The school opened in September 1998, having been conceived as a Pakistani version of The Doon SchoolofIndia. The name "Chand Bagh" refers to the Doon School's estate at Dehradun, India.[1]
The origins of the school lie in the independenceofPakistan in 1947 and the series of Indo-Pakistani wars and conflicts which have since followed. In 1985 a group of Pakistan's "Ex-Doscos", alumni of the Doon School, who had attended it in the days of British India, travelled to Dehradun in India to attend the school's 50th anniversary celebrations. On their return they formed a Doon School Society of Pakistan, which aimed to create a Pakistani version of their old school.[2] After many years in gestation, the school was finally founded by Lieutenant GeneralGhulam Jilani Khan, a former Governor of the Punjab Province, himself a Dosco,[3] and ten fellow-trustees. In many respects Chand Bagh is modelled on Doon School, Dehradun.[4]
The principal architect of the new buildings, which have Romanesque influences, was Kamil Khan Mumtaz.[7][8] The school opened its doors in September 1998 and occupies a campus of some 190 acres.[9] Around the campus are the Chand Bagh Farms, a further 270 acres.
In Grades 6, 7 and 8 all boys take English, Urdu, Art, Computing, General Science, Geography, History, Islamiyat, Mathematics, and Physical Education. On entering Grade 12, all pupils need to choose subjects to follow for their final two years of secondary education, taking three or four A-Level courses. The main options are Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, Business Studies, Urdu, Computing, Economics, and Accounting, plus the General Papers. The school thus gives its boys a grounding in humanities and natural sciences but focusses on the sciences in Grades 12 and 13.[10]
As of June 2011, each student is charged Rs 30,000 or more per month to attend this school.[3]
In 2011 the school advertised for new staff, stating that it was "looking for young dedicated faculty members as part of its expansion programme", naming twelve subjects, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Islamiyat, Economics, Accounting, History, Geography, Mathematics, Business Studies, Computer science, and English.[12][13]
In school sports, Chand Bagh competes against Aitchison College, PAF College Sargodha, Chenab College Jhang and many other renowned institutions of the country at cricket, hockey, football and basketball,[14] and takes part in the Shapes Cricket League.[15][16][17] In September 2006 there was a cricket match against the Wynberg Boys' High School of South Africa.[18][19]
The school hosts the annual All-Pakistan Art Competition, and that of 2011 was the ninth such event, when students from twenty-six institutions stayed at the school and were asked for work on the subject of "Ray of Hope". The judges presented shields and a trophy, and all paintings were later on display in Lahore. The principal of the school, Syed Nusrat Ali Shah Kazmi, opened the exhibition and said the competition was intended to discover potential.[20]
The 10th All Pakistan Music Festival was also held at Chand Bagh School in late January, 2011.[21][22][23]
In 2010 Muhammad Shahbaz Sharif, Chief Minister of the Punjab, was the main speaker at the school's annual Prize Day. He used the occasion to announce the provision of a grant of Rs 50 million for the school's Endowment Fund and two new buses.[24][25] He said
Time has come that we find ways for providing education to the poor but talented students in the prestigious educational institutions so that their abilities could be polished and used for the progress and prosperity of the country.[25]
At the ninth Founder's Day, on 26 February 2011, the main speaker was Yousaf Raza Gillani, Prime Minister of Pakistan, who saluted the vision of General Ghulam Jilani Khan "which created opportunities for the deserving students of the less privileged sections to acquire quality education in the school like Chand Bagh". He concluded by announcing the payment of Rs 40 million "as first instalment for endowment fund".[26] This led to criticism in Pakistan Today, which quoted sources as suggesting that "...at a time when thousands of schools in the province were without proper buildings, endowing an elite school was a waste of public funds".[3]The Economist of Pakistan commented that "This elitism has left a big question mark on the Punjab government's sincerity to provide education to all."[27]
When the Punjab Assembly approved its budget for the year 2011–2012, Chief Minister Sharif commented on the grants of Rs 50 million for the school. In response to objections from the Opposition, he said Chand Bagh plays "an important role in the promotion of education in the country and right of no one had been violated by giving donation to the school,"[28] and that the school was "not only for rich families"[29] as it also offered places for "children of extremely poor families, destitute and orphans."[28]
The separate "Chand Bagh School Girls Campus" formerly known as Chand Tara School, opened in 1999, caters for girls of all ages up to the Higher Secondary Education Certificate and also for boys up to Grade 5.[37]
^Jaskiran Chopra, Month of deja vu for Doon, Mussoorie old-timers from The Pioneer dated 31 August 2011 at dailypioneer.com. Retrieved 24 March 2012: "September is a memorable month for the famous Doon School as it was in this month in the year 1935, 76 years ago, that... Athar Hussain was the very first student to join the school and he arrived on the picturesque Chand Bagh (Garden of the Moon) campus on September 9, 1935."
^The Indian Year Book, vol. 29 (Bennett, Coleman & Co., 1942) p. 373
^Kamil Khan Mumtaz, Modernity and tradition: contemporary architecture in Pakistan (Oxford University Press, 1999), p. 123