Newsletter for alumni of The Abbey School, Mt. St.
Benedict, Trinidad and Tobago, W.I.
Caracas, 22 July 2022.
No. 1062
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Dear Friends,
News on the new era for
the swimming pool, the reinauguration.
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GEORGE MICKIEWICZ <amickiew@att.net>
Sat, Jun 18 at 8:24 AM
And many
plaudits to you too, Nigel, for all your love, dedication time and awesome
efforts to create so many documents that are still very valuable like our
alumni DATABASE (attached), yearly highlights, summary presentations, etc.,
etc..
Thank you very, very much, Nigel.
We also think and pray for you daily as you continue your daily painful
battle with cancer……
Please be extra careful and stay healthy, safe and sound,
George
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SWIMMING AGAIN AT THE MOUNT
GEORGE MICKIEWICZ <amickiew@att.net>
Sat, Jun 18 at 7:16 AM
This
recent article and photos bring back lots of pleasant memories for me.
I remember that my parents contributed a few hundred T&T $$ to it
being built.
Swimming again at the Mount - CatholicTT
Does it bring back any memories for you?
How many times did we dip ourselves in its wonderfully refreshing
waters?
Am guessing that it was in the thousands for me as I would frequently go
down to the field during the week to enjoy it.
I know that several of you were members of that very successful Abbey
Aqua Lads and Lasses Swim Club that travelled the world and won many individual
and team trophies.
Please share this memo with the Aqua Lasses that you still are in
contact with.
Last, but certainly not least, this article reaffirms the great value
that our brother Ladislao Kertesz has served our alumni and the Mount in
creating and publishing over 1000 Circulars so far.
Note the many references to Ladislao’s work when you read the article.
BRAVO
LADISLAO!!
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Nigel Boos <nigelboos@gmail.com>
Sat, Jun 18 at 7:57 AM
Definitely!
Ladislao has done a fabulous job during the past 20 - or- so years!
He began back in 2001, if I remember correctly, and one of the first
emails I received simply asked whether I was the “same Nigel Boos” who had been
his classmate in 1956.
He also asked whether I would be interested in helping him to round up
the names and contact info for all the ex-students of the Abbey School in an
effort to begin ole talk between the lot of us and to renew acquaintances.
I joined him and thereby lies a lovely story, as many OB’s were
recruited into the ranks.
Kudos must also be given to many others - among them Don Mitchell,
Arthur Knaggs R.I.P., Joe Berment-McDowall, Azier Atela, Attila Gyuris, Brian
Goddard, Cornel de Freitas, Dr. George Laquis, Glen McKoy, Kazim Abasali, Eddie
Lloyd, Dr. David Bratt, Alan Date, George Mickiewicz, Rafael Echeverria, Norman
Smith, Jan Koenraadt, Manuel Prada - for their efforts to bring the old school
“back to life”.
Thank you, everyone.
One small detail for the memory-bank.
Small stuff.
I remember that when the pool was built in ’55 - ’56, we students of the
day were recruited to help plant grass around its sides, and I always felt as
if I were partly (just a little partly) for the small patch of grass which I
had myself planted.
Good luck to all future lads and lasses of the continuing Abbey School
Pool.
Nigel
P.S.
Thanks for re-kindling the memories, Shish.
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Swimming
again at the Mount
Published
by CN Admin2 at March 23, 2022
By
Kaelanne Jordan
Email:
mediarelations.camsel@catholictt.org
After not being in use since 2000, the newly
reconstructed Mt St Benedict Swimming Pool was blessed Friday, March 18 and is
now open to the public.
The pool at Mt St Benedict
has a long-standing history. It was originally associated with the Abbey School
as it was actually built after the school was established.
For many years, Br Rupert
Alexis OSB had been the swimming coach.
During his tenure, he
established a club called the Abbey Aqua Lads Swim Club.
