By
Avishka Mario Senewiratne
Continued from part 1.
The
British occupy the College
Given the extraordinary
circumstances the country was facing due to the tense Japanese intervention
during World War II, we discussed in the first segment that St. Joseph’s
College had to be given over to the British so that they could station their
Royal Navy in the school premises. It was they who occupied the College during
1942-1946. Part 1 of this series gave a glimpse of how the College functioned
in exile at distant branches in Borella, Homagama, Kelaniya and Gampaha.
Therefore, discussing what the College ‘premises’ went through during this time
is equally important. Young ladies (Wrens) from the lands of our colonists, who
had joined the British Royal Navy, had to come to Ceylon, one of their
best-known colonies, at the height of the worst war in history. Tensions in
Maradana, where the College was located, were not ‘small’ by any means. This was
because the Japanese had attacked Colombo, and the Maradana Railway Station was
significantly damaged. Not much is known about what happened to the College during
the years in question, yet the writer attempts to compile an account based on
limited sources and rare photographs.
Who
were these Wrens?
The Women’s Royal Navy Service popularly
and more officially known as the Wrens were the women’s branch of the British
Royal Navy. They were first formed during WWI in 1917 and disbanded in 1919,
only to be revived in 1939, during the start of WWII. The Wrens mainly
consisted of cooks, clerks, wireless telegraphists, electricians, air mechanics, radar plotters, and code breakers. The witty and popular
slogan used to recruit Wrens in WWII was ‘Join the Wrens and free a man for
the Fleet’. The Wrens were stationed in many of the Colonies the British had.
Ceylon was one of them. Due to the spacious buildings and free space, St.
Joseph’s College seemed ideal to station these young women. Obviously, the gentleman
had to give better quarters to the opposite sex!
Undoubtedly, the College lost some of its
infrastructure during these years. Books in the library and archived documents
seemed to have gone missing. This was once said to me by a senior Josephian.
The College did not have the privilege to inquire into these matters. On the
other hand, the British stationed in the College built several long rooms and
other cabins. The purpose was not an easy one. Some of these wrens had the
decisive role in code-breaking. They had to intercept radio messages from their
rival Japanese and decode them to reveal secret information. These wrens were
no amateurs at the task. One of them, Flora Crossley had trained in code-breaking at Bletchley Park, where Alan Turing operated his Bombe, which
deciphered the German Enigma, saving millions of lives. One could catch a
glimpse of code-breaking by watching the 2014 motion picture, The Imitation Game
Admiral
Somerville celebrates his birthday at St. Joseph’s
|
Admiral Somerville |
Sir James Somerville (1882-1949) was the Commander
in Chief of the British Eastern Fleet. Following the fall of Singapore, he
transferred his fleet to Kenya and Trincomalee, Ceylon. It was under his rule that
the Royal Navy faced a significant loss during the 1942 Easter Sunday raid. However,
with reinforcements, he led an offensive strike on the Japanese-controlled Dutch
East Indies in the spring of 1944. This earned him much respect from the Allied
forces. He visited Colombo that same time. On July 17,
1944 as Somerville turned 62, he decided to have his birthday inspection at St.
Joseph’s College, Colombo 10. This led the way for the capturing of some profoundly
valuable photographs of the Wrens in the College and of course Somerville being
honoured. The Imperial War Museum has safely archived these images.
The tragic end of a glorious life
|
Fr. Maurice Le Goc OMI (1881-1945)
|
The College was hardly open to
anyone outside. The Rector, staff and students had to patiently wait for the war
to end and see the Royal Navy leave St. Joseph’s. However, the British bent
their rules on one occasion. This was to host the funeral of one of Ceylon’s
most loved priests. On March 16, 1945, Fr. Maurice Le Goc was teaching at St.
Bernard’s Seminary, Borella and excused his students that he had to leave early
to celebrate a Benediction Service at St. Bridget’s Convent. A few minutes
later, the unthinkable became a reality. His vehicle had collided with an Auxiliary
Fire Service Tender at Ward Place junction, killing him almost instantaneously.
The whole of Ceylon mourned for the untimely loss of a priest, who had
contributed immensely to the causes of education, agriculture, botany,
theology, astronomy and interreligious harmony in Ceylon. The British too
mourned his loss and invited the Church to host his funeral in the very Chapel
he built in St. Joseph’s College. So great was the gathering at his requiem
mass that not even 1/3 of the crowd could n be contained in the large Chapel.
The rest had to remain outside. His funeral procession was one of the largest,
Colombo had seen during the war years.
To be continued….
Part III will discuss the famous
march of the Josephians from Borella to the College, when the British handed it
over to the students, less than a month before the 50th anniversary
of the establishment of St. Joseph’s.
To read part one: https://tillthemountainsdisappearams.blogspot.com/2022/06/st-josephs-college-during-world-war-ii.html
Bibliography
Blue
and White, 1943
Blue
and White, 1946
Till
the Mountain Disappear, the Story of St. Joseph’s College
The
Ceylon Catholic Messenger, 1945 March issues
The
Times of Ceylon 1944-1945
The
Imperial War Museum website
https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/local-news/womans-shock-discovering-aunt-ww2-2500879
https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/12/a7011712.shtml
I was in that march from Borella to Darley Road, singing the College Anthem all the way.
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