ForeverMissed
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This site was created in memory of our loved one, Placido D’Souza, 90 years old, born on October 5, 1933, and passed away on June 20, 2024. We will remember him forever.

Placido is survived by his children, Jacinta, Lucia, Francisco, and Maria; grandchildren, Thierry and Michelle Sequeira, Nicholas and Gabriela D’Souza; great-grandchildren Mila and Bjorn Sequeira; and his sister Thomasinha Gomes. He was predeceased by his wife Sushila D’Souza, his brother Joseph D’Souza, and his parents Nascimenta and Benedict D’Souza.
July 15
July 15
May his soul rest in peace. During this difficult time, our thoughts are with his family and loved ones. May they find strength and comfort in the cherished memories they shared together.
I am very sorry for your loss. A life well lived and a no doubt he leaves a legacy to be cherrished by the family and friends. My sincere condolences.
June 28
June 28
My deepest condolences Frank! He is indeed a proud dad and an amazing human being to cherish..! May his soul Rest in Peace...May God give your family the strength to overcome the loss.

Peter D'Souza
June 28
June 28
So sorry for the loss of your dear dad! I met him on Facebook and enjoyed corresponding with him over the past few years. He was always polite, courteous, and caring. His writing style harkened back to an era when loyalty and friendships were treasured. I came to discover this personally when I asked him about the years he spent at St. Vincent's School, Poona. Later, I found out that he and my dad had been high school classmates. That discovery helped me piece together memories of hearing about your family decades ago. In fact, the oldest photograph of my father is one that your dad sent me from his collection. I am grateful to God for this friendship with him during the past few years. Thanks, Lucia, for the little vignettes of his life that you shared with us.
June 27
My condolences

I have a fond memory ..

Amb D’Souza had an interesting hobby. He drew portraits of global leaders and eminent figures and got some of them autographed.

When I met him in New York, he gave me the portraits of the presidents of Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay and asked me to get them signed by the presidents around 2009. I had got the signatures and gave them back to him. He surprised me by gifting me a portrait of mine..

He shared with me his experience as Ambassador in Panama..and was happy to see that Latin America was becoming important for India..

May his soul rest in peace..


R. Viswanathan
www.ambassadorviswanathan.com
June 27
June 27
Very saddened by the demise of Ambassador Placido Piedade D'Souza. I have had the privilege of having known him since my Probation days residing on Lady Curzon Road, External Affairs Hostel, in Delhi.

He was an inspiration to me. He always wondered why I teased Francisco by calling him Hey Frisco, who used to play under my balcony in EAH. Little 'Frisco' would yell back, I AM NOT FRISCO. Well, Frisco is a big boy. Sadly, I lost touch with Ambassador D'Souza and my last communication with him was on June 22, 2016.

The hallmark of Ambassador was his honesty, direct in his communication, straight talking, minced no word, brave, God fearing, family man, an excellent caring father, a gentleman to the core, and most of all, a very lovely human being, ever helpful, magnanimous, and gave till it hurt. God stopped making such human being. Sad.

In the demise of my dearest Ambassador Placido Piedade D'Souza, I lost a very dear friend and my mentor. I will miss you, Sir. Rest happy forever, Sir, in the Abode of the Ever Merciful Good Lord God. Amen.

May the Good Lord God bless the family with resilience and plenty of strength to live with the emptiness left behind by my dear Ambassador Placido Piedade D'Souza.

Good health to the family through all the years ahead- Muthu.
June 26
June 26
May his soul Rest In Peace. Father is a super hero for all kids.
His guidance shall always be remembered.

Wish God to Shower the Strength to the Family at this time.

Celebrate his life with the remembrance
June 26
When I received the mail from Maria, Placido's daughter, both Urmila and I were, not only deeply saddened, but were shocked. From the day we met in Metcalfe House, the then IAS/IFS training school, we became very friendly which continued till this day. After he settled down in CA we mostly used to keep in touch through E-Mail till about a year back. Even though he was in the US he used to take keen interest in happenings in India and specially in Maharashtra/Goa.
Will miss you dear Placido.
June 25
I deeply regret the passing of Ambassador PP D'Souza. My condolences to his family.