“But then soon after he
thought about the girls, and he changed the name to the Abbey Aqua Lads and
Lasses Swim Club.
And that has been a very
well-established swimming club in the swimming landscape in Trinidad over the
years,” said Abbot John Pereira OSB.
The pool is 25 meters in
length, which makes it eligible to be used as a training pool for the Olympic
games.
Abbot Pereira explained
that the actual reconstruction of the pool facility began about two years ago
but the onset of Covid-19 caused “several stops and starts” due to the
government’s ban on construction.
“So, it has been a rather
long, drawn-out process.
Now we have seen some light
at the end of the tunnel, and we believe it is something quite positive for the
area.
Just the aesthetics of the
place…as you are driving up the mountain, first thing you see is this lovely
pool on your right,” Abbot Pereira said.
Work done on the pool involved
repair to the inner surface of the pool, the restoration of the adjoining
buildings, the overhaul of the plumbing system, and restoration of the grounds
and the pavilion.
Restoration is 90 per cent
completed, Abbot Pereira said, and “we are happy it has come to this point.”
The Mount St. Benedict
Swimming Pool was blessed on Friday, March 18 2022
History of the pool
According to a blog by Ladislao Kertesz, a
former Abbey student, who, by his blog has established a virtual community of
shared memories with former students, shared a short note on the Abbey pool in
‘Newsletter for alumni of The Abbey School, Mt St Benedict, Trinidad and
Tobago, W.I. Caracas, 31 of July 2016 No. 769’. In it, he mentioned that he
arrived at The Abbey School in September 1955, and there was no pool.
“In the area selected there
was a flat ground and the scouts used it for their annual rope and bamboo
marvellous construction projects.
The last one was a tower
about 50 feet tall….
The pool was constructed in
1956 and was to be inaugurated for the new fall term.
All students were advised
to learn to swim during the summer holidays.
The pool effectively was
ready to be filled during the month of September which was a long process due
to the shortage of water from the river during summer.
Behold, when the pool was
full, one side was about 6 to 8 inches lower than the other lateral side.
The physics teacher was
consulted as to the phenomenon.
His answer was that
standing water is always horizontal, even at Mount.
Fr Ildefons was at his time
doing practice measurements around the football field aiming to master
topography measurements and was placed in charge to review and solve the
problem.
The pool was emptied, and
he placed the theodolite in the middle of the pool, after levelling
measurements this difference was noted, and the lower side was increased to
make that side of the pool level.
The contractor did the
extension and before December the pool was inaugurated with a competition.
Naturally only after the
green water was chlorinated and filtered, it was beautiful blue.
Those who spent their time
in the shallow end would notice that the bottom of the pool was not level.”
In a Circular No 747 wrote,
Saturday, February 27, 2016, Kertesz wrote that in 1956, Brother Vincent,
sportsmaster at The Abbey School, asked the then Abbot Adelbert Van Duin, if Br
Rupert could assist him in coaching sports.
In 1964, seven students,
Gordon Mitchell, Russell Cunha, Bernard Lange, Peter Boland, Edward Watson,
Douglas Watson, and Richard Knox, formed the Abbey Aqua Lads swim club.
Br Rupert was assistant
sportsmaster to the late Fr Gregory Kloeg, who foresaw that while a student
swimmer would leave after sitting their Senior Cambridge exams, Br Rupert, as a
member of the Benedictine community would provide continuity as swimming coach.
Bernard Lange, one of the
founders of Aqua Lads and Lasses also served as assistant coach to the team, a
position he held for 18 years.
By 1967 the first four Aqua
Lads had made the National swim team.
The article mentioned that
in 1970, while on a swim tour to Venezuela, the Venezuelan coach was astounded
that there were no girls in the club and told Br Rupert it was the norm to have
swim teams of both boys and girls.
How was Brother Rupert to
get girls into the Abbey in 1970?
“Such was the attitude that
the Abbey was off limits to girls.
