The Custom – Shirt for New Year

It was a day of great joy for all the boys in the school. It was the last day 
of the academic year. One last examination paper remained to be answered. And 
that would be all. It was a half-day session.

The previous night all the boarders would pack their suitcases ready to load 
them the next afternoon straight on the bus. As the last paper was answered, 
which would always invariably be “Religion” , there were wide smiles on all the 
students' faces.

The buses were slowly climbing up the hill to take the boarding students home 
for their summer holidays. These transport buses were especially hired to take 
them to their respective home districts of Goa. The engines of the buses 
laboured very hard to climb the slopes of the spiral road up the hill. They 
could be heard right up in the classrooms just below the chapel.

Felicio was a dayscholar. He did not have any packing to do or a bus to board. 
He lived in Guirim. He had just to walk home two miles away.Felicio wrote the 
last few lines on his answer paper. He had almost finished writing his paper. 
As glanced towards the side doors the school clerk walked into the class. The 
clerk then turned towards him and whispered in his ear: “The Principal would 
like to see you after the exam is over”.“Alright, Sir,” Felicio replied.

The clerk walked away and Felicio wondered: Why would the principal want to see 
him? He was worried. He could almost hear his heart beating faster. Suddenly, 
he seemed to have lost his smile. Did he do anything wrong? Would he be 
punished? Did he fare badly in the subjects that he had already answered? He 
had no idea. He was anxious to wish goodbye to fellow students and then head 
home. He wondered whether he could do that before meeting the Principal.

Felicio was afraid that his class students might leave before he got back from 
the Principal's office. So he hastily said good-bye to all his friends wishing 
them happy holidays and ran up the several flights of steps to the Principal’s 
office on the top of the hill. He stopped suddenly a few feet from the door. 
Gasping for breath and trying to get back his composure, he tried to remain as 
calm as he could.“Hello there young lad, come in” the Principal said as they 
boy felt his knees tremble. “Here’s something for you”.

What is it? Is it a gift, Felicio wondered. “Take this, it is a gift from us” 
said the Principal. "Open it", he continued. His hand shaking, Felicio opened 
it unsteadily. There is was. He could not believe his eyes. It was a pair of 
shirts and short trousers that made part of the set of the school uniform for 
the new year.

“This is for you to use in the next academic year”, the Principal said. “Tell 
your mother that it is a gift from the Fathers and Brothers at Monte. I know 
that your mother works very hard. I know sometimes its is hard for her to pay 
your fees. It breaks my heart to see some boys being sent home at times on 
account of the delay in payment of school fees”. “Tell her not to have any 
uniforms tailored for you during the holidays for the next year”. “You have 
done quite well this year my boy”. "Keep on studying hard".

The young boy almost froze as he stood there in silence. Tears ran down his 
cheeks. He thought about his mother. She would be very happy to hear the news. 
He wanted to fly home if he could to tell her about what the Principal had 
said.So, anxious as he was to get home, he thanked the Principal, shook hands 
and was ready to leave. “Don’t go”, he said, “here’s something especially for 
you from me. It is a water-colour box. I know you like to draw and paint. I am 
sure you will like it. Have a nice painting done during you holidays for me. It 
will look nice on that blank wall there in my office”, the Principal joked. The 
boy shook hands, almost genuflected and hurried down the slope clutching his 
prized possession, out of the courtyard of the Principal's office.

The boarding students were all ready to leave for home. There were a lot of 
buses, a lot of din; their drivers trying hard in negotiating to reverse and 
park on the steep slopes. There was hardly any place for them to make a turn 
and head back. Some big boys helped in placing bricks behind the tires - 
chocking them to prevent them from rolling back.As the buses started to leave, 
some of the boys threw confetti, cut out of old excercise books, through the 
windows of the buses. Felicio waved out to his friends. “Good-bye”, he shouted 
above the roar of the whirring engines. “Enjoy your holidays”. “See you in 
June, best of luck in the results of the finals", someone said behind him.


Was Felicio forgetting something? Of course he was. How could he forget. So 
then he ran to the school clerk who had whispered the Principal’s message in 
his ear just a while ago. After he had thanked the clerk and told him how 
frightened he was, he told Felicio that he would like to share with him a 
little secret that it was customary for the school to present a set of school 
uniform to deserving students who worked hard and whose parents could barely 
afford their school expenses. He was touched by the clerk'smessage. He looked 
back as he walked out of his office, still dazed from what had transpired a 
little while ago.

Felicio started his journey home. He walked faster than usual on that hot April 
afternoon. It was quite a distance but on that day he felt that had walked much 
less than the actual two miles he did everyday along the winding path through 
the fields and villages. As he briefly stopped and turned to look at his alma 
mater high up on the hill behind him, he could still read the famous capital 
letters right across the façade: ST. ANTHONY'S HIGH SCHOOL. He paused for a 
moment, turned and started walking homeward again.

Felicio's mother would be waiting for him to have lunch together that 
afternoon. She would probably cook something special today for sure, he mused 
to himself. He too would have his own special surprise for her. Would she cry 
like he did when he would show her the gift? Would she have tears of joy when 
he tells her what the Principal had said? All these thoughts raced quickly 
through his mind as he walked home. He tried to shield his face from the 
blinding glare of the mid-day afternoon sun with the palm of his hand. The hot 
earth pierced through the soles of his feet. In a short while he would be home. 
No more school for some time.

In the distance Felicio could see his mother, sitting outside in the shade of 
the guava tree, on the low stool at the back of his house, waiting for him. The 
boy wondered whether his mother would guess what the packet he was carrying in 
his hand contained. She probably would not, he thought. He walked slowly 
towards her holding the packet behind his back. He handed it to her and asked 
her to open it.

Felicio's mother carefully opened it, showing a big surprised look on her face. 
She could definitely not believe her eyes when she saw that it was the uniform 
for the next year.  “May God bless the Capuchin Friars of Monte de Guirim”, she 
said. Tears rolled down her cheeks as she hugged and kissed her son.

And Felicio said to himself: “I knew my guess would be right! I was certain my 
mother would cry!”

She did cry. I know that for sure because I was there. She was my mother. I was 
that boy.

Excerpted from:
Goa - Memories of My Homeland
(Poems and Stories)
by Tony Fernandes 
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