Author: Stanislaus Baptista

  • Matharpacady Rising…

    Matharpacady Rising…

    (A guide to the Guides.  And!!!!!!!  We’ve got a Nostalgia Quizzz! coming up on Saturday, June 27, 2020.  All the clues are hidden here)

    It is a mark of a living organism that it continues to grow and evolve in multiple ways.  Matharpacady is no exception.  Old traditions continue and new ones are being created.  A once East Indian Village continues to accept and integrate brothers and sisters from other communities who over time begin to appreciate its virtues of love and togetherness and peace and quiet.  As well as its seasonal joys…

              

    Heart and Soul

    A sentinel of faith, the Cross of Jesus Christ stands as the ultimate “buckler impenetrable” and refuge in times of trouble. Saved from the Plague with not a single death in the Village the Holy Cross Oratory was built by grateful Villagers in 1875.  It’s undoubtedly one of the most beautiful spots and the emotional centre of the Village.

              

    A Home for the Holy Eucharist

    Peter Miranda. There’s a whole generation of St. Isabel schoolgirls who remember this beloved Principal with great affection.  Nicknamed Pop, Peter was a great patron of the arts.  An avid pianist, Chopin, Mozart, Liszt could be heard pouring out of this house.  His parties were legendary feasts of singing and music.  Many a prize-winning play staged by Matharpacady talent was born in this house. 

              

    The late Abe Samson, Joan D’Souza and Roydon in Day of Atonement at the Rosary Parish Interzonals (Director: Peter Miranda)

    It didn’t take much to convince Peter to stump up for lights, sets and production costs that the impoverished but talented youth couldn’t afford. Noble and generous as the Miranda brothers were, they left the house to serve the community by gifting it to the Blessed Sacrament Fathers.

              

    It’s now renamed Eymard Cottage, and is the Provincialate (HQ) of the SSS Order, a Blessed Sacrament Chapel and offers a daily Mass for the senior citizens of the village. Matharpacady has been twice blessed:  The Holy Cross Oratory, a living symbol of faith in Jesus Christ and the Blessed Sacrament Chapel where the Lord God Almighty has become a Village Resident and a member of our community.

                        

    As East Indian as Bottle Masala

    Aunty Esme was famous for two things:  her gifts of mangoes to her friends from the tree that still stands outside Militia Apartments (great for kasaundi pickle or chutney) and her bottle masala.  Her khudi parties for the members of the Club were affairs to remember.  Bottle masala is the East Indian’s secret ingredient in the perfect khudi, sarpatal (note the spelling which differs from the Goan version), balchao and many other specialties. BTW, Aunty Esme’s mango tree is also heritage – more than a hundred years old now. 

    Aunty Esme’s Bottle Masala is now available along with other East Indian goodies from her grandson Chef Ray Henriques.

              

    Mary Lodge

    A name never used for it. Commonly referred to as the ever-helpful David and Stanny’s house.  Fond memories of Aunty Maud:  A houseful – five boys, a girl and sundry friends, all creating mayhem. Enough to drive any parent mad.  By the way, who knows that the ground floor of the bungalow still has vestiges of classroom numbers from the time it was borrowed to start a school to promote female education: now in its own location, the prestigious St. Isabel’s? Check it out…

              

    Today, not only is St. Isabel’s a prestigious school but Maud’s children continue to serve the School and the Community in multiple ways.

                        

    One Community

    Originally an East Indian Village, Matharpacady became home to Goans and Mangaloreans looking for opportunities in the growing metropolis.  As time went by the RCs were joined by the Parsis and as time passed Jains and Bohris and people of other communities settled in.  As time passes newcomers get integrated into the community.  The Festival of lights has universal appeal with many windows sporting diyas.  Adults and children play with firecrackers keeping within today’s conservation ethos.  At Eid and Christmas sheer korma and Christmas sweets respectively are exchanged. 

    But life is not all about fun and games. In emergencies neighbours rush to provide medical aid or to comfort the bereaved.   When it comes down to it, in Matharpacady, we are all united in the brotherhood of man.

                              

                

    Merry Christmas

    Christmas is a magical time in Matharpacady. Its indescribable and worth a visit.  Enough said.

    Explore these links and soak in the flavour.

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/christmas-festivities-christmas-tree-part-two/

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/christmas-festivities-matharpacady-thanksgiving-service/

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/christmas-party-boxing-day-26th-december-2019/

              

    Whilst one admires the decorations and occasionally a large star or lantern that emerges out of the Village boys’ creativity Christmas is incomplete without our Christmas trees.  This one in Nitin and Brenda’s compound is invariably lit up to make that end of the street particularly festive.