I met him when he was Commissioner for India in Hongkong. His abilities in his chosen profession were well-known to his fraternity. The late PN Haksar, one of India's ablest diplomats, spoke of him in familiar terms. There can, perhaps, be no greater compliment for an Indian diplomat.
June 25
June 25
Vinita and I are greatly saddened to learn about Ambassador Placido D'Souza. He was a humane, down-to-earth genuine person with a very high sense of integrity. I had the privilege of working closely with him when we were posted in Hongkong --he as the Commissioner. We also shared a special bond as he was my tutor when I first started school in Pune. He will be missed. May his soul Rest in Peace and the family have the fortitude to bear the loss.
June 24
June 24
It is with great sadness that I received the notice about Ambassador Placido D´Souza passing. For his children and grandchildren, please accept my condolence. I had the opportunity to exchange with him through a common friend, who passed away some years ago, Professor Hilda Chen Apuy. Both of them worked together in a beautiful project of diffusion of India´s Cultural History in Costa Rica and other countries of Latin America. Placido D´Souza left us a rich legacy in the knowledge about India´s Culture in the West. As a tribute of gratitude to the memory of these two special human beings, I want to share an example of the fruitfully mixture of talents they put together: in a book authored by Hilda Chen Apuy, entitled (in Spanish), “About life, love and friendship. A bridge between cultures”, the front cover is illustrated with a sketch drew by Placido on Professor Chen Apuy. Rest in peace, Placido.
Manuel Araya, San José. Costa Rica
June 24
June 24
Am proud of the legacy Mr Placide Dsouza has left behind
May his soul RIP,Amen
June 24
The bond between our parents led to my friendship with their daughter, Lucia. I fondly remember Uncle Placido and Aunty Susheela, from Kinshasa to Hong Kong. He was a kind-hearted man of few words. May his soul rest in peace, and may his family be granted comfort and strength during this difficult time.
June 24
June 24
Dear Jacinta, Raphael, Michelle, Thierry and family,

With sadness we read the news of the passing of your beloved father, father-in-law, grandfather. We read with great admiration his bio, stories and looked at the many photos. What an adventurous and beautiful life, full of enriching encounters, exchanges, colours and scents. It is clear to us that he passed on his sense of adventure, discovery and curiosity, his warmth, open view, smile and humor to you all. Besides it immediately takes us back to the few times I was able to meet him, and that makes us grateful.
We wish you much warmth and support together to honour and celebrate Placido.

Big hug
Lies, Luc and Hanne
June 24
June 24
Dear Jacinta, Lucia, Francisco and Maria,

We were privileged to have known uncle thru the lovely Aunty Susheela. A man of few words, such simplicty inpite of his stature. It was remarkable to feel the steadfast support towards his wife and family through the small, seemingly insignificant though immensly profound, actions.

Please accept our sincerest condolences. May you find solace in the many wonderful memories you shared together and may His legacy of strength, kindness and joy for life live on through you all.

With heartfelt sympathy,
Mark & Belinda
June 23
June 23
I never got a chance to meet or talk to Uncle Placido, but I could definitely understand about his philosophy to some extent from the way he has raised his children. The values Franc carries and lives with truly speak about his upbringing which shows the kind of formal and informal education he has received from his family. May the soul rest in peace.
June 23
Very sad news. It was such an honour to know someone so genuine, so inspiring. May his dear soul rest in peace. My deepest condolences to his beloved family.
Veena Gomes-Patwardhan
June 23
June 23
This is a irreparable loss. May God give enough strength to the entire family to bear this heavy loss. May his soul rest in peace. Om Shanthi...
June 23
June 23
My wife Lavinia and I mourn the passing away of our dear friend PLACIDO, Our friendship goes back to the early 1970s when Placido was posted at the Indian Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and I worked at USAID (the American Foreign Aid Program). I always considered Placido to be a great man and a great human being. May he Rest in Peace.
June 23
June 23
Sadened to hear the death of Placido D'souza. He was a strong supporter of my newsletter XIT-KODDI (e-Newsline of Bahrain Goans) and always assisted in improving this newsletter. You will be missed Placido - My sincere condolences to his family. May his soul rest in peace.
June 23
June 23
Please accept my deepest sympathies and sincere condolences on your Dad's passing away. May his soul rest in peace. Amen

