after the patron of the ward, Sam 
João Batista or St. John the Baptist. Some old-timers still address their 
letters to their loved ones at Rua de Sam João or St. John Street/Road, and the 
postman has no problem in delivering them to the individuals in Gaumvaddi. 
 
(2) GAUMCHI-ARADDI
 
All the houses located by the foot of the Gaumvaddi hill on the east side come 
under ‘Gaumchi-Araddi’ - my house is one of them.
 
(3) VOILO VADDO
 
The Prabhus or Porobos, who were the original moradores (residents) or 
ganvkars, selected the prime elevated sites for residential purposes and they 
called this belt of dry uplands ‘Voilo Vaddo.’ 
 
They then assigned various sectors in the Gaumvaddi to hereditary occupational 
groups and thus created a small scale industry within Gaumvaddi. 
 
The Anjunkars were an agricultural community. They were and are still a 
hard-working people. We cultivated paddy fields, nachnno or millet and grew 
home produce like onions, chilies, vegetables, etc. and supported our families. 
For centuries, Anjuna met all her requirements locally - it was an independent 
and self-sufficient village. 
 
(4) POROBO VADDO
 
The belt of dry uplands is also known as ‘Porobo vaddo’ because most Prabhus or 
Porobos lived and still live there. 
 
(5) FOGÊR VADDO
 
The main profession of Porobos in Voilo Vaddo was to make explosives and 
fireworks; hence, it came to be known as ‘Fogêr Vaddo.’
 
Birth marks the beginning of the reign of the god of fireworks. Thereafter, 
every event in the life of the people, public and private, sacred and profane, 
Hindu and Christian is loudly proclaimed and celebrated through the voice of 
gunpowder.
 
Until the late Eighties, two of the descendants of the ‘Fogêr’ community, 
popularly known as “Thontto Purso, Fogêr” (lame Purshotam, the manufacturer of 
artificial fireworks) – his full  name was Purshotam Sadashiv Porob - he was 
called thontto or lame because one of his legs was deformed - he was a polio 
victim, and his younger brother, Mungês or Mangesh – his full name was Mangesh 
Sadashiv Porobo, known to all as “bhero Munges” (deaf Mangesh) because he was 
hard of hearing, were in great demand to make fireworks for the feasts and 
other occasions in Anjuna, Parra, Arpora, Nagoa, Calangute, Candolim, Assagao, 
Siolim, Pernem, Mapusa, etc. 
 
Whether they are kids, youngsters, or older people, everybody enjoys the 
fireworks like crackers, skyrockets, petards, small and big gornal (hand made 
grenades,) twinkling anars, furious rockets, vibrant sparklers, cyclonic ground 
discs (phirki), etc.  
 
Fireworks, including "kombo ani kombi" (hen and rooster) at the Vespers, was an 
added attraction because of which people made it a point to attend the Vespers 
however busy they might have been. It was so famous and in demand in the days 
gone by that it was always kept as the last item of the evening. 
 
With the brass band in the background, Mungês would start firing petards, 
gornal, etc. and treat our eyes to the jet power of rockets, which kept on 
ascending into the sky before bursting into thousands of colored sparks, which 
ultimately landed in adjoining fields. 
 
Our joy knew no bounds when Mungês introduced the exhibition of the Catherine 
Wheel, to culminate finally in the incandescence of the ‘Gate’. People would 
not move from the site until they witnessed the kombo-kombi fireworks display. 
 
When the kombo-kombi was lit, those present said in utter astonishment:  
“Polloiat, kombo-kombi kaiborim distat!” (Look at the beautiful rooster-hen!) 
The hen lastly laid luminous eggs at which people remarked: “Polloiat, kombi 
kaiborim bhangarachim tantieam ghalta!” (Look, the hen is laying beautiful 
golden eggs!) And that would mark the end of the fireworks display. It was a 
bonanza for our eyes and ears. 
 
On the feast day, too, fireworks added worldly (not spiritual) colors to the 
celebrations. 
 
Thontto Purso and Mungês were so safety conscious that they built four small 
rooms at Toleacho Bandh (strip of land beside the pond) and stored their 
gunpowder there, away from residential area. 
 
Just as rice, wheat, millet, lentils, etc. were ground at home on a “dantem” 
(millstone,) they hired a couple of women to grind gunpowder for them on two 
“dantim.”
 
