Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

AWOMAN OF GREAT VISION AND TREMENDOUS ENERGY

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The year 1945 marked a turning point in the educationa­l sphere and therefore in the social history of the country. The Free Education Bill was passed in the State Council in 1945. It was an exciting year, with much debating on the feasibilit­y of giving every child in the country a free education from kindergart­en to university.

It was in this year that a woman of great vision and tremendous energy, Mrs. S. G. Pulimood, came to the helm of Visakha Vidyalaya. The school, founded in 1917, had eight Principals in the 28 years before her.

Susan George Pulimood, a graduate of Presidency College, Madras, and the co-author of ‘A Text-book of Botany’, joined Visakha Vidyalaya as a teacher 67 years ago, in January 1941.

Born in July 23, 1907, as the 3rd daughter of K. C. Joshua, a magistrate and later District Judge in the State of Travancor, Susan Joshua had her secondary education in Baker Memorial School in Kottayam. The Joshuas belonged to the oldest Christian community in India, the Syrian Christians.

She obtained her education from Baker Memorial School, to Queen Mary’s College and to Presidency College where she obtained her Master’s Degree in Botany. Keen to be a teacher she joined Wellington Training College and got her Licentiate in Teaching.

Being full of fun and with her keen sense of humour, Susan Joshua was very popular among her fellow students. She took an active part in sports and athletics and did well in tennis and long-jump.

She taught in a girl’s school in Tamil Nadu for a few years before coming to Sri Lanka. Mrs. Pulimood taught at Moratu Vidyalaya and one other school before joining the staff of Visakha Vidyalaya.

The day she took up her appointmen­t must have been very auspicious both for Mrs. Pulimood and for Visakha, for on that day began a long and rewarding associatio­n between a school struggling for ‘her place in the sun’ and a dedicated educationi­st. Her 22 years as Principal were years of achievemen­t and fulfillmen­t for both Mrs. Pulimood and Visakha Vidya-

Mrs. Pulimood retired in July 1967, 24 years to the day, leaving Rs.250,000 in the Swarna Fund. It took 15 years to build the hall

laya.She taught Botany, her forte, Mathematic­s and English Literature. Inspite of administra­tive work which increased with the years, she found time to coach her students for Quiz Contests, Oratorical Contests, Spelling Bee Contests and other such inter school activities.

When she took over as Principal in 1945, Mrs Pulimood realized that Sinhala girls had more to do than sit on a cushion and sew a fine seam. Herself a graduate in science, she saw the profession­al opportunit­ies a science education offered. While some girls’ schools were forging ahead, Visakha was ill- equipped to give that education to her students.

It was easier equipping a laboratory than finding teachers, for there were very few women with degrees in science in the late forties,

Mrs. Pulimood had one of two alternativ­es – employing male graduates or getting down qualified women teachers from India. She chose the latter, making herself the target of wicked comments and accusation­s that she was helping her kith find jobs. Undaunted she went ahead.

“All that the school now needs is a hall”, she used to muse. It was Mrs. Pulimood’s dream to equip Visakha Vidyalaya with a hall in keeping with her prestige and to collect funds for a hall she organized the seven day ‘Swarna Jayanthi’ carnival in the old race course grounds in February 1967. There was never a school which conducted a carnival as gay and grand as that.

Mrs. Pulimood retired in July 1967, 24 years to the day, leaving Rs.250,000 in the Swarna Fund. It took 15 years to build the hall.

Although Mrs. Pulimood was of another faith, the study and practice of Buddhism in the school in her time was real, not perfunctor­y observance of rites and rituals.

Mrs. Pulimood left Sri Lanka in December 1967, presumably to enjoy a well-earned rest, but retirement was not for someone with as active a mind as Mrs. Pulimood’s. She got involved in various projects and in the midseventi­es took up the post of Director of Jawarhar Vidyalaya in Ashok Nagar, Madras.

She visited Sri Lanka thrice after her retirement, first to felicitate two retiring teachers, Mrs. Pearl Weerasingh­e and Mrs. Marie Hewavisent­hi, who had served under her, and again in 1977 for the school’s Diamond Jubilee. Her last visit was in October 1983 to see the fulfillmen­t of her cherished dream – the opening of the Jeremias Dias Hall.

She longed to visit Sri Lanka again to meet her former students and visit old friends, but she was prevented by the troubles on both sides of the Palk Strait.

She passed away peacefully in the early hours of April 12, 1989, in her home in San Thome, Madras. S. S – A pupil in her first

Botany class in 1941

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