    The Cross Feast  

    The Highlight of Village Life.  A lot has been written but suffice it to say that this year, the Coronavirus Pandemic afforded us the opportunity to take the Feast international via the World Wide Web.

                      

                      

    From the hundred odd people who would typically participate the online prayers and feast day mass reached expatriates, people of other faiths as well as interested devotees from all over the world, an audience far exceeding the original congregation. 

    A serendipitous discovery that holds out an opportunity to take the faith of Matharpacady and share different aspects with the world on different occasions. While in the future, post the Coronavirus crisis we would be free to congregate for the Novena and the Cross Feast, we also intend to continue reaching an extended community via the internet.

    Click through below for a retrospective of Cross Feasts past.

    Links to Cross Feasts of years past:

    May 2020 –

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/holy-cross-feast-mass-1st-may-2020/

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/cross-feast-day-memory-lane/

    May 2018

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=12817&action=edit

    May 2015

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=6272&action=edit

    And click these links to join Matharpacady Village in prayer. 

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/daily-rosary-may-monday-saturday/

    Faith in the Cross of Jesus Christ will bring you and your family much grace and peace.  For it is said in John 3: 16 “For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that everyone who believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through Him. 18Whoever believes in Him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe has already been condemned, because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son.…”

                 

    Mumbai’s #1 Must-visit Destination

    You visit Shanghai, New York, Hong Kong — any teeming metropolis and you expect to see glass and steel clad skyscrapers, metro stations, flyovers and crowds. Mumbai will increasingly not disappoint you there.  But like London, with its old-world tinge of history in its stately buildings in the Fort area and a few other neighbourhoods, you get the flavour of another age – that of the British Raj. 

         

    Portuguese rule of Bombay?

    Tourists are increasingly discovering right in the heart of the city within ten to fifteen minutes of the Fort area, over the JJ Flyover, a well-hidden secret.  The Village of Matharpacady with its graceful Portuguese styled houses and residents with Portuguese sounding surnames. The shock you’ll get is that you enter from cacophonous traffic noise into an area so quiet that the dominant sound is bird-song from the trees or a piano or guitar playing somewhere in the background.  

    https://www.google.co.in/maps/place/Matharpacady+Holy+Cross+Oratory/@18.9713303,72.8396773,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m5!3m4!1s0x3be7ce48c5aa0685:0x2a69b7ddb45d3324!8m2!3d18.9713303!4d72.841866?hl=en&authuser=0

    It’s a fascinating story: the original inhabitants are called East Indians recalling their employee relationship with the East India Company but their Catholic faith, family names and culture bear a distinct Portuguese heritage. It has the all the stuff a great tour memory is made from.

    Click these links to view some earlier explorations and get your tour organiser to put Matharpacady into your itinerary.

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=7232&action=edit

                     

    Cruise Ship Diaries  

    http://www.matharpacadyvillage.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=9145&action=edit

     

     

    This is the third in our series of nostalgic picture tours of the Village.  You are recommended to study it carefully because there’s a bonus … The exciting Nostalgia Quizzz is on Saturday. June 27, 2020 and the clues are hidden here…

                                                                                       by Roydon G, the Galllivanter

  • Yesterday Once More….

    Yesterday Once More….

    (A guide to the Guides.  And!!!!!!!  We’ve got a Nostalgia Quizzz this Saturday, June 27, 2020.  All the clues are hidden here)

    I once heard it said that a building represents a “store of energy”.  In my view when we tear it down for “redevelopment” it’s not just physics that stands negated. It’s the expectations, desires and spiritual energies that get consigned to the graveyard of hope.  In the Village some lovely houses have gone…  But here, for your pleasure, it’s “yesterday once more”:

              

    Antonio Restless?

    This was once the prettiest house in the Village.  Antonio Rest.  No more. Torn down to make way for a modern monstrosity. In this house late Audrey Concescio would create the loveliest decorated marzipan eggs for Easter. She and her late sister, Dilys Remedios would prepare baskets of delicate flowers to decorate the streets for the Cross Feast. In yesteryear pink bougainvillea covered its roof and asparagus fern trailed along one side of the entrance.  Pretty as a picture, as they say. Here’s an interview of one of its last residents, the late Tyronne Concescio done by Vincent Mascarenhas:

    https://viewvin.net/2017/09/15/down-memory-lane-with-tyronne/comment-page-1/

              

    Militia and the Second World War

    Where this building stands, once stood a sprawling bungalow, Militia House whose verandah was bigger than most people’s sitting rooms.  In those days, “militia” symbolized the boys who were fighting against Hitler, Nazis and fascism. The property housed the Militia Club which included a full-sized badminton clay court. A place where matches were made and hearts were won.