I live in Letchworth Garden City, 165 Glebe Road, Hertfordshire, UK.
I used to work with Filos, Muranga(Fort Hall) Kenya - 're : Victor and Camilla D'Souza.
June 23
I pray the departed soul rest in peace and the Almighty gives the family the strength to bear the irreplaceable loss.
June 23
June 23
Deeply saddened to hear about the sad news of dear Placido passing away. His was a life well lived.
We were close friends of both Sushila and Placido for years. He was a very talented man with a great sense of duty and integrity. Humour and wit were his hallmark. Everyone was kept laughing at parties. Making skillfully hand-sketched portraits of eminent personalities whom he interacted with during his years with the Indian Foreign Service, was his passion. These were autographed by these persons. He has captured so many personalities in this collection of his. We are privileged to have a copy of his true-to-life portrayal of Mother Theresa which he so kindly framed and gifted to us. It enjoys a special place in our home and is admired greatly by everyone.
All his children who are creative and gifted as well are a testimony to his many talents.
He valued his roots as a Goan and loved Goan culture.
Our deepest sympathies to the family he leaves behind, his dear Sister, and all his children, Jacinta, Lucia, Frank and Maria
With love from Lila and Allan Cordeiro
June 23
June 23
I had the pleasure of meeting and interviewing Placido in the final months of his life. While his cognitive abilities were not what they had been, he still had the intensity and seriousness that would come to define his work as he represented India to the world. His personal drawings of some of the most prestigious leaders of our time were a testimony to the respect the international community had for him.  My thoughts are with his remarkable kids and grand kids.
June 23
June 23
Kalpana and I are deeply distressed to hear that dear Placido is no more. We send our heartfelt condolences to the bereaved family.
Though almost a decade my senior at St.Vincent’s and in the Indian Foreign Service, I was privileged to know him as a close friend, particularly during my ambassadorial assignment in the US.
His was a life fully lived, as a distinguished diplomat, as an editor and author, as a talented portrait sketcher of global luminaries and not the least as a prolific writer of limericks which reflected his deep empathy for his fellow human beings. We will miss him.
May his soul rest in peace
June 23
June 23
Sincere condolences to all the family. I have pleasant memories of conversations with him and his dear wife in New York. I had enjoyed his books.
   Best wishes. Eric Pinto.
June 23
I am deeply saddened to hear about the loss of your father. Please know that my thoughts and prayers are with you and your family during this difficult time. May you find comfort in the cherished memories you shared.
June 23
June 23
Dear Jacinta, So sorry for your loss. My sincere condolences to you & the family.

Those we love don’t go away,
they walk beside us every day…
unseen, unheard, but always near,
still loved, still missed and very dear.

May his soul rest in peace.
June 23
Frank, I am truly sorry for the loss of your father. I know how much he meant to you and how he shaped you. My heartfelt condolences to you and your family for this great loss.
June 23
May your soul rest in Peace.
Your contribution to India is unforgettable.
Salute from all Indians.
Jai Hind
June 23
So sorry to hear of the passing of Mr. Placido D'Souza. A life well lived, and an inspiration to many.
We got to know him in the mid or late 1990s, when he joined an online social network which some of us were associated with, called Goanet. Though he was born in East Africa (like quite a few in the Goan Daizpora world) and spent time in Poona and so many other parts of the world, his heart lived in Goa.
He would always encourage and comment on some new (even small) initiative going on here, and connect us with others he thought we'd be interested in.
For instance, in Jan 2019, he wrote: "I have been spending a few days in Cayman Islands, and was pleasantly surprised to find a number of Goans more or less settled here. I met two of them working in a local hotel and was pleasantly surprised to see that they spoke fluent Konkani and showed the usual nostalgia for Goa and things Goan. They had even invited some teatrists from Goa and provided entertain at get-togethers after the celebrations of St. Francis Xavier etc. I thought I should let you know as you have always been interested in Goans abroad."
A blessing to have had out paths crossed, met and learnt so much from an inspiring personality. We'll remember your 'New India Digest' too!
June 23
My heart goes out to you for the loss of your Dad I hope your happy memories will help you and your family through this difficult time.
June 23
June 23
So sorry to hear the sad news.

