I cannot vouch for this narration of a slice of Bombay Catholic history, but it 
is so interesting, it’s certainly worthwhile repeating with due credit to the 
writer

ST. MICHAEL CHURCH, MAHIM --
A LEAF FROM HISTORY.

Once upon a time the city of Mumbai was made up of seven lush, green islands. 
Mahikavati or  Mahim was one of them. Over time, Mahim was inhabited by Hindus 
and Muslims. In the year 1534 the Portuguese arrived and took a great fancy for 
the island. With them came the first missionaries...The Franciscans. They were 
the first to build two churches in the area. The first being our very own San 
Miguel Church  now St. Micheal’s  Church of Upper Mahim or St. Michael’s in 
1585 and second was  Our Lady of Salvation in  1595 in, Lower Mahim, now 
renamed Dadar. There are conflicting dates regarding the actual year the 
foundation of our church was laid. 1512, 1534, 1540, 1585. From this one fact 
becomes clear. The church was indeed built in the   16th Century by the 
Portuguese and  it is the first one built in Mumbai .

This is an early description of our church by the Gazetteer of Bombay City and 
Island, "The San Miguel Church of Upper Mahim, was built probably in I540”, 
built at the northern extremity of the island, very near the creek that 
separated Mahim from Bandra.  And a certain Mr. Burnell, a visitor to Mahim, 
wrote in 1710 describing the island and the Church as follows: “On the 
northwest point of the island is Mahim seated, being a pretty large town and 
hath an indifferent Buzar, the buildings being brick and covered with pautile".

According to Fr Meersman, the Franciscan historian (I957:6I), "The church of St 
Michael appears in 1585 as a fully functioning mission station.From 
circumstantial evidence it can be concluded that Mahim was the most important 
and the most advanced area among the islands of Bombay. The Portuguese 
commercial and missionary activities must have started in Mahim even before 
1534 and there must have been a mission station in Mahim from the beginning of 
the sixteenth century.

An English man who came to Mumbai on behalf of Charles the 11 or England 
wrote,“Mahim is the best part of the Islands and the Portuguese think it too 
good for our King's Majesty”. However the British managed to take over the 
Island city, with the advent of the East India Company in 1663. St Micheals 
must have been then progressed with  the English.

Mahim however, came into serious difficulties during the Sidi War in Bombay in 
I687. They Sidis originally hailing from Abyssinia had settled down in 
Janjiraas. Aurangazeb encouraged the Sidis to attack Bombay. They landed at 
Sewri and marched towards Mazagaon. Emboldened by the weak resistance of the 
English army, the Sidis planned plunder and rapine on a large scale, landed in 
Mahim and destroyed and burned the houses on the Mahim Island and St Michael's 
church as well.

But, the Franciscans soon renovated the church as only the roof and the doors 
were burnt down.This is a description of  the church  I7I0 by one of the 
visitors, “by the riverside fronting the Mandove stands a large and beautiful 
church being a Convent of the Franciscans, with a large verandah before the 
portal and at a small distance on the road a large wooden cross set in a 
brickwork pedestal".

The Franciscans remained in charge of the parish of St Michael till 1720,when 
they were expelled from Bombay by the British for tampering with the loyalty of 
the Roman Catholics of Bombay.

With the approval of the Holy See in 1720, the Apostolic Vicar General of the 
Grand Moghul, who was an Italian bishop, took charge of the spiritual welfare 
of the Catholics of Bombay and its dependencies, after a pledge to obedience 
and loyalty to His Britannic Majesty.

In 1794, the four Bombay parishes were divided. St Michael's Church at Mahim 
was the second church chosen by the Vicar-Apostolic, the first being that of 
Esperance at Boribunder (1570) which was later shifted and named The Holy Name 
Cathedral. As such, St Michael's Church at Mahim was under the jurisdiction of 
the Vicars Apostolic for 59 years. Thereafter St Michael's Church and Parish 
came under the jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Goa (Padroado) until 1928 when 
the double jurisdiction came to a happy end.