               

    Mazagon Pier

    Matharpacady Village’s most popular evening attraction.  It was an easy stroll even for elderly members from the Village down Ganga Bawdi, past Ciba’s across the road past the Church through the bazaar and straight to the Pier. No steep hill to climb. The added attraction especially for the ladies, were the handsome cadets that the motor launch from the M.V. Dufferin landed.  T.S. Rajendra later replaced the Dufferin.  Mazagon Pier has now been swallowed up by Mazagon Dock.

               

    The Age of the Beatles and Beat Groups

    Once upon a time the ground floor of Marian Villa was packed with teenagers, friends of the Stevens’ children.  It was the age of the Beatles, and here, duly inspired, the Caravelles, Matharpacady’s own beat group was born:  late Ozzie Stevens (piano), late Alan Valentine (lead guitar), Stanley Francis (Australia), Desmond Rego (London), Stuart Do Remedios (guitar, USA) and Bonnie (Drums). 

    Matharpacady may be a small village but some residents have played on the national stage. The landlord of Marian Villa was one of them: Dr Mafaldo Ubaldo Mascarenhas.

    In fact, Dr. Mascarenhas Road bounding Matharpacady on one side, was named after him. He was the 19th Mayor and the first Indian Mayor of free Bombay (1948-49. Mayoral inaugration was held on November 22, 1948).

              

         Dr Ubaldo Mascarenhas with Pandit Nehru

    Dr. Gerald Mascarehnas and Dr. Allwyn Mascarenhas (Dr. Ubaldo’s grand nephews) continue to serve the sick and ailing in Byculla and Mazagon while Vincent Mascarenhas is the current President of our Matharpacady Holy Cross Committee. 

    It is said that Dr. Ubaldo was an Indian Freedom Fighter and fought for the return of Goa from Portugal. He was therefore blacklisted by the Portuguese government and his landed properties were confiscated.

    It’s rare to find people like him these days where all netas have an agenda.

           

    The Cottage before “Village Villa”

    The D’Mellos treated all their neighbours as family. Aunty Louie cooked the most delectable salt tongue, pan rolls and potato chops as well as an assortment of Christmas sweets and goodies. Neighbours got to taste, invited or not!  No limit to generosity here. 

    Uncle Wency would pick a lucky boy to accompany him to the Port Trust office in the docks, from where the lad got a much-prized view of the ships in the docks.  The mission was to pick up ship’s flags for the Cross Feast Vespers.  These decorations were suspended along house walls, starting from the Cross, on both sides, all the way up to Maud Baptista’s house. Seen above are old style tiles in partial exterior views of the Village’s oldest cottage. 

               

    Winifred House – gone with the wind

    Theo Turner’s legacy and named after Winifred (Winnie), his eldest child.  The Matharpacady Club was where people from Mazagon and Byculla as well as all over Mumbai got together:  Billiards, Snookers, cards, a Christmas Tree and Sunday Housie. Every worthy Billiards great has played on its table. The Sunday Housie was more of a social event where gents and ladies – RCs, Parsis and others belonging to a variety of communities, from as far away as Colaba, at one end and Bandra at the other turned up perfumed and in their Sunday best. Now a ghost of Matharpacady Past.

              

    The Busy Bees

    This terrace above the Exide Battery Service Station in Rear Helal Building was once one of the most sought-after spots:  the place where the Busy Bees used to rehearse. Fender Stratocaster guitars and high-powered amps, as well as great musicians, drew throngs on the terrace and windows opposite. The Busybee Band was Allan Valentine on lead, Mario on drums,  Bridgenell -bass. The guy on rhythm was from lower level & Nelson Vaz’s elder brother sang vocals. 

    Ah Norman! Norman Rosario, a tall well known figure in the Village was one of their biggest fans.  He’d catch hold of anyone whom he came across to extoll the musical prowess of Allan and the impressive array of Fender equipment that the band possessed. That’s to say, by the Busy Bees, was Norman completely possessed…

              

    Steps to the Sea?

    The Portuguese and following them Goan Brahmins prided themselves on living on the altinhos of Goa’s cities.  Well Matharpacady is an altinho as these steps above indicate, an extension of one of Mazagon Island’s ranges.

              

    Mazagon (Bhandarwada) Hill (Joseph Baptista Garden) is the other.  That’s not the most exciting fact.  Way before P D’mello was a living person and later a road name, the steep slope that extends from these steps down Champsi Bhimji Road past Mazagon Tower and Hatimi Mohalla to the main road, took you straight to the sea long before where the main road now begins.  At that time it was probably a rocky and muddy path.  And, as if to remind you that Bombay (now Mumbai) was reclaimed from the sea on full moon nights when the tide is up you can smell the sea in Matharpacady and if you’re familiar with it, you get the whiff of the coal tar on the dock walls as the waves lash them. 