Ambassador D’Souza has been a good friend. I had the privilege to work with him very closely when he was India's Consul General in New York in the early 1980s. After his retirement, when he was bringing out the India Digest, he used to send me a copy. When I was bringing out newsletter for our organization, Global Organization of People of Indian Origin, he volunteered to do the final proof reading of the same before it was being send out. He did help for a couple of years. That is the kind of personality he was. Always ready to help for common cause. The last I met him was at the Indian Consulate over 12 years back for a program when he was staying in New Jersey.

I had kept in touch with him for some time. Whenever I met Frank, I always enquired about him.

He was a very kind man and a very able and capable diplomat for India.

On behalf of community organizations, I convey our heartfelt condolences. We are offering our prayers for the bereaved family members.

Thomas Abraham
Chairman,
Global Organization of People of Indian Origin (GOPIO)
Stamford, CT, USA
June 22
June 22
Dear Mr Frank, pls accept my heartfelt condolences. As the incumbent Consul General in NY, a position Sir served many years back, and as a former High Commissioner in Tanzania, where he spent his childhood, I feel a strong connect with him and have deep regrets that I never got a chance to meet him in person. He remains very well respected in the foreign service fraternity. May God bless his soul. Binaya Pradhan, Consul General of India in New York
June 22
Great loss. May GOD give all the strength to you and your family. May HIS soul Rest in Peace
June 22
June 22
Deeply saddened to learn of dear Placido D’Souza’s passing. Not only was he a friend but an enthusiastic supporter of myself and my mother Indrani’s dance performances: arranging memorable tours for us in San Juan, Puerto Rico while he was Consul General in New York, and while he was High Commissioner, for me in Trinidad, Tobago and Barbados. I will remember him as a gentle soul who kept up a friendship after he retired from public life. A life lived to the fullest. A privilege to have enjoyed our association both personal and professional. My deepest condolences to you, Maria, and to your family. May his soul rest in peace.
June 22
June 22
Deeply sad to hear about the passing of Ambassador Placido D'Souza. My husband Jackie Melwani and I first met him with his family in Kinshasa, Africa where he headed the Indian Mission. We met again in New York and I remember the wonderful exhibit ' Portraits of Power' at the UN which I wrote about.
https://www.lassiwithlavina.com/thebuzz/portraits-of-power/html
His was a life well-lived and his kindness and integrity impacted everyone.
May his hand of blessing always be on his family
June 22
June 22
Our sincerest sympathies to you Frank and to your family. We are never prepared enough for this moment but, your father's luminous presence and giving spirit will always be with you. May his soul rest in peace.
June 22
June 22
May your spirit continue to guide your family, even in your absence.

May his soul rest in peace!
June 22
June 22
Frank, So sorry to hear the passing of your leading light, your father. He obviously make a great impression on you and guided you on your life and career. We are always in debt of our fore fathers for their wisdom. May his soul rest in peace.
June 22
What a life! No doubt, Ambassador D’Souza brought his ‘artist eye’ to his diplomacy, forging creative solutions to vexing problems in challenging places. Rest in Peace Servant of Love. Warmly, Doug
Ambassador J. Douglas Holladay
June 22
A great loss for everyone .. I learned to love you and respect you a great character who was a pride to spend these years by your side... Thank you for the pride of serving you .we will start living without you... my admiration for the man you were. Soul test in peace
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Recent Tributes
July 15
July 15
May his soul rest in peace. During this difficult time, our thoughts are with his family and loved ones. May they find strength and comfort in the cherished memories they shared together.
I am very sorry for your loss. A life well lived and a no doubt he leaves a legacy to be cherrished by the family and friends. My sincere condolences.
His Life

A Life of Service

June 21
Placido was born in 1933 in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania to Benedict (aka Leopoldo Goncalo) and Nascimenta D’Souza. When Placido was 8 years old, the family returned to India and settled in Pune where Placido attended St. Vincent’s School and later Nowrosjee Wadia College where he received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees.

