E XACTLY 50 YEARS AGO, world attention pivoted to focus on Goa and the 451-year-old Estado Português da Índia, the last remaining colonial possession on the subcontinent.

From the point of view of the Indian Union, the lingering European presence had become a prestige issue that demanded quick resolution—“just a pimple on the face of India”, in Nehru’s infelicitous phrase. Eventually, as 1961 drew to a close, the Indian prime minister had had enough. To the international press, he declared, “Continuance of Goa under Portuguese rule is an impossibility.”

But the Portuguese had no intention of budging. António de Oliveira Salazar, the arch-conservative dictator who had comfortably held power for almost three decades, was confident he could stave off an invasion by getting the US and other Western countries to back an audacious plan for NATO to set up a military and naval base of operations in Goa.

Salazar sent a series of frantic messages to Manuel António Vassalo e Silva, the last governor-general of the Estado Português da Índia, demanding that his (mainly African-Portuguese) troops fight to the last man—a suicide mission that he believed would buy enough time for Portugal to rally international support against the Indian invasion that everyone knew was coming. On 14 December 1961, Salazar wrote:

You understand the bitterness with which I send you this message. It is horrible to think that this may mean total sacrifice, but I believe that sacrifice is the only way for us to keep up to the highest traditions and provide service to the future of the Nation. Do not expect the possibility of truce or of Portuguese prisoners, as there will be no surrender rendered because I feel that our soldiers and sailors can be either victorious or dead. These words could, by their seriousness, be directed only to a soldier of higher duties fully prepared to fulfill them. God will not allow you to be the last Governor of the State of India.

Just four days later, under the command of Air Vice Marshal Erlic Wilmot Pinto (himself a Goan), the Indian aerial bombardment of Dabolim airport commenced.

By 10 pm on 18 December 1961, the Portuguese high command—which had wisely ignored Salazar’s insane instructions—was already negotiating total surrender. The next morning, the Indian Army marched into Panaji without facing any resistance, and promptly raised the Indian tricolour above the fabled Palacio de Idalçao, once the seat of power for the colonial administration of the entire Portuguese maritime empire, from Mozambique to Malacca.

Vassalo e Silva, who had also ignored Salazar’s crazed order to comprehensively destroy the infrastructure of the state, was quickly taken into Indian custody, and eventually returned to Portugal in disgrace. The annexation of Goa was complete.

A storm of protest was then raised at the United Nations Security Council, where a resolution condemning India was vetoed at the last minute by the Soviet Union. But the military solution to Goa’s plight also came in for severe criticism from many prominent Indians, including ardent nationalists like the Goan painter FN Souza. The brilliant Goan writer Dom Moraes even surrendered his Indian passport in a kind of symbolic protest—not about Goa joining the Indian Union (which he supported) but about the way it had happened. Looking back, in his Never at Home: An Autobiography (1994), Moraes wrote:

Another reason for the sudden movement of troops was that KV Krishna Menon, the Defence Minister of India, and one of Nehru’s pets, was at the time in a very bad odour. Chinese attacks on Indian patrols and border-posts in 1959, a precursor to full-scale hostilities in 1962, had found the military entirely unprepared, and this had been blamed wholly on him. At one point all three chiefs-of-staff had resigned in protest against his attitude. Krishna Menon was about to stand for election, and a victory in Goa, which was predictable, would raise him in public esteem. So the Indian Army went in, and conquered.

As Moraes instinctively gathered, the specific circumstances of annexation were a disaster for Goans. Even though the majority of the populace had long been vehemently in favour of joining the Indian Union (as the Portuguese had themselves found in surveys prior to 1961), the territory was still subjected to a humiliating military occupation in the wake of annexation, which continued the colonial experience of being ruled from a distant centre, with local interests and concerns marginalised to favour those of the conqueror.

Westernised Goans found themselves treated with suspicion by equally Westernised Delhiwalas. Their complex culture and identity became slurred as insufficiently Indian in the popular mainstream imagination, an absurd accusation that still rankles deeply.