There were eight vicars between 1857 and 1903. At the turn of the century Fr 
Sequeira, who was in charge of St. Michael’s  extended the sanctuary and 
erected the main altar and the two side altars. Fr Domingo Bernadino Vieira 
demarcated the vast landed properties of the church and built boundary walls to 
prevent trespass or misappropriation. Fr Bernardo  Francisco Mendonca developed 
the school and started the High School. Fr B F D’Silva built the new school 
building on the side of the main road. He brought the land adjoining the church 
property and built houses for parishioners on a reasonable rental basis, known 
as St Michael's Colony. An oratory was built near this colony on the side road 
where to this day mass is sung once a year.This oratory was built with monetary 
funds from the East Indian Death Benefit Fund. Fr B F D'Silva also extended the 
church building by adding a spacious porch in front of the church.

Great progress was made during the tenure of Monsignor George Fernandes and Fr 
Edward Placidus Fernandes who began the Perpetual Novenas to Our Mother of 
Perpetual Help. Monsignor George Fernandes, the rector and parish priest of St 
Michael’s church from 1950-1962 began a congregation for nuns known as the 
“Poor Sisters of our Lady” (PSOL).

A devotee said, "The picture of Our Mother of Perpetual Help has a special 
aura. One glimpse of it is all it takes to experience a thrill and a joy which 
cannot be described in words,” The old church was narrow. It could house only 
two rows of pews. It had a side porch near the grotto. In the late 1960s, the 
porch collapsed. The old structure walls were left inside, while a new, modern, 
spacious and airy one was constructed outside and was completed in l973 to 
commemorate the Silver Jubilee of Our Lady of Perpetual Help novenas. 

Today , St Michael's church at Mahim is simple and solemn, large yet intimately 
prayerful in atmosphere, a 'populist' church in the best sense of the word. The 
Church is close to the sea with a fishing village nearby but is almost in the 
market-place amidst crowds with the main road buzzing with heavy traffic. It 
has no parking space for devotees and no aesthetic beauty but is geographically 
and strategically positioned. As such this arterial route is often a conduit of 
cultural transmission.

Yes, St Michael's is a city shrine almost in the centre of Mumbai, i.e., the 
end of the city and the beginning of the suburbs. With the opening up of many 
residential sub-divisions and industrial areas in the northern part of the city 
and beyond, Mahim has become one of the busiest transportation hubs in Mumbai.

Earlier St Michael's church had a Catholic population of over 13,000. Presently 
the Catholic population is only 4800. Today,St Michael's church is managed by 
the Archdiocese of Bombay under the direction of the Cardinal. The Parish 
priest and his assistants outline the policy parameters and execute the 
day-to-day management of the church affairs. The employees and volunteers work 
with extraordinary, exemplary zeal to ensure maximum convenience to the 
devotees who throng there every Wednesday.

In a fast-paced city like Mumbai it is heartening to witness the shrine filling 
and emptying itself every half-hour with the crowds cascading like a flood unto 
the main road, often disrupting traffic and reminding office-goers who traverse 
through the main artery of Mumbai that it is Wednesday - Novena Day.

St Michael is the Archangel warrior, the commander-in-chief of the heavenly 
hosts, the Prince of angels and the Protector of the Church. In Hebrew ( 
MiCchaCel) signifies, “Who is like God". His name was the battle-cry for the 
good angels when they drove Satan from Heaven. He is the guardian, comforter 
and protector of people in times of sorrow and conflict. He has indeed 
protected our church for centuries.

Wish you a Happy Feast and may the blessing of our Mother of Purpetual Succor 
guard and protect you.
 
Godfrey Pimenta
Vice President

BOMBAY EAST INDIAN ASSOCIATION..

Roland.
Toronto.

Reply via email to