In 1957 after graduating from university, he joined the Indian Foreign Service where he served as a career diplomat for 34 years before retiring in 1991. He relished the opportunity to work alongside Jawaharlal Nehru and other architects of India’s independence. “I was proud to be part of an establishment that was steering an independent course,” he said. “To be able to work for someone like Nehru was to have one of my wildest dreams come true.”

In 1962, he married Sushila Lalvani and they had four children – Jacinta, Lucia, Francisco, and Maria.

During his career, he was accredited as India’s envoy and presented credentials in 16 countries, five territories, and two UN organizations. Early his career, he held posts at the Embassies of India in Berne, Jakarta, Nairobi, and Addis Ababa.

In 1973, he achieved the rank of Ambassador and established the Indian Embassy in Panama, Costa Rica, and Nicaragua. He went on to serve as Ambassador of India to Zaire (now the DRC), Congo (Brazzaville), Gabon, Central African Republic, and Equatorial Guinea. Shortly thereafter he was appointed Indian Consul General in New York and later served as High Commissioner of India to Trinidad and Tobago (where his jurisdiction included ten other Caribbean nations and territories), Commissioner of India to Hong Kong and Consul General to Macau. He returned to Kenya in 1989 serving as High Commissioner of India for three years until his retirement.

During his career, he returned periodically to New Delhi to serve in various positions in the Ministry of External Affairs. He also served as a member of the Indian delegation to two of the seven sessions of the UN Security Council that have been held outside New York – in Panama and Addis Ababa.

In addition to Placido’s distinguished service as a diplomat, he was a prolific journalist and artist. He wrote hundreds of articles, for at least five dailies in countries where he served, and innumerable articles for other newspapers and magazines. He created and edited three journals while in service, all of which were widely praised: Revista India, Darshan, and New India Digest, the last of which ran for 15 years under his stewardship as he continued to publish it after his retirement.

Placido’s first love was art. He expressed that love by drawing portraits of the world leaders and other prolific individuals that he met during his career. Each portrait is unique in that the individual subject of the sketch has signed it. Many of these sketches were compiled and published into a book, Portraits of Power. He was invited to exhibit these portraits at the United Nations headquarters in 2009 where he also presented the then UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon, with a portrait. Placido’s portraits have been exhibited in Belgium, California, and other places around the world.

In addition to Portraits of Power, Placido authored four other books: Beacons for Mankind, The Indian Foreign Office: It’s Properties and Art Objects, National Leather Development Program: a learning experience, and a coffee table book, entitled A History of the Indian Leather Industry.

Placido is survived by his children, Jacinta, Lucia, Francisco, and Maria, grandchildren, Thierry and Michelle Sequeira, Nicholas and Gabriela D’Souza, great-grandchildren Mila and Bjorn Sequeira, and his sister Thomasinha Gomes. He was predeceased by his wife Sushila D’Souza, his brother Joseph D’Souza, and his parents Nascimenta and Benedict D’Souza.
Recent stories

The Early Years (1933-1941)

June 21
These are the stories of my father's life as written by him when he was alive.  He left behind a rich trove of stories and I wanted to share a few of them with you.
- Francisco D'Souza

The Early Years (1933-1941)
Placido D'Souza

The first eight years of my life were spent in East Africa, mainly in Dar-es-Salaam, capital of Tanzania, where I was born.  I was a bonny baby, some 9 pounds at birth.

My mother would often tell me that the Governor's daughter was also in the same hospital where I was born and seemed to like to take me for a walk along with her own baby who was not as healthy-looking as I was!

My father worked in the Customs Department of the then Government of Tanaganyika. He attained what was probably the highest level possible for Asians at that time – that of Grade I Clerk. His was a very active life, and he engaged in all forms of sports including hockey, angling, and shikar.

