St. Xavier's Institution Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan St. Xavier(Malay) 圣方济中学 (Simplified Chinese) சைன்ட் சவேரியார் உயர்நிலை பள்ளி (Tamil) | |
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Address | |
, , 10200 | |
Coordinates | 5°25′16″N100°20′13″E / 5.420978°N 100.336884°E |
Information | |
Type | Co-educational secondary school |
Motto | Latin: Labor Omnia Vincit (Labour Conquers All) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Christian |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Patron saint(s) | St. Francis Xavier |
Established | 1852 |
Founder | De La Salle Brothers |
Principal | Thirumamani s/o Sundaraj [1] |
Brother Director | Br. Jason Blaikie, FSC |
Grades | Forms 1-Upper 6 |
Gender | Co-educational |
Colour(s) | Green and gold |
Feeder schools |
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Affiliations | Lasallian educational institutions |
Abbreviation | SXI |
Website | www |
St. Xavier's Institution, at Farquhar Street in George Town, Penang, Malaysia, is the oldest Lasallian school in Southeast Asia and one of the Catholic Lasallian schools in Malaysia. [2] While it has a history dating back to 1787, the present-day institution, named after St. Francis Xavier, was only established in 1852. [3] [4] [5] [6]
This secondary school has been an all-boys school since its establishment, although girls have been admitted in Form 6 since the 1950s (but as of 2022, it is now a co-educational secondary school ever since female students were admitted for the first time beginning in Form 1 of the batch born in 2009 for the 2022-2023 Malaysian school academic year). In addition, the school is renowned for producing several notable Malaysian and Singaporean personalities, including Wong Pow Nee, Karpal Singh, Cecil Rajendra and Hon Sui Sen. Students of the school are colloquially known as Xaverians or Lasallians. [7] [8]
To this day, St. Xavier's Institution maintains its historical rivalry with Penang Free School, another premier school in George Town which holds the honour of being Malaysia's oldest school. [9] The school has two suburban feeder primary schools at Pulau Tikus and Air Itam. [4] [10]
The history of St. Xavier's Institution stretches all the way back to 1787, soon after the founding of George Town by Captain Francis Light. Light invited Bishop Arnaud-Antoine Garnault, a French Catholic priest, to George Town as Bishop Garnault and his Eurasian followers were fleeing political persecution in Siam. [11] After arriving in George Town, Bishop Garnault who was proficient in Malay, set up a Malay school at Church Street. [11] [12]
The Malay school was subsequently relocated into a brick house built by Jean-Baptiste Boucho of the Paris Foreign Missions in 1825 and converted into an English school. [7] [11] It was called the Catholic Free School, in opposition to Penang Free School which had been established by Protestants in 1816.
In 1852, three members of the De La Salle Brothers took over the administration of Catholic Free School upon invitation by Jean-Baptiste Boucho. The school was renamed as St. Francis Xavier's Free School after St. Francis Xavier, a Spanish Catholic missionary who is revered to this day for his extensive missions in Asia during the 16th century.
St. Francis Xavier's Free School was moved to its present grounds at Farquhar Street with the completion of a new school building in 1858. With this relocation, the school was finally renamed as St. Xavier's Institution. [13] This building was expanded several times over the years, before it was replaced by a grander Baroque-style double-storey building in 1895. A third storey was added in 1901 and a wing was constructed in 1908.
During the Japanese occupation in World War II, the Imperial Japanese Navy used the school building as a Marine barracks. [7] [13] As a result, the school building was completely destroyed by American bombers in the later years of the war.
With the main building wiped out, school sessions resumed after the war at the adjacent school field, with temporary attap sheds serving as classrooms. In 1954, the current school building was completed at a cost of about $2 million (Malaya and British Borneo dollar).
Brother Paul Ho was the last La Salle Brother in SXI to serve as a school principal. [14] [15] His retirement in 2009 marked the end of a long-standing era of La Sallian brother principals in Malaysia.
In 2022, the school transformed into fully co-educational, where it previously only enrolled boys from Forms 1 up to 5. [16]
St Xavier's Institution currently operates two feeder primary schools in the suburbs of George Town.
St. Xavier's Primary School (SRK St. Xavier) was originally sharing the same premise with the secondary school at Farquhar Street. It relocated in 1990 to the former site of La Salle School at Jalan Sekolah La Salle in Air Itam. La Salle School was established in 1962 but phased out in 1981.
St. Xavier's Primary Branch School (SRK St. Xavier Cawangan) located at Jalan Brother James, Pulau Tikus was opened on 10th March 1962. [17]
While the schools are not closely associated with each other, most pupils go on to continue their secondary studies in St. Xavier's Institution. Regular annual tours are also organised by the schools which usually bring the students of the two primary schools on a "day tour" in St. Xavier's Institution (whilst its female students would come from several suburban schools since it has no single-sex all-female feeder schools affliated with this school). [4]
Penang Free School (PFS), located at Green Lane in George Town, Penang, Malaysia, is the oldest English-medium school in Southeast Asia. Founded in 1816, its academic achievements lead to its inclusion in the Malaysian Ministry of Education's Cluster School and High Performance School systems.
Lasallian educational institutions are educational institutions affiliated with the De La Salle Brothers, a Catholic religious teaching order founded by French priest Saint Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, who was canonized in 1900 and proclaimed by Pope Pius XII as patron saint of all teachers of youth on May 15, 1950. In regard to their educational activities, the Brothers have since 1680 also called themselves "Brothers of the Christian Schools", associated with the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools; they are often referred to by themselves and others by the shorter term "Christian Brothers", a name also applied to the unrelated Congregation of Christian Brothers or Irish Christian Brothers, also providers of education, which commonly causes confusion.
Pulau Tikus is a neighbourhood within the downtown core of George Town in the Malaysian state of Penang. Named after a rock just off the coast of Penang Island, this upper class neighbourhood is home to Eurasian, Thai and Burmese communities.
Penang Road is a major thoroughfare in the city of George Town within the Malaysian state of Penang. It runs between Farquhar Street to the north and Komtar to the south. The road is a one-way road, with the traffic directed southwards towards Komtar.
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