It remains a lasting failure of the Indian intelligentsia that it has never come to terms with Goan history, culture and identity, consistently preferring cartoonish stereotypes that do not disturb its cherished narratives.

It is a shame that simple facts need to be repeated even 50 years on, but here we go. First, it must be understood that Goa had a different colonial experience from the rest of the country; Portuguese rule had little in common with the British Raj.

Second, by the 16th century, Goa had exploded into the richest trading port the world had ever known, the centre piece of a truly global empire that extended from Brazil to Timor to Aden and back to Lisbon; Goans were profoundly globalised centuries before the first British merchant showed up in the subcontinent. (In fact, the British East India Company was formed in response to a series of letters by Thomas Stephens, an English Jesuit who marvelled at the riches of Portuguese Goa.)
On the 50th anniversary of India’s annexation of Goa, a few existential anxieties still preoccupy the locals
By VIVEK MENEZES
Published :1 December 2011

Third, and most essential, the Portuguese ability to project power overseas had almost entirely withered by the beginning of the 19th century; from that point onwards until 1961, the Goans themselves ran rampant across the Portuguese empire.

Hindu financiers and trading houses (like the Mhamai Kamats) kept the Portuguese governors of Goa on a leash for centuries, rendering them utterly incapable of action without their assent. Other Goans fanned out across the subcontinent and throughout the Portuguese and British empires seeking employment, playing a disproportionately massive role in the building of Karachi, Rangoon, Nairobi, Maputo and countless other colonial cities. With global awareness, a new self-confidence and an increasingly free hand at home, the unique ‘Indo-Latin’ cultural expressions that we now recognise as iconically Goan began to flower. But none of this was understood by the Indian occupiers in 1961.

Today, as a state within the Indian Union, Goa occupies the top echelon in every single available index of economic and human development, or quality of life. And India and Portugal exhibit perhaps the warmest postcolonial relationship in world history; Lisbon votes along with Indian interests in international fora with almost embarrassing assiduousness. So it is easy to forget that the decades following 1961 have involved repeated existential fights which have sorely tested local solidarity and reserves of strength.

First, Goans were told we were merely temporarily disoriented Maharashtrians—it took a vast agitation and a historic opinion poll to disabuse the rest of the country of that notion.

Then, we were informed that Konkani (provably older than Marathi) was just a creolised dialect, and again it took vast agitation, even violence, for Delhi to recognise its legitimacy and rightfully enshrine our mother tongue as Goa’s official language.

More recently, Goa’s outstandingly disgraceful political and economic elites colluded with the Centre to try to impose an outrageous Regional Plan that would have permanently altered the land use, character and identity of Goa. Widespread agitations have fended off the threat for the time being, but Goans live with tremendous anxiety, convinced that New Delhi is not merely indifferent to their interests, but actively wishes to “change the facts on the ground” to render the Goans a powerless minority in their own homeland.

TeAM HerALd teamherald@ herald- goa. com PANJIM: Laxmikant Shetgaonkar, the critically acclaimed Goan director of Eka Sagar Kinaree and The man beyond the bridge, announced and launched his next feature film titled ‘ Baga Beach’. The film is set in one of the most hectic beaches in Goa, Baga, which has become a meeting point for Russians, Germans, British and Israelis. The film journeys through lives of five teenagers whose dreams and struggles are enmeshed with the life of the beach, giving an insight into the complex world of tourism industry in a third world country.

The film is an international co- production which has Sharvani Productions already attached as the co- producer.

A combination of international and Indian cast will be the unique feature of this film. The filmmakers have already begun the hunt for international cast ( German and French) and the auditions for nationwide casting will begin shortly.

PONDA: On world AIDS day, Goa state AIDS control society (GSACS) dreams of bringing infection down to zero. It, however, cannot escape the fact that seven persons die of the infection every month in the state.