He took interest in a variety of other things. He was fond of films that had just been invented and introduced to East Africa at that time. He was so fond of them that he had a special uniform made so that he could avail of the special rates available to such personnel.

He seemed an adventurous type of person. Airplanes were still a novelty and when one came to Tanganyika, he did not hesitate to go on a joy ride along with my mother. It must have been an exciting and seemingly dangerous trip in those distant days.

He was a convivial type of person – outgoing and involved in the Goan Institute club activities.

I have few memories of Dar-es-Salaam, and fewer photographs to jog my memory.

I do remember quite well the school I went to – St. Joseph’s - and the inspection of our fingernails that took place before class began. If one forgot to have them neatly cut, one was punished or at least received a reprimand. To avoid this we would, if we had forgotten to get them cut, scrape them on a huge stone in a corner. This was quite painful but effective!

Another vivid memory that remains with me is of the house we lived in – a small flat on the first floor. Below it was a printer’s shop that was also a bookshop. I would scour the environs of the printer’s shop for the coloured paper shreds that were thrown away, and use them for drawing and painting.

From the bookshop, I would insist on getting the weekly comics magazine. I could not read but would pester my sister to read them to me – generally over and over again, which no doubt irritated her no end. But she was coaxed by my mother to give in to my entreaties.

The school was not far from the beach and from time to time, the teacher would take us there during class hours. That was most exciting, and I recall a sand castle that I built with great care on one such occasion. It was a big castle decorated with seashells and other trivia from the beach, and I was devastated when the tide came in and washed away my effort.

We spent a few months in Bukoba on the shores of Lake Victoria, but returned as the climate was not congenial and my father asked to be transferred.

I have a few other stray memories – of my class friend Freddy Cordeiro who later joined me in class in India; of Rolly, our dog who was run over by a car on Christmas day, and of the local servant Yusuf, who looked after me and generally helped around the house.

In 1939, the Second World War broke out and there was the danger of getting involved in the war. There were frequent blackouts, and we used to have dinner in the kitchen. It had just one small window that my father covered with a blanket, folded several times, to avoid the police from seeing the light of the candles that faintly illuminated the room.

In 1941, my father finally took premature retirement for health reasons, and believing that a change of climate would help, decided to return to India.

We travelled by ship – by deck class. Fortunately, there were Goan stewards on board who were prevailed upon to let us use the bathing and toilet facilities of the upper classes. I remember taking along for the journey a cigarette tin full of ground gram and sugar which was generally an ingredient in neureo, the Goan Christmas sweetmeat.

The war was not over, and at night, no lights were allowed on the ship for fear of alerting some lurking German submarine.

We arrived in Bombay and after customs clearance left by train for Pune – a move that was to prove of seminal significance in my life.

In School in Pune (1941-1950)

June 21
These are the stories of my father's life as written by him when he was alive.  He left behind a rich trove of stories and I wanted to share a few of them with you.
- Francisco D'Souza


In School in Pune (1941-1950)
Placido D'Souza
My father could have settled down in Goa where his roots were embedded.  However, for the sake of the education of the children which he, wisely, realised would be the foundation for their future, he decided to move to Pune. Goa was then under Portuguese rule and educational facilities were very limited, to put it mildly. Even the schools in Goa were affiliated to Bombay University, and taking the high school leaving examination, students from Goa had to come to Pune or Bombay.

Pune was an accidental - and happy - choice. Accidental because my father had just one contact there, someone from his village in Goa whom he had known and helped earlier. The latter was instrumental in finding a place for us to live – achieved, unbelievable as it may seem today, during the course of a day while the rest of the family waited at the railway station!

It was a good choice as Pune had excellent facilities for school and college. It was to be my home for the next sixteen years, during which I finished my school and college education before venturing into the wide world.

I clearly remember my first day in school – in what was known as Higher Preparatory B. I cried incessantly and was miserable for several days, resisting going to school. My brother had to take me and put me in the care of a teacher who was not quite used to this kind of behaviour. But she was kind to me, and for a few days, let me sit on the platform next to her.