    Don’t believe me? Study these maps: 

    One of these shows original land v/s reclamations. The first, though shows the original island and its hills. See the hills on Mazagon Island:  Mazagon Hill to the South (now Joseph Baptista Gardens) and the hill range on which Mariah Hill currently stands, incorporating the gunpowder works and the Matharpacady altinho. Hill slopes descended straight to the sea. When the harbour branch was built, two bridges, it appears from the map, were necessary: span between Mazagon and Mariah Hills and another to span the road before the Reay Road Station.  Given that the intervening land has subsequently been flattened and leveled to create roads and seeing that the original hills descended all the way to the sea, but for a narrow promontory makes us believe that the slope starting at the Matharpacady steps ended up in the sea. So exciting!

                                                  

    This is the second in our series of nostalgic picture tours of the Village.  You are recommended to study it carefully because there’s a bonus … the exciting Nostalgia Quizzz slated for Saturday, June 27, 2020, is getting ready and the clues are hidden here…

                                              by Roydon G, the Galllivanter

  • Meet the Ghosts of Matharpacady Past….

    Meet the Ghosts of Matharpacady Past….

    (A guide to the Guides.  And!!!!!!!  We’ve got a Nostalgia Quizzz coming up on Sat., June 27, 2020.  All the clues are hidden here)

    There’s often a right way and a wrong way to enter a place. When it comes to the Village, there are many ways.  Right or wrong, depends on what you want and where you want to end up.  A bit like Alice in Wonderland or Through the Looking Glass. You might happen upon a beauty or you might meet a ghost.  Depends upon you.  No white rabbit here though, but check this out:

         

    Lions’ Den

    Home of the Leao family: Daniel, Alma, Fred, John.  And their descendants.

    And Sammy, former President of the Cross Committee.

    The Bible relates how the Israelite prophet Daniel, a prominent official in the Babylonian King’s court was thrown into the Lions’ Den because he stayed true to the one true God and refused to worship the mortal king.  God shut the lions’ mouths. Daniel was awarded greater honours while his accusers were thrown to the lions instead.  Now figure out who inspired this house’s name.  If you get it wrong the two stone lions on the gate will chew your head off when they come alive …

         

    The lost chord?

    Once upon a time when you entered the Village sounds of the piano or other musical instruments greeted your ear.  23 D Matharpacady, known just by a number, the HQ of the Lopes family. Sundays saw Lt Cdr. Eric Lopes and his daughter Dagmar playing classical Western music on the musical saw (an instrument that looks much like an ordinary carpenter’s saw, played with a bow drawn across the non-toothed side. Tension on the blade and degree of bend gave the desired note) accompanied by his brother Ian Lopes on the guitar. And, a hall full of rapt listeners. Want to see them in action dig up the two episodes of Surabhi (ex Doordarshan) that feature them.  There might still be a saw or two left in Matharpacady but the players are gone… 

              

    The late Dagmar Lopes plays the musical saw at a First Communion party

             

    All’s Well with the Village Well

    No one’s dropped a coin in here to make a wish. No lovers’ suicide.  No ghost stories, so far. Stocked with fish now, but a trifle overgrown, no village maid has ever offered a lad a drink from it, out of her bucket. Brides and grooms do make a trip to it for their “paani” ceremony. I, for one, wouldn’t draw a bucket to bathe, much less take a swig, but the fire brigade has certainly suctioned its lifesaving liquid more than once to fight local fires.  If you’re scared of ghosts, I wouldn’t count on not meeting a shade here between midnight and 3.00 AM.

                                                     

    The Park

    Previously called Tank Square.  Once an open play area bordered by the Bharat Vyayam Shala a low-cost gymnasium where many lads went to acquire their muscles, Tank Square has seen many changes.  In its present avatar there’s a jungle gym and some kiddie playthings and by that token, its grandly called The Park. 

                  

                                                  

    Barcelona, Spain or Lisbon, Portugal or Fontainhas, Panjim?

    A touch of Azulejo tiling, a bit of street art, shady arbours, mysterious windows, a door of enchantment. Roam the streets of Matharpacady and find yourself in a different world, a living culture of taste and refinement that reflects the cultures that shaped this city.

    (Matharpacady was a warren of service lanes and secret short cuts: invaluable to hide in when playing rough games like dabba doobie and seven tiles and you broke someone’s window pane.  Kites were flown from several terraces and dheels or contests were entered into with sharp manja. Marbles, tops, cycling were all popular pastimes before smartphones arrived)

                     

    Behind the Cross

    No tour of the Village is complete unless you go behind the Cross and view the location where one of India’s greatest freedom fighters stayed.  There’s, now a big building called Monarch, a take on the name of the original sprawling Raja Bungalow, that it replaced.  The residence of the Village’s most famous son:  Joseph (Kaka) Baptista.

