Saint’s day
A wise brain will get you into trouble, especially if you are Christian. It is your fellow Christians to watch out for. The solution, of course, is to carry the trouble to them. It is a solution that requires a surplus of will and courage, and of course, you should expect to die young — if not from assassination, from exhaustion. Apparently, you don’t have to be able to read, or not very well, know biology, or chemistry, or physics. This seemed largely true of St. Catherine of Siena, the Catholic Saint (and Patroness of Rome!) to whom my attention was first called, because she died on my (earthly) birthday, although she is not celebrated until the day after.
I was not even a Christian then, although, as a white boy, in compulsory attendance at church, and willing to be educated — like some children today, but not all. I was an irritating child, asking too many questions, and not at all liking my beatings (especially from Brother Berg). My family were, as well as I could understand, “post-Protestants,” which meant we did not normally go into Holy Places, except when we were visiting a foreign country. I was, to some degree, impressed by the “Dogans,” at least those in Pakistan around St Anthony’s School on Lawrence Road in Lahore. Alas, they habitually beat the education right into you (through the right ear, I believed), whether or not this service had been requested. My papa chose the school despite its Roman association, for its high academic standards, thinking, “I have a bright boy, he’ll never become a Catholic.” They had me a full year past the age of seven.
Today, “Our school” (as St Anthony’s is still called) “offers Biology, Chemistry, Physics, and Computer Labs.” … In the old days it only offered books, and your parents had to pay for them.
I suppose I wasn’t such a bright boy, after all. I made it to the age of fifty, then caved. St Catherine of Siena, pray for me.