I was in the B stream as we had joined in the middle of the academic year, and the A division – meant for the brighter boys - had no place. However, I did get used to school and did quite well. In the first quarterly exam that I took, I was third in class, and in the next, the final, I was second. That prompted the Principal to move me to the A division of the next class, Standard I.

It was not to my liking however, and for a week or so, I continued to attend the B division class of Standard I where I had all my friends, until one day, the teacher suddenly noticed, when taking roll call that I was not responding. I was promptly sent to the Principal, a rather terrifying experience in those days. Fr. Ricklin, a Swiss Jesuit and a strict disciplinarian to boot, was not very pleased and sent me with a note to Std I A, and I remained in the A division till I left school.

I did well in the very first quarterly exam and stood first. I was so excited and thrilled, that as soon as school was over, I ran all the way home to show my report card, totally ignoring the pleas of my school mates to show them the report. From then on, I continued to do well in exams being generally within the first three or four in the class. I won several prizes, but till the war ended, these were just merit cards with a little note at the bottom to say that the cost of the prizes had been donated to the Red Cross.

As the war came to an end, I would scan the newspaper every day which invariably carried a map of Europe showing the Allied advance and Hitler’s retreat. Finally when the war ended, we began to get prizes which consisted mainly of books of our choice. I would look with impatience at the slow Allied advance as we were suffering all sorts of deprivations.

The war affected us in many ways. Rice, wheat, cloth, and sugar were rationed, and other commodities were in scarce supply. My parents, brother, and sister would go and stand in line before school began to collect the cup of sugar that was doled out. Sometimes they would go to two such centres. We tried to use jaggery, but this did not dissolve easily in the cup of coffee that, along with a chappati constituted breakfast.

I have many happy memories of my school days, of friends and teachers who moulded and guided us with such care and affection. I owe them a great debt and much of what they taught me still lives with me.

Another aspect of school that I loved was the emphasis on games and sports. Every evening, practically the whole class would re-assemble on the playground after school was over and we had had our tea. Each class had its allotted area where we played either hockey or football. I was fond of all games but never excelled in any. The best I did was to make it to the school junior football team which lost a crucial game thanks to a lapse by me.

I had many friends in school, most of whom are no longer in Pune. Some I have managed to contact after fifty years, like Paul who is a Carmelite monk whom I tracked down a year or so ago. Another, Seshmal, I have just discovered, and hope to meet soon – after over half a century! Vincent Suryawanshi became an advocate and was a good and useful friend over the years till he passed away of lung cancer.

My general impression of life in school was favourable, though I yearned for more freedom, which came when I entered college. It had been a time when one had little to worry about. I was good at studies, though I did have anxious moments before exams, and invariably went to St Antony’s shrine on St Vincent’s Street to say a prayer and promise to visit the shrine regularly in future! I am ashamed to say I seldom kept my promise.

Yet college opened my eyes to many new things for which I was ill prepared. Fortunately, I went through without any major scratch.

The Years in College (1950-1957)

June 21
These are the stories of my father's life as written by him when he was alive.  He left behind a rich trove of stories and I wanted to share a few of them with you.
- Francisco D'Souza


The Years in College
Placido D'Souza
I was very excited about going to college. Above all, it meant freedom – freedom from the discipline of regular attendance of classes as at school, and more excitingly, social freedom to mix with the opposite sex who had been so far a closed book to me.

My first problem was to choose what I was to do with my life. I was ill-prepared to make this decision. At school, one went from class to class routinely, and the question of taking such important decisions hardly ever arose. In those days, the first step was to decide whether to join the Arts or Science streams. The latter meant one intended to take up either medicine or engineering. Most boys from my class opted for Science as the alternative provided for a vague future as a lecturer or lawyer or clerk.

I did not fancy becoming either a doctor or engineer. I had some vague inclination to join the priesthood, but was not sure of my vocation. Every year, a few Redemptorist priests came to Pune from Bangalore and preached a series of sermons for a week or so. They made a great hit as their sermons were meaningful and laced with unusual humour. They were greatly admired and perhaps that attracted me to them.

