Colegio Cardenal Newman

Private secondary school in San Isidro, Argentina
34°29′11″S 58°33′44″W / 34.4865°S 58.5622°W / -34.4865; -58.5622InformationTypePrivate secondary schoolMottoCerta Bonum Certamen
(Fight the Good Fight)Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic (Congregation of Christian Brothers)Established29 March 1948; 76 years agoAdministratorMarcelo TrohavcicDirectorAlberto OliveroHead teacherLiliana FacciolaGenderBoysLanguageSpanish, EnglishWebsitewww.cardenal-newman.edu

Colegio Cardenal Newman or Cardinal Newman College is Catholic, bilingual, day, primary and secondary school for boys in San Isidro, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina, in Greater Buenos Aires.

Values

All its students are expected to complete seven IGCSE exams (Cambridge University) in year 10 and receive an International Baccalaureate diploma in their last year at school. The college is located in the area of San Isidro. It was founded by the Irish Christian Brothers who still provide staff. The motto of the college is "Fight the Good Fight" (in Latin: Certa Bonum Certamen) which is taken from St. Paul's first letter to Timothy in which Paul writes "fight the good fight of faith to win for yourself eternal life" (Timothy 6:12)." The Christian Brothers seek to educate men with the vision of his founder, Edmund Ignatius Rice (1762–1844). "Honesty, loyalty, solidarity, and deep moral values; give them the strength to fight for good causes, with honor and moral integrity". The college is an important centre for Rugby union in Argentina and Club Newman has close connections with it.[1]

Origins

The college was founded in 1948 as the result of many years' effort by the Irish immigrant community in Argentina to obtain a pastoral and education ministry from the Irish Catholic Church. The Passionists had arrived in the mid-19th century and one of their priests, Father Fahy, who had established a boys’ school in 1860, suggested then that the Christian Brothers should take it over. However, this request was refused by the order because they were concentrating their efforts in the United States and, later, in Australia and New Zealand, where much greater numbers of Irish people had migrated. In 1946, Father Dominic Moore, provincial of the Passionist Order, visited the Superior of the Christian Brothers in Dublin, and once again promoted a new foundation in Argentina. His request was accepted, and in November 1947, Brothers Joseph Ignatius Doorley (founder of various schools in USA) and Cornelius O’Reilly arrived in Buenos Aires. Father Moore found a suitable building in Belgrano 1548 and the new school was named after Cardinal Newman. Colegio Cardenal Newman was opened on the Belgrano site on 29 March 1948. The national education programme in Spanish was followed during the morning, allowing the afternoons to be devoted to English. Brother Alphonsus L. Pakenham was the first Rector. He presided over a community of 7 brothers, 8 lay teachers, and 148 students, 27 of whom were boarders. In 1949 the roll increased to 200 boys and there "would have been more had there been more vacancies".[2] The Christian Brothers encouraged the playing of Rugby Union[3] and so began a great tradition at the college which led also to the founding of Club Newman in 1975.[2]

Development

In 1971 the college changed its location to San Isidro where a new complex was built on a large campus with ample space for sports fields and other facilities.[4] The college offers wide curricula and extra-carricula choices.[4]

Rectors

This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (June 2016)
  • Brother Alphonsus L. Pakenham, (1948)
  • Br. Hayes
  • Br. John Burke[5]
  • Br. O'Brien
  • Br. Gallagher
  • Br. Derham
  • Br. Finnegan
  • Br. Keohane[5]
  • Sr. Alberto Olivero

Notable alumni

Academic

Art and Music

  • Eugenio Cesar Aleman, (born in 1953 in Buenos Aires), also known as Chapete; drummer of the pop group Los Helicópteros. He is also an architect
  • Guillermo Carlos Cazenave, (born September 18, 1955 in Buenos Aires) musician and writer resident in Europe for more than four decades; also a journalist, specialized in many different musical styles
  • Donald Clifton McCluskey, (born July 9, 1946 in Buenos Aires), popularly known as Donald. Pop and ballad singer, who achieved fame in the 1960s and 1970s. He is also a lawyer
  • Francisco Prati, (born in 1953 in Buenos Aires), first drummer of the famous folk-pop group Sui Generis. He is also an architect
  • Federico Peralta Ramos (29 January 1939 - 30 August 1992), Mar del Plata, Argentina, artist, representative of dadaism and of the avant-garde of the sixties.
  • Juan Forn, writer.

Business

Law

  • Alberto B. Bianchi (born Buenos Aires, 1954), Argentinian legal scholar; constitutionalist

Media

  • Carlos José (Bebe) Contepomi, known by his alias "Bebe" (Buenos Aires, September 28, 1970), Argentine journalist, writer and media presenter, specialising in popular music
  • Carlos Campolongo, (born Buenos Aires, July 13, 1947), journalist, psychologist and lawyer

Military and Police

Politics and public service

Sport

External links

  • Colegio Cardenal Newman

References

  • flagArgentina portal
  • iconCatholicism portal
  • iconSchools portal
  1. ^ Cardenal Newman[permanent dead link] (retrieved 31 May 2016)
  2. ^ a b María José Roger, "The Children of the Diaspora: Irish Schools and Educators in Argentina, 1850-1950", Society for Irish Latin American Studies (retrieved 22 May 2012)
  3. ^ Brother Sean Hayes, "Why did the Christian Brothers choose Rugby?", Club Newman website (Retrieved 2 February 2018)
  4. ^ a b "Historia del Colegio Cardenal Newman", Colegio cardenal Newman website (Retrieved 24 January 2018)
  5. ^ a b "Una Aventura en el Hemisferio Sur – Seis Meses en Buenos Aires, Por Billy Lynch". Hermanos Cristianos. 2016-01-27. Archived from the original on 2016-08-08. Retrieved 2016-06-06.
  6. ^ "Nicolás Caputo, el amigo y recaudador en las sombras de Mauricio Macri", Nexofin (Retrieved 24 January 2018)
  7. ^ "El Newman: Del rugby a la política, la escuela del dinero y el poder | Perfil". Archived from the original on 2017-11-14. Retrieved 2018-01-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) (Retrieved 25 January 2018)
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