Papal Seminary
The Papal Seminary in Pune, India, is a Catholic educational institute whose primary function is training priests.
Overview
The seminary trains students from three particular churches in India: the Latin Church, Syro-Malabar Catholic Church, and Syro-Malankara Catholic Church., it caters to the formation of about 160 seminarians per year from most of the dioceses of India.History
Founding
Pope Leo XIII, who inspired the present Pope,, established the Papal Seminary for India, Burma and Ceylon in 1890. The task of finding a suitable place for it was entrusted to Msgr. Ladislaus Zaleski. After travelling within India and Ceylon, he chose to locate the seminary in Ampitiya, a settlement close to Kandy. He subsequently became the Apostolic Delegate to India, Burma and Ceylon and took up residence in Kandy. Zaleski insisted that the seminary be entrusted to the Jesuit Missionaries of the Belgian province.The students were selected from the dioceses of India and Sri Lanka, and were to be trained as leaders of the Churches in their own countries. This was one of the first major seminaries to be supported by the Pontifical Society of St. Peter the Apostle.
The seminary opened its doors in 1893 under the rectorship of Rev. Sylvain Grosjean, then Rector of St Xavier's School, Calcutta.
In 1926 the seminary was empowered by the Vatican to confer Ecclesiastical degrees in Philosophy and Theology.
During its 62 years of existence in Kandy, over 700 students were ordained to the priesthood; 51 of these became bishops and three became cardinals.
1955: Transfer to Pune, India
The seminary moved to Pune in 1955. The transfer of the seminary to India was driven by financial and traveling difficulties; the independence of India in 1947 and the consequent political separation of India and Sri Lanka made it difficult for Indian seminarians to travel to Kandy.The new buildings for the seminary were designed by architect Silvio Galizia.
The original seminary in Kandy became the National Seminary of Our Lady of Lanka for the now independent Sri Lanka.
1956 to 2000
On 10 February 1986 Pope John Paul II visited the seminary.On 16 December 1993 Mother Teresa visited the seminary.
Current day
The academic work of the seminary is delivered by the sister-institution Jnana Deepa, Institute of Philosophy and Theology, Pune, which is on the same campus.The seminary has 16 staff members who are all either Jesuit or Diocesan priests. It has three spiritual directors who oversee the spiritual dimension of the seminarians' lives. The house doctor, Manoj Durairaj, received the Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice.
In 2015 the seminary celebrated 60 years in Pune.
Rectors
- Rev Fr Bhausaheb Sansare SJ
- Rev Fr Jose Thayil SJ
- Rev Fr Pradeep Sequeira SJ
- Rev Fr. Ornellas Coutinho SJ
- Rev Fr Joe Mathias SJ
- Rev Fr Michael Alosanai SJ
- Rev Fr Joe Thadavanal SJ
Notable faculty
- Kurien Kunnumpuram
- Francis Pereira
- Kuruvilla Pandikattu
- Bishop Thomas Dabre
Notable alumni
Servant of God
- Msgr Lawrence Puliyanath
- Mar Varghese Payyappilly Palakkappilly
Cardinals
- Cardinal Moran Mor Baselios Cleemis
- Archbishop Filipe Neri Cardinal Ferrão
- Cardinal MarJoseph Parecattil
- Archbishop Valerian Cardinal Gracious
Archbishops
- Archbishop Sebastian Kallupura
- Archbishop Joseph Powathil
- Archbishop Daniel Acharuparambil
Bishops
- Bishop Valerian D'Souza
- Bishop Christudas Rajappan
- Bishop Kurien Valiakandathil
- Bishop Stephen Athipozhiyil
- Bishop Alex Vadakumthala
- Bishop Sebastian Adayanthrath
- Bishop Maxwell Valentine Noronha
- Bishop Antony Thannikot
- Bishop Jacob Manathodath
- Bishop Michael Arattukulam
- Bishop Peter Michael Chenaparampil