                      

    Kaka Baptista, (born March 17, 1864) was a close associate and friend of Bal Gangadhar Tilak.    

    Kaka Baptista was Bombay’s Mayor (1925-26).  He developed ideas for local home rule , deeply influencing Tilak. Together with Annie Besant they formed the Home Rule Movement.  However, his ideas for independence didn’t go down too well with the Brits and there’s an apocryphal story told to me by a now deceased elderly resident.  It seems his mayoralty was snatched away in a year and without batting an eyelid, barrister that he was, he declared “the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away” obviously taking a dig at the Brits.

    Kaka Baptista defended Tilak in court. Tilak also liked and adopted Baptista’s slogan “Swaraj Is my Birthright” which soon became Tilak’s rallying cry.

    There are some ironies to his story.  Firstly, despite being a fervent Christian, he played an important role in popularising the Ganeshotsav festival in the late 19th century, using the community gatherings to mobilise support for the independence movement.  The other irony is that he defended Hindutva ideologue, Vinayak Damodar Savarkar, one of his most high-profile clients.

    While sundry netas have signed away mill land to house the rich and famous, it was this freedom fighter and barrister who took up the cause of the mill worker and in 1920, founded the All India Trade Union Congress (AITUC).

                   

    Keepsake

    Once bustling with many well-known residents:  John Martin (Jamtin a corruption of the Portuguese contraction of his name, J’mtine), a prominent voice in the singing of the Litany,  St John Valladares (Sinjin) who led the Matharpacady Club for ages as Secretary, Carole Viegas the late President of the Cross Committee.  Bonnie Michael D’souza (Bonnie) whose band “The Bonaventures” was top of the charts for ages in Aamchi Mumbai.  At one point, Bonaventures featured golden-voiced Walter Pereira who lived behind the Cross.

                   

    Canon Villa                 

    Once called The Rosary but more fondly remembered colloquially as the “lozenger school”.  The former owners, the Ferreira sisters ran a nursery school for tots on their terrace.  At departure time each kid was given a boiled sweet lozenge as an incentive to come in the next day, earning the school its name.

    It was renamed Canon Villa by the current landlords, respecting their association with Wilson College and its Church of North India Legacy. A curious shift from a Marian to Biblical nomenclature.

    Talking of music, Frank Gonsalves formed an orchestra, of his old students, which met every Sunday in his hall.  This is the same orchestra that played every year for the Cross Feast Vespers which were celebrated on the 2nd of May, the day before the actual feast which used to be on the 3rd of May. It was a grand affair with the singing of the Litany in Latin by the Village’s best voices.

                   

    Trilby Cottage

    Situated behind the Lopes’ bungalow is the quaint Trilby cottage named after the late Trilby Lopes (nee Azavedo), the late musical saw player Lt Cdr. Eric’s wife.  By the way, once upon a time, the Trilby was a fashionable hat as was the bowler, fedora and homburg. The hat’s name derives from the stage adaptation of George du Maurier’s 1894 novel Trilby. A hat of this style was worn in the first London production of the play, and promptly came to be called “a Trilby hat”. Frank Sinatra was identified with trilby hats, and there is a signature design trilby bearing his name.

                   

    Harbour View  

    Situated next to Lions’ Den this used to be the height of high-rise in the days when Matharpacady was a Village of quaint and sprawling bungalows. As the name suggests, the higher floors afforded a view of the famed Bombay Harbour to which cargo ships called (before JNPT drew the cream of shipping away). Isn’t it curious that the former building opposite Harbour View was called the Anchorage, another gracious building that has given way to a boxy Kishant?

                   

    The Wayside Cross

    Fifty yards away from Harbour View you’ll find this Cross on private land. The home of the Nazareths.  The day after the Cross Feast it is traditional to celebrate the feast at this Cross.  As children of yesteryear will remember, there was a kind of decorative cherry tree that grew next to it.  Kids never failed to pluck its wild cherries. They were sweetish but full of chik and inedible. The other botanical specimen of interest, hard by the cherry tree, was a drumstick tree often decorated by an abundance of drumsticks dangling from the branches.  Legend has it that a drumstick tree was home to a drumstick like green snake that camouflaged itself and then dropped down onto the head of a victim.  If that happened to you, you were a sure goner.

