
On January 24, Grade One learners at Sacred Heart College each had a turn to ring the bell at the school chapel.
This tradition, now in its fourth year, marks the start of their school career. At the end of this year, the matric class of 2020 will ring the bell at their Valedictory Mass to mark the end of their school career.
The history of the bell at Sacred Heart College
Both the bell and the chapel have a rich history and are of particular significance to the school, which is one of five Marist schools in the country and 140 worldwide.
The bell came from the Third General House of the Marist Brothers in Grugliasco, Italy, where it had hung since the late 1800s.
The first General House was in France at the Hermitage just outside St Chamond.
As the Marist order grew, they moved to the Second General House at St Genis Laval, Lyon, but when all religious institutes were expelled from France in 1903, the brothers moved to the Third General House at Grugliasco in northern Italy.
In 1958, this Generalate was moved to Rome at which time Brother Jordan, who was the principal of Sacred Heart College in the late ’50s and who was responsible for the building of the chapel, asked that the bell at Grugliasco, which had called the brothers to prayer and meals for over 50 years, be given to the school for its chapel.
Many Sacred Heart College former learners gave their lives in the two world wars. The 49 Old Boys who died in the First World War (1914-1918) are commemorated with a plaque that hangs in the school hall.

The current chapel at Sacred Heart College was erected in 1956 as a memorial to the former learners who fought and fell for their country during the Second World War (1939-1945).
Gazing down from behind the altar of the chapel is a statue of Marcellin Champagnat, the founder of Marist Brothers. The statue was sculpted by Hungarian sculptor and artist Zoltan Borbereki.
Today, the historically significant Grugliasco bell and the school chapel have joined to form a new tradition that will become part of the personal journey of each Sacred Heart learner.




