It was 1940, and the Germans had occupied Belgium for a second time in 30 years when Father Sylvester announced to students of the Belgium Mission High School in Dalwal village, that funding for the institution had run out.
Father Sylvester was the principal of the school, which had been established in a small village in the Salt Range in the Chakwal district.
“One morning, Father Sylvester announced the shocking news that Belgium had been overrun by Germany and funds to run the school had been stopped, but he had not bowed down to this challenge,” said former Punjab governor retired Lt Gen Mohammad Safdar, who studied at the Mission High School as a child.
“I am not going to close it down,” Mr Safdar recalled the principal as saying.
At the time, students and villagers had feared the school would close, but the principal not only pulled the institution out of its financial problems, but maintained its standard of education even during difficult times.
Riding his motorcycle – a hallmark of his at a time when no one else had one – Father Sylvester would drive to the nearby villages of Dulmial, Tatral, Waulah and Katas, to raise funds for the school.
“The locals supported him because they considered him to be their hero,” Mr Safdar said.
Father Sylvester was appointed as manager of the school’s Catholic hostel on April 1, 1923, and appointed principal on April 1, 1932.
He served at the school for 36 years – after 28 years, he handed over management of the school to the diocese of Rawalpindi on Nov 1, 1960. During his 36-year stint, Father Sylvester only went on home leave twice.
The construction of mission schools began in Punjab in 1888, when control of the diocese of Lahore, erected by Rome in 1886, was given to Capuchins missionaries, who in turn extended the diocese of Lahore across the Punjab province and the state of Bahawalpur.
The land for the Belgium Mission High School in Dalwal was donated by Raja Shakir Mehdi, an influential villager who coverted to Christianity as a teenager.
Although the school’s main building states that the school was built in 1900, construction on the school began in the last years of the 19th century.
In Capuchins Missionaries in the Punjab (India and Pakistan), co-authors Fidentian van den Brouke and Daniel Suply write that it was Father Godfrey – appointed as apostolic administrator of the diocese and the third bishop of Lahore by Pope Leo XIII in 1893 – who laid the foundation of the school, along with a priest house, chapel and dispensary.
In May 1898, Father Vincent was transferred to the school, where he attempted – unsuccessfully – to open a mission centre.
According to the book, Father Anthon was transferred to the school on Sept 18, 1899, to repair and extend the school building.
“The building of the middle and high schools were blessed by Bishop Pelckmans on January 18, 1900,” the book states.
This would mean that the school originally opened as a primary school, before being upgraded to a middle school in 1903 and a high school in 1905.
On March 1, 1900, Father Matthew was appointed principal, and served there until 1930, aside from a two-year interruption in November 1920, when he was called to Lahore as the rector of a cathedral.