EDUCATION: MY STATELY ALMA MATER
The high-ceilinged room with large, imposing windows framed in mahogany wood was a daunting setting for a 10-year-old, sitting alone on one of the wooden desks, taking her entrance test for one the most prestigious schools in Pakistan. At the time, my only concern was to finish the questionnaire in front of me and run out of the room which seemed to have an eerie atmosphere, as if ghosts of students past were mocking my attempt at joining their hallowed ranks.
When the teacher came for the third time to check on my progress, I knew I had taken longer than was normal.
After a shamefully lengthy period when I timidly handed over my paper to Ms Billimoria, the headmistress of the primary section at the time, I felt like an imposter vying for a position for which I was not worthy. While Ms Billimoria had kind, twinkly eyes, I remember her giving me a deep look and saying, “You took your time, child!”
On the occasion of the institution’s centenary, a former student remembers the glorious times spent at Mama Parsi School
In tears on the way back, I told my dad that I never wanted to go to that yellow building again. He, being a parent of the past century, curtly replied, “You make so many careless mistakes in mathematics, you must have done poorly. Now pray that they consider your language skills more when judging your test because entry to Mama Parsi School will be the making of you!”
The blessings of Zarathushtra were probably roaming at large through that majestic edifice that day, for fortune smiled on me, and my parents were called a week later to finish the admission process.
The original yellow limestone building, as it stands today, held its first classes in April 1925, following a steadfast struggle undertaken by its forefathers — Khan Bahadur Ardeshir H. Mama, Nowroji Nusserwanji Pochaji and Seth Eduljee Dinshaw — who invested their time, money and hard work into laying the school’s foundation. A dedicated building for Parsi girls’ education was a dream of these visionary Parsi leaders of the 1900s whose proposals were rejected several times because the Parsi boys’ school — BVS (Bai Virbaijee Soparivala) — took precedence where funds and other resources were concerned.
Mama Parsi Girls School’s 100 years officially began when the perseverance of Jamshed Nusserwanjee Mehta — the first elected mayor of Karachi — was finally rewarded and the school was established in 1918 in a portion of the BVS.
It was the early 1970s when I started at Mama Parsi. At the time, it was the local answer to the finishing schools of the West, as education at Mama School was not restricted to class courses. It was a holistic approach which included instruction in manners and comportment; music and ballet; cooking and laundry; art and needlework, and also competitive sports.