One of the rooms at Toleacho Bandh was solely used to prepare fireworks. 
Finished fireworks were dried and stored in a separate room. 
 
Bhero Mungês passed away on August 15, 1988. He was 88 years old. Exactly a 
year later, Thontto Purso passed away on August 15, 1989. He was 98 years old. 
 
Today you get a variety of fireworks but they are not manufactured manually – 
they are factory-manufactured. 
 
Did you know that the fogêr or manufacturers of artificial fireworks in Voilo 
Vaddo treated people for burns? Yes, they treated all degrees of burns at home. 
They mixed gunpowder with coconut oil and prepared some kind of ‘pomada’ 
(ointment), which was applied liberally over the burns and, voilá, burns were 
cured within a week or more depending on the gravity of burns – without getting 
admitted in a hospital! 
 
(6) SONAR VADDO
 
A slice of Voilo Vaddo is also known as Sonar Vaddo and that’s because the 
sonar or goldsmith came from this part of Anjuna. It is believed that their 
workmanship was of a very high quality - some of the best goldsmiths came from 
Gaumvaddi. The Chodankar family still reside here as descendants of the 
original race. 
 
(7) PADR AGNELO VADDO
 
Recently, the Sonar vaddo is also known as Padr Agnel vaddo because, as we all 
know, Ven. Fr. Agnelo was born in Sonar Vaddo/Voilo Vaddo.
 
(8) SOKOILO VADDO. 
 
All houses in the low lying belt come under Sokoilo vaddo.
 
(9) PEDRO BHATT
 
In Sokoilo Vaddo, we have ‘Pedro Bhatt’ and this is where, in the 19th century, 
a great person, Jacob Conceição de Souza, was born to Caetano Bernardo de Souza 
and Dulcina de Souza, who produced sons like Walter and Ligouri, who were 
far-sighted visionaries and pioneers of education. 
 
The 19th century produced noteworthy sons in Gaumvaddi, but God’s greatest gift 
to us was Ven. Fr. Agnelo (January 21, 1869 - November 20, 1927). 
 
For centuries, Anjuna was true to its old adage: “Anjuna fuddem ganv nam ani 
Anjunkarank nanv nam” (Anjuna lacks a village beyond it; and its people lack 
any fame for themselves). It was dormant till the middle of the last century, 
when it suddenly shot to world fame from the late Sixties because of the 
hippies who made it their paradise. 
 
The 19th century was the era when transportation hardly existed and bullock 
carts creaked and rumbled over Anjuna’s pot-holed roads. 
 
Primary institutions set up by the Portuguese to formally educate people were 
not sufficient to cater to their needs neither were they accessible to all. 
 
This gave rise to private institutions and individuals shouldering the burden 
of teaching and educating the Goans. 
 
These institutions prepared and trained students for the primary and secondary 
exams besides training people in different professions. 
 
Primary education was made compulsory by a decree of the Government and the 
teaching had to be exclusively administered in Portuguese or 
Portuguese-Marathi, Portuguese-Gujrati and Portuguese-Urdu combinations – the 
English language was nowhere on the scene! 
 
English education in Goa was started by Mr. William Robert Lyons, a Jesuit 
Scholar, popularly known as Fr. Lyons, when he founded a school in Arpora in 
1887 and named it ‘St. Joseph’s High School’. During colonial times it was 
known as ‘Collégio de Arpora S. José.’ 
 
The establishment of an English school was a turning point in the economic and 
social set up of Goa. 
 
The prevailing conditions at that time had forced many a Goan to leave their 
birth place in search of greener pastures elsewhere. The youth were anxious to 
learn English in order to make a living in the then British India and British 
East Africa. 
 
On the other hand, education beyond the primary level had become the sole 
privilege of the affluent Goans who could afford to send their sons to Panjim 
or outside Goa. A few of the middle class and hardly any of the poor class 
could afford to do the same to improve their state in life. 
 
Employment opportunities during the Portuguese regime, especially to those who 
learned English, were next to none. This is why Goans who had studied English 
had to migrate and take up jobs in the neighboring cities like Bombay, Poona, 
Belgaum, Baroda, Ahmedabad, etc. 
 
Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the exodus to British overseas 
territories was in full swing. So, the desire to learn English increased. 
Consequently, small English teaching schools mushroomed all over Anjuna village 
but all of them vanished except one in Gaumvaddi. 
 
Jacob Conceição de Souza from Gaumvaddi was one of those Goans who had to leave 
Goa and take up employment in Belgaum.  He was employed in a post office where 
he worked his way up and became a Postmaster. 
 
We do not know how much Jacob studied but the very fact that he returned home 
from Belgaum as a retired Postmaster, proves that he was an educated person. 
 
He received a monthly pension of Rs.75, which his grandson, Archibald, 
collected for him from the Mapusa Post Office. 
 
Upon his return home, Jacob set up an English teaching school in his house in 
Gaumvaddi (presently ‘Bougainvillea Hotel - Grandpa’s Inn’, owned by Lucindo 
Faria, son of Phyllis Virginia Faria from Morodd, Mapusa - grandson of 
Alphonsus Ligouri D’Souza,) around the first decade of the 20th century, but 
there are no records to support this fact. 
 
However, Dr. Teresa Albuquerque, a highly reputed historian, writes the 
following in her book: ‘ANJUNA: Profile of a village in Goa’: 
 
“In 1891, we know from an article written by Ambrosio D’Sa in ‘Anglo Lusitano’ 
that an institution called St. Michael’s School was being directed by Cosmos 
Damiao da Cruz at Anjuna. The latter resided at Kumbhar Vaddo and had started 
as a teacher in St. Xavier’s High School, Bombay; and had also been headmaster 
of a school in Igatpuri. St. Michael’s School comprised of six classes manned 
by experienced teachers and it continued till 1900, if not later. Both da Cruz 
and D’Sa taught in the school and very probably ‘Ghirzoo’ assisted them. 
 
>From 1910 to 1914 da Cruz taught in an English-teaching school set up by Jacob 
>D’Souza, a retired Postmaster of Belgaum. The classes were conducted in his 
>house at Ganv vaddi.”
 
Although the school existed in Jacob’s house for over 25 years, sadly this fact 
is not recorded anywhere except in Dr. Teresa Albuquerque’s book. 
 
But if we go by the year 1910 as the inception year of the school, it completes 
one hundred years this year, which is good enough cause to celebrate the first 
centenary of the school. 
 
The school taught only four classes, from the 1st to the 4th Standard. No 
wonder in those days, whenever one talked about educational qualifications, 
they would say: “Chear classi xikop aslear puro!” (Should have studied at least 
four classes!)  
 
The concept of Sacred Heart of Jesus High School was conceived at Jacob’s house 
at Pedro Bhatt in Gaumvaddi.  
 
“JACOB-HANGÊR” (At Jacob’s) 
 
In the past as well as during our childhood, Jacob’s house was known as 
‘Jacob-hangêr’ (at Jacob’s). Later, it came to be known as ‘Edwin-hangêr’ (at 
Edwin’s) because he and his family were the last members to live in that house 
before it was converted into a hotel. 
 
Jacob’s house was one of the larger houses in Gaumvaddi. It comprised of the 
following:
 
Spacious verandah in front and on its left side 
One large entrada or entrance hall
One large sal or sitting room hall (now used as a snooker room)
Four (4) bedrooms, all in a row
One prayer room
One dining room
One kitchen
One storeroom
One passage from the sitting room to the kitchen (now converted into an office)
 
One staircase from the sitting room corner leads to a loft upstairs. It was 
used as a study place by Edwin’s son, Bernard, during examination days; it has 
a wooden floor. 
 
The malli or storey had a window by the roadside, which Lucindo closed because 
of the age-old belief e.g., ‘Anjunant malliechem ghor togonam’ (a storied house 
does not last in Anjuna.) It’s alright though to have a door or window on the 
side; hence, the right side window of the malli has been retained. 
 
As in many old Portuguese houses in Goa, the house has a roz-angnnem (open 
space in the middle of the house), which exists till today but it is now turned 
into a mini garden with flower pots. 
 
There are two L-shaped spacious corridors on the outside of four bedrooms, 
adjoining the roz-angnnem.
 
There was a servants’ quarter behind the house, a firewood store and a chicken 
coop, which were demolished and five new rooms or studio apartments, matching 
the old house, have been built in their place. 
 