                                                        

    Bongo Lane

    How this very picturesque part of Matharpacady with its old-world houses and narrow mysterious paths got this name is a mystery.  Maybe the settling down of many music loving Goans with their upbeat Konkani mandos had something to do with it; the Latin flavour, supposedly.  One legend has it that the late Joe Pereira, a music-loving chap with a great sense of rhythm had adopted the bongos as his instrument, which he produced on every social occasion.  From Joe’s bongos to Bongo Lane was a short transition.  Who knows?  It still hosts an annual happening jump ‘n jive party.  Find favour and you might get invited…

     

    This is the first in our series of nostalgic picture tours of the Village.  You are recommended to study it carefully because there’s a bonus … the exciting Nostalgia Quizzz is in the works and the clues are hidden here…

    Credits – Roydon Gonsalves

     

  • Monsoon Magic

    Monsoon Magic

    And the winners are…

    The Quizzz!  

                                                    

    Matharpacady Cross Feast 2020

    1st place: Denzil Dsilva         2nd place: N3          3rd place: Caray

    The Magical Movie Quizzz!

                                                  

    1st place: Shazam          2nd place: Scarlet          3rd place: Luna

    WATCH THIS SPACE!

    Hey!  There’s more excitement coming out of Matharpacady.

    SOON on this Blog: A pictorial trot in three parts down some old and new Village stories.  Lots of hidden clues. Hidden answers.

                                                                                                                             

    There’s a mind-blowing                                 

    Matharpacady Memories Quizzz on  

    The Village that was and The

    Village that is!

    Think!!! Did you play hop scotch, gilli danda, seven tiles, tops, ironies, dabba doobie, fly kites?  Did you get caught up to tricks in the jungle of a garden at Bapties (Raja Bungalow, wasn’t it)? Were you Christian enough to know who was thrown in the Lion’s Den? Did you play Badminton at the Militia Club? Billiards at the Matharpacady Club? Did you whistle at the St Isabel’s girls? Climb Mazagon Hill? From the wrong side?  Swim with a Dalda dabba at Kasara Bunder or The Pier? Get spotted by the aunties who used to take their evening walks there? Ever had a drink at Cardoz’? Hung onto windows/terrace ledges to watch one of the bands rehearse – Caravelles, Busy Bees, Bonaventures? Or Frankie’s old boys on Sundays? Fought to ring the bell for prayers?  Watched ghosts at night in the gullies? Hiding football bladders? Tried to hitch a ride to BPT to fetch the flags for the feast? Were you an extra in the filming of Keating’s “The Perfect Murder?”  Were you a quaint mix between an innocent lamb and a bit of a village hooligan? In a nice way, of course?

    Our Quizzz Mistress is certainly not nice!  She’s going to mess with your memory!  It’s your challenge to compete and prove that your smarts are better than hers!

    Shhh!  But we’re on your side.  (We’ve hidden plenty of clues above). You gotta use your grey matter… There are hints and answers in the linked Walk down Memory Lane

    https://viewvin.net/2017/09/15/down-memory-lane-with-tyronne/

    Follow this link and bone up on Matharpacady Past to win a quizzz in the future. (And, ooooh, await our picture pages of old juicy gossip and ghost stories)

    Shivvvver

    ALERT!  Grand Tambola

    8.30 p.m. Sunday June 28, 2020

    Matharpacady Village

    A successful village beats with one heart!

  • The Magical Movie Quizz

    The Magical Movie Quizz

    Become a child again:

                    Fall under a spell!!!  

           

    Walt Disney in his films captured the magic of great stories we all grew up on.  The three big story tellers of all time:  Charles Perrault – Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, etc. Brothers Grimm – Hansel & Gretel, Rapunzel, Snow White, etc and Hans Christian Andersen – the Little Mermaid, The Snow Queen and other stories. The Walt Disney Company added to its repertoire, The Lion King by Justine Korman, Jungle Book by Rudyard Kippling and the life story of Pocahontas authoritatively told by Camilla Townsend.

    A great story demands a great story teller and Disney excels with prize winning animation, stunning colour, visual effects, humorous, incisive, compelling treatment and ear catching music and songs that add tremendously to the story line.

    Now, Matharpacady village brings to you the MAGICAL MOVIE QUIZZZ!

    If you’re a child hooked to the Disney Channel you’re going to luvvv this.  If you’re an adult captivated by the Magic of Disney you’re going to luvvvv this even more.  Even though “Malificent” our Quizzz Mistress is going to mess with your mind and memory ?

    Don’t miss this chance to be a child again.

