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Interview with Phineas Selima 1958 - 2010 Staff

  • ZA ZAR STDS 202000883
  • Item
  • 2010

Interview with Phineas Selima – 14 June 2010
Phineas started work at St David’s whilst he was still at school, his brother worked in
Balmoral and moved to St David’s in 1958 to do temporary work and Phineas joined him.
Initially he worked as a gardener, cutting grass etc. He didn’t stay on the property but lived in
Alexandra. He had been brought up by his grandparents and uncles as his father had died
and his mother was disabled. Brother Anthony was the school headmaster at the time. In
1962, Phineas matriculated and also became a permanent member of staff, cleaning
classrooms and assisting Brother Aidan
Brother Paul signed his ID in 1960 and Brother Leonard in 1961. He was obliged to pay £1
per year in tax from which he was exempted once he was at St David’s.
When he started working at St David’s in 1958, the current library was the hall and the
kitchen was much bigger. The boarders were accommodated upstairs in what is now the
senior prep.
The heating was by coal, the kitchen had a large oven and a cook called Julius. The present
committee room was the brothers’ dining room.
Teaching was undertaken mainly by the brothers with just a few female teachers who helped
out. Mrs Kempster was in charge of the primary school and left at the end of 1974, as did
Brother Anthony. Mrs Schaafsma then took over. Phineas also remembers Mrs Kenesovitch
and Buchan.
When he worked with Brother Aidan, everything was done manually. Each boy had a card
on which Brother Aidan typed all the details, envelopes were addressed to each parent and
receipts were written out by hand. Phineas used the roneo Gestetner machine, everything
was done by hand and put onto stencils, and then Phineas would roll them off, exam papers
from the lower grades through to matric. The current photocopying room was Father’s dining
room and Brother Mario was responsible for all the photocopying in the early days. Where
the bursar’s department and Laureen Schafer and Diane Clark’s offices are, were formerly
the brother’s dining room where Phineas often helped out as a waiter. He also helped out
with washing dishes in the kitchen, laundry dispatch and receipt.
Phineas was happy working and earning some money of his own with his wife living in Louis
Trichardt. His first born in 1968 was a girl and in 1967- 68 he used to go from St David’s to
Park station then on to Zone 8 Meadowlands and then home. He fathered 7 children, 3 girls
and 4 boys; the second born son was sadly killed in a car accident.
Phineas remembered some of the brothers, Br Andrew (Dracula), Br Timothy, head after Br
Anthony with Br Aidan staying the longest until the 80’s, none of the other brothers stayed
that long.
Phineas recalled Mr Murphy leaving and Br Anthony returning and Willy Castle left and went
to St Stithians for 3 terms. Mr Davies was a good but strict headmaster.
Phineas said that Willy Castle was a naughty boy, fighting other boys, hasn’t changed
much!!!!
Phineas is retiring after 57 years but will miss all the staff as everyone is so kind and the
school has been like home to him. He will be involved with family back home with selling
fruit, vegetables and groceries with which his wife is already busy and his brother doing the
gardening. His children all passed matric – the first born is a nurse and has 3 children, the
second child had a diploma in marketing and died whilst working for Denel. The third went to
Univ. Pretoria and acquired a degree in investment science, then honours and masters and
is now working for SARS. She is married with 2 children and her husband is an electrician.
The fourth has a diploma in tourism but couldn’t find a job and worked at SARS, the fifth is
also working at SARS finishing a BCom through Unisa. The sixth daughter is studying
electrical engineering and the seventh is at Tswane University doing graphic design.
Phineas and his wife encouraged them all to write matric.
As a child in grade 1, Phineas had a slate and chalks, with no shoes going barefoot to
school. He had to work to get some money to get into form 1 and went to Lemana College
near Elim Hospital, Louis Trichardt. The Elim Hospital was owned by a Swiss mission, he
found a Swiss teacher who let him stay with him to do form 1 and eventually went through to
form 5 and then St David’s where he finished his matric. He applied for the Univ. Of the
North but had no money for further education, which is the reason why he was so
determined that his children should be better educated. He started to live on the property at
St David’s as soon as he started working and was registered there and shared a room, going
home every month. In the 1990’s Paul Edey began to upgrade the rooms so that their wives
could come and stay with them.
In 2004, Mike Forder wrote a letter to Enoch and Phineas telling them that they had to retire
and then changed his mind so Phineas finally had to retire in 2010.
Phineas was not keen on Murphy. Davies he got on with the most because of his philosophy
of getting the job done. The bursars were always good to him and the photocopying
machines were always changing, he thought Minolta was the best.
Phineas worked t St David’s for over half a century!
JLE 2010

Egenrieder, Julie