Established in April 1982, the school is of the Indian community, by the Indian community and for the Indian community.
It began with just 90 students in 1982, and in recent years, the strength has been over 2,000. It has classes from LKG to XII and has been holding CBSE Board Examinations for Grades X and XII, since the late 1980s.
"Our students' interaction with Nigerian schools, for music, sport, drama, debate and art, have helped them develop friendships and they grow to love Nigeria. In fact, at least a few hundred of our alumni, have chosen to come back to stay and work in Nigeria," Mathew told PTI.
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The school at Oba Nle Aro Avenue in Ilupeju comes under the umbrella of the High Commission of India to Nigeria and is managed by a Board of Trustees comprising eminent industrialists and businessmen.
"Over the years, we have had students and teachers from every part of India - from Tripura to Rajasthan, from Kashmir to Kerala...Understanding and appreciation for the myriad shades of India's cultural diversity, broaden and enrich the outlook of our students. I personally, have learnt so much more about India, during my years in ILS, than I have ever learnt in India," says Mathew.
She says students passing out from the school have been pursuing a variety of careers including law, music, films, medicine, engineering, defence and fine arts and many of them are very well placed.
Suman Kanwar joined the school in 1986 and went on to
become the principal in 1990.
Today, 23 years later, I am older and wiser. I know that to be the Principal of ILS, beside academics, one must know building construction, be proficient at filing affidavits in court, keep an eye on the health of the banking industry and the oil sector.
"As all text books came from India, they did not always reach Lagos in time at the beginning of an academic year. We managed. I remember in one particular year, some science and computer science textbooks arrived only at the start of the second term. We still managed to get fairly good results. However, the 90 per cent mark which was elusive till 1991, was later achieved and the impossible was made possible. Our public exam aggregates rose into the 90s and we have never looked back since then," Kanwar says.
The school remained shut for days on end and its authorities had to struggle to keep up with the academics.
"Worksheets were sent home like handbills. Many times the local crisis forced us to close school half way through the day and disperse students to nearby Indian houses, till evening, when it would be safe for them to drive home. To steer the school during such times of turbulence was a daunting, yet enlightening and strengthening experience for me," she recalls.
"hat was the time when communication was at a premium. Internet was non-existent and circulars from CBSE about the change in syllabi would reach us after the examinations were over. There were times when question papers had to be faxed by the CBSE to the High Commission.