Without telling my parents, I began a correspondence with one of them, telling him of my interest in their Order. He understood my hesitation and advised me to take my time to decide. I thought it would be best for my career as a priest if I joined the Arts stream, where I found myself one of the few boys, surrounded by a majority of girls.

My father consulted our landlord Mr. Oliver who studied my marks sheet and advised me that medicine would suit me best. But on my own, I went and enrolled in the First Year Arts class. My parents did not object. Nor did they ask the reason for my decision. I did blurt out my interest in the priesthood in answer to a question, and my mother showed some disappointment. I assured her that I had yet to decide. Her concern was that priests led a life of privation and knowing me as someone who was quite spoilt, she felt this would not suit me.

Anyhow, the die was cast, but as a way of keeping my options open I elected to take mathematics as one of my subjects. This I continued in the second year of college, partly in the hope of scoring well in the exams, which would not have been possible with other subjects like logic, economics etc.

I did very well in the exams in the first year of college, obtaining scholarships that virtually paid for my tuition. But in the second year, it gradually began to dawn on me that I had elected to go along a road that led to nowhere. I was thoroughly confused about my future. I fared poorly in mathematics in my second year and obtained a second class which was not going to be of much help in my career.

I then had to decide what subjects to take for the B.A. for the third and fourth years. I really had no idea. I had no special preferences. Nor had I any particular career goal in mind. The idea to become a priest had fallen by the wayside as I realized the discipline of that calling would be too much for me.

I toyed with the idea of becoming a journalist for two reasons. Frank Moraes had just become the first Indian editor of the Times of India, then the premier paper in our part of the country. He was greatly admired and lionized, and I looked on him as a role model, reading his editorials and columns with care and trying to imitate his style of writing.

At that time, too, we had in our class a student from Harvard, one, Premkumar Sadanand, son of the legendary freedom fighter and editor of the Free Press Journal. Prem and I were quite good friends and even though journalists were paid a pittance in those days, I thought I was cut out to be a journalist. (He once asked me to interview some American students who were visiting the University and write a short piece about it. It was published as a middle by his paper and I received the princely remuneration of Rs. 5!)

At that time, something else happened that was to change the course of my life. A fellow student, Jagdish Hiremath, who was two years ahead of me, got into the Indian diplomatic service. It was quite a sensation in Pune, when he emerged successful in the Union Public Service Commission examinations and entered the Indian Foreign Service – a profession about which little was known in the backwaters of Pune.

I was already beginning to wonder what I would do with my Arts degree which seemed inevitable after I had gradually decided that I was not going to join the priesthood. My father consulted Mr. Oliver again, who said we should talk to one of the college professors. We invited my French Professor, Prof. Chaubal, for a drink one morning, and I still remember the “elaborate” preparations we made for this unique occasion. Papa bought a bottle of beer and prepared salami sandwiches – neither of which I had seen before.

The professor was unable to give me any advice, and suggested I meet Prof. Choksi, the History Professor in our college. This may seem routine nowadays, but at that time, it was with some trepidation that I knocked on his door and spoke to him. He too could not help but suggested I meet Jagdish, which I did.

It was my intention to follow in his footsteps – get a 1st class in my B.A., go on scholarship to the USA, finish my M.A, as he had done in a year, appear for the competitive examination and enter the Foreign Service. I consulted him, and he advised me on the subjects I should take for the B.A. (General) course which would also cover subjects that I could take for the competitive examination for the Foreign Service.

I did work hard towards this goal, but sadly missed my 1st class by a couple of percentage points. That put paid to my dreams of going abroad for my second degree on scholarship, as I could not afford to go on my own.

I was a year too young at that stage to appear for the IFS exam, and so went on to do my Master’s with more or less the same subjects – history and political science. Here too, I once again did not make it to a 1st Class by a couple of percentage points, the added difficulty being that Pune University had fixed 65%, and not the usual 60%, as qualifying marks for a 1st class.

I finally appeared for the exam in 1956 and got through at the first attempt, much to the surprise of my friends and colleagues, and above all, myself!

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