But always ready to support
change, I got the headmaster, the late Father Bernard Vlaar, to agree to my
sourcing girls from the Convent in St Joseph.
A survey of the school by
the principal produced 45 girls to the 12 Abbey boys, so great was the
interest.
And that’s how the club
became Aqua Lads and Lasses,” Br Rupert said.
“It’s like a whole other
family you have,” says Heather Hutton, who swam with the Aqua Lasses in the
mid-70s.
She continued, “The beauty
of being a part of a swim club like Abbey Aqua Lads and Lasses is that you have
a whole new family, everyone is still in touch.
It’s just great in that
sense.
We have benefitted so much
from being part of the club in friendships, discipline and in life generally.
This is why we are looking
forward to the reunion.”
“Obedience,” says Br
Rupert, “a word never popular, more so today, but I obeyed the sportsmaster, gave
up cricket and tennis and concentrated on swimming.”
For 12 consecutive years
from 1974–1986, Br Rupert took the Aqua Lads and Lasses to the Miami Springs
Swim Meet and other meets in the United States.
“In 1987, we won a meet in
Pennsylvania.
It was the best bunch of
swimmers that we happened to get in all age groups,” says the proud coach.
Other Abbey teams went to
Martinique, Guadeloupe, Barbados, Grenada and were in winner’s row many times.
Although the Abbey pool was
currently under repair at that time in 2016, the article said that the
indomitable Br Rupert is sure “there could be a resurgence of interest when it
is completed, with all forms of competitive swimming including the masters,
water aerobics, water polo and lifesaving”.
Br Rupert has since
“exited” as swimming coach due to declined health and age.
He is now 87 and in the
infirmary.
“He is being well taken
care of in the monastery,” Abbot Pereira said.
Since then, the Mount has
been looking for a “partner” to “resuscitate” the pool and to make it a place
where people will be once again able to participate and learn to swim.
He shared the Mount had
“one or two” partners along the way, but they did not prove to be “suitable”.
“So, we had to make some
divorce proceedings,” the Abbot said.
In 2017, Abbot Pereira was
approached by Chadville Pilgrim, founder of Hilltop Aquatic Center to enter
into a lease agreement with the Mount.
How to access the pool’s services
Chadville Pilgrim is now in
charge of the management and running of the pool with the intent to have
swimming tuition programmes for children, adults, seniors, and swim meets and
various pool-related activities.
Now that the Abbey pool is
open to the public, Abbot Pereira stressed that the “proper channel” is to
direct all requests through Pilgrim.
There is a notice board in
front of the pool grounds, which gives all the contact details for registering
at the pool.
Recreational hours are as follows
Sunday to Sunday 6am to 8am.
Monday to Friday 5pm-7pm
Saturday and Sunday 1pm-3pm and 3pm-5pm, Aerobics
Tuesday and Thursday 8am- 9am (suitable for
seniors or people with flexible hours)
Monday and Wednesday 6pm-7 pm
For more information, contact Hilltop Aquatic
Centre at: 763-7704
Overall, Abbot Pereira
reiterated that the Mount has always been a place that generates and encourages
life-giving activities.
He asserted that the
Mount’s main vision is to ensure their facilities will be used to positively
enhance the society, community, and the nation at large, “hopefully in a way to
keep people away from more negative activities like drugs.
I think by utilising the
facility in a positive way will enhance the general aspect of people.”
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EDITED
by Ladislao Kertesz, kertesz11@yahoo.com,
if you would like to subscribe for a whole year and be in the circular’s
mailing list or if you would like to mention any old boy that you would like to
include, write to me.
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Photo:
55HH0018ENGLISHp9
60LK0170LKEPOOL, The editor Ladislao Kertesz at the pool
58DB0001SWIMMINGPOOL, Picture of a lot of unknowns, need your help
72UN0002AQUALADS. Photo taken in Valencia Venezuela of the AQUALADS
team.
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