On the north side, in line with the compound wall, there were two old-style 
toilets – one for gents and the other for ladies; these were demolished.   
 
There were three iron gates to the compound wall – one front main gate and one 
each on the left and right compound walls. The left compound wall was 
demolished to expand the hotel area. 
 
Now there are only two gates left – the main front gate and the one on the 
right side. These are original gates and they are still in good condition. 
Their existence enhances the beauty of the house/hotel and gives antique 
authenticity to the environment. 
 
The hotel is named ‘Bougainvillea Hotel’ because the compound wall was fully 
covered with bougainvillea. 
 
The logo of the hotel is a ‘volter’ (armchair), which belongs to late Jacob de 
Souza; it’s still there in its original condition.
 
Photo 
 
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/iHi1pFq3FWjYtm400kXNFQ?feat=directlink


The hotel now has a swimming pool and a Yoga Center in one corner of the plot 
close to the main road. Three new rooms or studio apartments have recently been 
built close to the swimming pool, thus bringing the total number of rooms 
available with the hotel to 12.
 
If anyone is looking for a comfortable Portuguese-type house to live in while 
in Anjuna/North Goa, ‘Bougainvillea Hotel - Grandpa’s Inn’ is an ideal place! 
 
Classes were taught in the four bedrooms – now they are hotel room No. 1, 2, 3 
and 4. During the summer, classes were sometimes shifted in the verandah so 
they could enjoy the freshening breeze, as there were no fans in those days. 
 
I did not see Jacob personally but I have seen his photographs at his home (now 
Grandpa’s Inn) and at his granddaughter’s, Phyllis’ residence in Mapusa. Here 
is one of them:  
 

Photo 
 
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/DdkWMfmYQFOz6_N_9kY8Ig?feat=directlink
 
>From left to right (Front row): Sylvia (Walter’s daughter,) Cynthia (Ligouri’s 
>daughter,) Elsie (Ligouri’s wife,) Albertina (Jacob’s wife,) Jacob, Olive 
>(Jacob’s daughter,) Sybil (Edwin’s daughter,) Ivy (Olive’s daughter) 
Children sitting on the ground from left to right: Olga (Ligouri’s daughter,) 
Phyllis (Ligouri’s daughter,) Hazel (Olive’s daughter)
>From left to right (Back row):  Archibald (Walter’s son,) Ligouri, Myrtle 
>(Olive’s daughter,) Edwin, Dr Joseph
 
The elderly from Gaumvaddi and my paternal grandmother, Isabela Fernandes, who 
worked at Jacob’s from the Thirties until she passed away on July 16, 1957, 
told us that Jacob was a gentleman and had a great personality. 
 
Just like my grandfather (died July 23, 1943), who sported white beard and was 
nicknamed “Khaddieo Abreu’ (Bearded Abreu,) by the Abreu family at Sorantto, 
Jacob, too, sported a fully white, flowing beard. They said it was so shaggy 
that one of the little girls from his family sometimes sat in his lap and tied 
it up into bows and plaits! 
 
It has also been related that on one solemn occasion when the Patriarch visited 
the parish, he stopped to marvel at the fine, shining beard that Jacob sported. 
 
Jacob belonged to a bhattkar or landlord family. Bhattkars did not mix up with 
common people. They spent their free time with close relatives and friends who 
were not always there. So, sometimes they felt lonely, and we know loneliness 
is boring. 
 
Whenever Jacob felt bored, he hired one of the persons from the ward to talk to 
him and pass his time. Jacob relaxed in an armchair and made the person sit on 
a stool in the verandah. The person then talked to him and gave him all the 
news from the village and beyond! 
 
On Sundays, Jacob went to Church in a “boilanchi gaddi” (oxen-ridden carriage). 
The priest would start Sunday mass service only after Jacob’s carriage arrived 
in the Church compound. He knew Jacob was on his way to Church or nearing it 
from the jingling sound created by jingles in the neck of oxen. In the absence 
of clocks/watches, some Gaumvaddi people depended on the jingling sound of 
Jacob’s carriage to help them get to Church in time.
 
                                                                                
                ……………..To be continued
 
Moi-mogan,
 
Domnic Fernandes
Anjuna, Goa
Mob: 9420979201                                           

Reply via email to