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http://scroll.in/article/755624/mistaken-identity-why-private-schools-in-india-love-to-name-themselves-after-christian-saints

When the principal of a Catholic-sounding school was arrested in Mumbai last 
week, most people assumed it was a Church-run institution headed by a priest. 
The confusion is understandable.Aarefa Johari  · Sep 15, 2015 · 02:30 pmPhoto 
Credit: Shoaib Daniyal79.6KTotal Views On September 11, soon after the 
principal of an institution named St Xavier’s High School wasarrested in Mumbai 
on charges of molesting two boys, some Indians on Twitter began simmering with 
rage. The arrested principal is a man named Rosario Alphonso, and many Twitter 
users took this as an opportunity to unleash a torrent of abuse against 
Christian priests and paedophilia.

A lot of the abuse was channelled through the hashtag #ShameOnJohnDayal, 
specifically targeting journalist and minority rights activist John Dayal who 
had tweeted about the principal’s arrest by asking, who owns the school?

 

Unsurprisingly, many of those who saw news reports on the molestation assumed 
that the school in question – St Xavier’s in Andheri East, Mumbai – is a 
Christian institution whose principal must have been a priest. The assumption 
is not entirely unfounded: most schools run by the Catholic church are headed 
by priests and nuns, and in the past few years, cases of priests getting caught 
for paedophilia have made international headlines.

But in this case, the assumption – and the abuse – was completely off the mark.

As Catholic as it may sound, St Xavier’s High School in Andheri East is 
actually a private school, run by the Ryan Group of educational institutions 
that also include the more well-known franchise of Ryan International Schools 
around the country. The school’s trustees, Grace Pinto and AF Pinto, happen to 
be Christian, but the school itself has no connections with the Church or any 
of its denominations. The principal arrested for molestation is a Christian 
too, but he was not a priest.

Common names

For institutions actually run by Christian church denominations, such cases of 
mistaken identity are a familiar phenomenon. Everywhere across  India, there 
seem to be schools named after popular Christian saints – St Mary’s, St 
Xavier’s, Don Bosco and dozens more. But contrary to expectations, a sizable 
number of them are not the Church-run “convent” schools that they appear to be.

Typically, institutions named St Xavier’s or St Ignatius are run by the 
Jesuits, a Catholic congregation of priests founded by Ignatius of Loyola in 
the 16th century. Don Bosco institutions are run by the Salesians, another 
Catholic congregation.

“But there are many other private Don Bosco schools in India that have nothing 
to do with the Salesians,” said Father Nigel Barrett, the spokesperson for the 
Archdiocese of Bombay, the central body of the Roman Catholic church in the 
city.

In the Mumbai metropolitan region, there are at least eight Don Bosco 
institutions officially run by the Salesian order, but at least four that are 
private and unaffiliated to the Church. Similarly, there Archdiocesan board of 
education runs at least 150 schools in Mumbai and Thane district, but that 
number does not include dozens of other schools named after various “saints”.

“St Xavier’s is a much more common name than Don Bosco among private non-Church 
schools,” said Father Savio Silveira, a Salesian priest at Don Bosco, Matunga.

The Ryan International group, for instance, has at least 10 educational 
institutions named after St Xavier across India, in addition to schools named 
after St Lawrence, St Joseph, St Francis, St Mary and Fr Agnelo.

At times, schools manage to sound like Christian schools even without a 
Christian name. This Hindi-medium school in Uttar Pradesh’s Barabanki district, 
for instance, is named after a 19th century Sufi saint – Haji Waris Ali – but 
the choice of “St” as a prefix instead of “Haji” or “Pir” is telling:

St Waris school in Barabanki. Photo: Shoaib Daniyal
What’s in a name?

For church-run institutes, having multiple namesakes among private schools can 
be a double-edged sword. Getting an English-medium “convent” education has long 
been a goal for middle-class Indians, so private schools named on the lines of 
Christian schools can be seen as an acknowledgement of the success of 
church-run institutes.

The Church sees education as a social mission, "but there are some private 
schools who see it as a business, and they use names of saints because it is 
good for business”, said Barrett. “But the problem arises only when there is an 
issue, like this case of child molestation.”

At times like these, the church and the schools that share the same name are 
dragged into the controversy. But there is little that the church has been able 
to do.

In 2011, Salesian priests filed a case against a private trust in Madhya 
Pradesh for registering and claiming ownership to the “Don Bosco” title, even 
though church-run Don Bosco institutions have been running in India for more 
than 100 years.

Most other times, however, the church merely lets the issue pass. “If there are 
any negative incidents in private schools that share our name, we don’t really 
take any action,” said Silveira. “We put out clarifications only if we get 
calls from the media.”

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