    GUIDELINES:

    OPENS Sat May 23, 2020 11.30 A.M. IST.   CLOSES 7.00 A.M. NEXT DAY (May 24) 

    • Make sure your data/WiFi is switched on – chk, chk, chk your internet connection!
    • Click the link sent to you on WhatsApp or posted on FaceBook/on this Blog
    • Enter your username
    • Click on Ok, go!
    • Start playing
    • Set of 20 trivia Disney Film related questions
    • Be Fast. Think quick. Answer quick. Tick tock.  Tick tock!
    • Limit on 100 players. BE FIRST!!! or BE LEFT OUT!
    • Be smart buddy, don’t get logged out… he he he — like taking a chick to a dance and losing her to another dude ?You won’t be able to get back 🙁

     

    • Note: The Quizzz is open till 7.00 a.m. on May 24. THEN:  The Winners will be announced here on the Matharpacady Blog. Of course you might also hope to see the Podium on the App. WILL U GET A MEDAL?  Aha!  Let’s see!

    Think you can beat the Quizzz Mistress?!?!

     

    Matharpacady Village

    A successful village beats with one heart!                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    

  • RIP Tyronne Concescio

    RIP Tyronne Concescio

          

    John Bunyan in his book The Pilgrim’s Progress presents the allegory of Christian, an everyman journeying from his hometown City of Destruction to the “Celestial City” atop Mount Zion.  On the way he labours under a heavy burden, in his case, the weight of his sin that he came upon after reading the book in his hand.  Tyronne’s life too was much the same, a constant pilgrimage.  However, in his case his burden was his troubled eyesight.  A major handicap it made him undertake several pilgrimages from the “city of destruction” that lost eyesight is.   It’s tragic that his eyesight stood in the way of his studying further despite having a keen intellect.  But then it compelled him to undertake a journey to North India to seek treatment.  Travelling in the blackout during one of India’s wars, he gained fresh perspectives.

    A burden often opens up new vistas and coopts various Simons of Cyrene. Seeking out Fr Dickey his priest relative, Tyronne developed friendships with many priests. In the process he found not the proverbial Simon but the Master, Jesus, Himself. Those who were fortunate to know Tyronne closely will recall that his life too was struggle, persevere, fall, rise, but keep on walking.  All the while like his Master, he reached out his hand to bring happiness to people. I’ve been a witness to the love many of his office colleagues had for him.  At various critical moments Tyronne gave someone a hand. Feast times, Christmas, in particular he was often the first to pop in very briefly to wish the family before taking himself off to the next house and the next, spreading cheer as he went.  And, often his visits were not empty handed.  Working for Britannia he often bought packets of biscuits which he distributed to all those he loved and the list was long.

    It is not as if Tyronne didn’t have his balmy days!  Cross Feasts, the polishing of brass under the eagle eye of Aunty Daisy followed by tasty rewards.  Especially chilled kalinga juice on the day itself after a morning of hard work.  One shouldn’t forget the days when Gorai was a virgin beach lined by hedges of mangroves and palm trees recalling the best Honolulu dream.  A versatile writer, Tyronne romanced Aunty Girlie (Marie D’Silva) with his poetic prose describing the place where she owned an ambawadi, much beloved by us children.  Encouraged by his words she literally gave us children the keys to her kingdom and the most magical times in Gorai followed, with swims, sing song and great food.  Yes, Tyronne was a versatile writer, winning over metaphorically priest and prelate alike.  Very selfishly we capitalized on this strength making him General Secretary of every Village based organization.  MRWA and the Cross Committee notably.

    After the untimely death of the multi-talented Peter Miranda who was both Headmaster and Managing Trustee of St Isabel’s the mantle of Managership fell on Tyronne’s shoulders.  I always wondered how a person who spent his working life as a secretary hampered by a physical limitation would rise to the challenges a CEO would find daunting.  There is no doubt in my mind His Lord and Cross bearer was behind his rising to the challenge.  With perfect serenity he took charge.  It’s a pleasure to recall the times he proudly related how the school got cent per cent results in the SSC. There were other trustees but in his own quiet way Tyronne forged bonds with all constituencies – students, teachers, office staff and ex-students.

    I must confess I pulled a sneaky one on him. After addressing a gathering on careers at the Bandra Gym the East Indian committee backstage tried to rope me in as a trustee of the Bombay Institute for Deaf & Mutes on Nesbit Road, one of the premier institutions for the hearing impaired.  Not as large hearted as Tyronne, I side stepped the issue by suggesting his name.  Next thing I heard, he had become a Trustee of this august East Indian initiative at the service of a specific segment of “non-people” who would otherwise never get a chance in society.

    However, Tyronne’s greatest love was for the village.  He leveraged his trusteeship to extend facilities to bond inhabitants together.  Villagers were always welcome.  As were the poor service providers, like the dhobi. In this country it’s the tendency to misuse position to get ahead. Tyronne never hesitated to use position to help others.  Not only that I’ve seen him give time to lonely people, the elderly, the sick and hospitalized.  Never empty handed: patties, samosas, cake, biscuits or even a bag of apples. I’ve caught him sneaking into the Blessed Sacrament Provincialate House at dusk bearing bags of goodies.  A brief popping in, dropping off of and quick exit.  Many a priest or bishop had his lonely life lifted a bit by Tyronne’s graciousness.

    It would be an incomplete narrative to forget that Tyronne was all about family.  I recall his tears of sorrow at his sister Audrey’s passing.  Cliffy his brother, was easily his best friend.  His sister Dilys’ children Linda, Astrid, Trudy and Faye were his life and joy.  His cousins and many relatives were clearly dear to him.  It is pretty evident that the love was reciprocated.

    Tyronne had a way with words and what he lacked in eyesight, he made up for in memory.  For anyone who’d like to relive life in the old Village nostalgically, here’s a link to a piece that Vincent Mascarenhas did on Tyronne taking us all Down Memory Lane. It’s a journey worth taking for more reasons than one; a life that’s not vanished, but in a way, transformed.

    https://viewvin.net/2017/09/15/down-memory-lane-with-tyronne/

    Farewell Tyronne. May angels bear you to Abraham’s side.

    From rest and sleep, which but thy pictures be,

    Much pleasure; then from thee much more must flow,

    And soonest our best men with thee do go,

    Rest of their bones, and soul’s delivery.

    ….

    One short sleep past, (Tyronne, thou shall) wake eternally

    And death shall be no more; Death, thou shalt die.

    Credits – Roydon Gonsalves and Vincent Mascarenhas

  • Daily Rosary During May – Thursday

    Daily Rosary During May – Thursday

     

    LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE FAITHFUL FOR THE MONTH OF MAY 2020

    The month of May is approaching, a time when the People of God express with particular intensity their love and devotion for the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is traditional in this month to pray the Rosary at home within the family. The restrictions of the pandemic have made us come to appreciate all the more this “family” aspect, also from a spiritual point of view. For this reason, I want to encourage everyone to rediscover the beauty of praying the Rosary at home in the month of May. This can be done either as a group or individually; you can decide according to your own situations, making the most of both opportunities. The key to doing this is always simplicity, and it is easy also on the internet to find good models of prayers to follow.

    We sending you the link of the you tube video to be used during every Thursday in the month of May.

  • Daily Rosary During May – Tuesday & Friday

    Daily Rosary During May – Tuesday & Friday

    LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE FAITHFUL FOR THE MONTH OF MAY 2020

    The month of May is approaching, a time when the People of God express with particular intensity their love and devotion for the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is traditional in this month to pray the Rosary at home within the family. The restrictions of the pandemic have made us come to appreciate all the more this “family” aspect, also from a spiritual point of view. For this reason, I want to encourage everyone to rediscover the beauty of praying the Rosary at home in the month of May. This can be done either as a group or individually; you can decide according to your own situations, making the most of both opportunities. The key to doing this is always simplicity, and it is easy also on the internet to find good models of prayers to follow.

    We sending you the link of the you tube video to be used during every  Tuesday and Friday in the month of May.

  • Daily Rosary During May – Monday & Saturday

    Daily Rosary During May – Monday & Saturday

    LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE FAITHFUL FOR THE MONTH OF MAY 2020

    The month of May is approaching, a time when the People of God express with particular intensity their love and devotion for the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is traditional in this month to pray the Rosary at home within the family. The restrictions of the pandemic have made us come to appreciate all the more this “family” aspect, also from a spiritual point of view. For this reason, I want to encourage everyone to rediscover the beauty of praying the Rosary at home in the month of May. This can be done either as a group or individually; you can decide according to your own situations, making the most of both opportunities. The key to doing this is always simplicity, and it is easy also on the internet to find good models of prayers to follow.

    We sending you the link of the you tube video to be used during all Mondays and Saturdays in the month of May.

     

     

     

     

  • Daily Rosary during May – Sunday & Wednesday

    Daily Rosary during May – Sunday & Wednesday

    LETTER OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS TO THE FAITHFUL FOR THE MONTH OF MAY 2020

    The month of May is approaching, a time when the People of God express with particular intensity their love and devotion for the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is traditional in this month to pray the Rosary at home within the family. The restrictions of the pandemic have made us come to appreciate all the more this “family” aspect, also from a spiritual point of view. For this reason, I want to encourage everyone to rediscover the beauty of praying the Rosary at home in the month of May. This can be done either as a group or individually; you can decide according to your own situations, making the most of both opportunities. The key to doing this is always simplicity, and it is easy also on the internet to find good models of prayers to follow.

    We sending you the link of the you tube video to be used during the Sundays and Wednesdays of the month of May.