Until September this year, the disease had claimed the lives of 61 persons-38 men and 23 women. The statistics were similar for the preceding year. GSACS data reveals that 745 persons-515 men and 230 women-died of AIDS between 2001 and 2010, an average of just above six a month.

Integrated counseling and testing centre (ICTC) counselor Supriya Arolkar said seven deaths a month is an acceptable average. “Timely and better anti-retroviral treatment and precautions taken by HIV infected persons have reduced deaths. The number could have been more otherwise,” Arolkar said.

Given this, GSACS project director Dr Pradeep Padwal said the society’s aim is to bring HIV and AIDS cases to zero. “We have a dream that there will be no new infections five years from now and there would be zero AIDS deaths. We are working towards this through creating awareness,” Padwal said.

Padwal presents data to show that the incidence of HIV is on the decline in Goa since 2008. While around 954 persons were infected with HIV in 2008, it dropped to 901 in 2009 and to 769 in 2010. He also said 105 HIV infected persons in 2008, 184 in 2009 and 154 in 2010 developed into AIDS cases. Up to September 2011, 536 people had tested positive for HIV and 81 were living with AIDS.

HIV takes several years to turn in full-blown AIDS hence those who die of the disease would have contracted the virus years earlier, Padwal said.

Qatar Goans celebrate World Goa Day

A cultural event in progress at the Doha Goans Sports Club’s World Goa Day celebrations.
Members of the Doha Goans Sports Club recently celebrated World Goa Day with a number of activities at a recent function held at the Doha Municipal Conference Hall. Music and dancing marked the proceedings that attracted a number of community members.
World Goa Day commemorates the anniversary of the inclusion of Konkani in the Indian Constitution in 1992, when it was recognised as one of the official languages in India. The World Goa Day is observed by the Goans worldwide, who take pride in their identity, culture, language, traditions, music and cuisine.
In keeping with tradition, the local event started with the song ‘Goan Ekovt’ (Goan unity) and ended with the ‘Noman Tuka Goa’ (Tribute to Goa). Children, youth and also elders took the centre stage in a four-hour programme, keeping the packed audience glued to their seats until the very end.
Goan cuisine reflects a combination of Indian, Arabian and Portuguese tradition, with a unique blend of both richness and simplicity. The Goan way of life is also unique in that this blend of East and West co-exists peacefully.
And this was most evident in the delicious Goan food, sweets and other traditional items that were on display.
The Club also felicitated winners of an essay writing competition held recently at hotel Grand Mercure, besides community members who have enhanced the Goan image and contributed to the community in Qatar.
The forum president Ambrosio Dias also introduced its new managing committee for 2011 – 2013 and has dedicated his term to empowering women and encouraging the youth. He said: “This is just the beginning. We intend to encourage more children to come forward and explore their talents. Three meritorious children each from Class 10 and Class 12 will be honoured at a function to be held shortly.”

By Dean Nelson, New Delhi
India’s Anglo-Indian community fights for survival
India’s Anglo-Indian community – a legacy of British rule on the subcontinent – is fighting for its survival as increasing numbers of their young men and women marry Indian partners.

Its leaders have announced plans for an India-wide marriage bureau to encourage more marriages within the community amid fears that their distinctive culture could die out.

There are an estimated 500,000 Anglo-Indians throughout the world – including in Britain, Canada, Australia and Pakistan – but in India itself their population has dipped to an estimated 150,000.

At the time of India’s independence in 1947 there were half a million Anglo-Indians in the country.

The community developed from mixed marriages between British officers, squaddies, tea planters and railway workers and local Indian women in the 19th century.

Since then they have developed a unique hybrid culture which carefully preserves a pre-War sense of English identity.
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The largely Christian community has traditionally centred on some of India’s largest cities, including Calcutta, Madras, Bangalore, New Delhi and the Kolar Gold Fields of Karnataka.

Last week it staged a food festival to celebrate its unique cuisine which blends Indian spices with classic English recipes in dishes like Indian Railway Mutton, Dak Bungalow Chicken and Colonel Standhurst’s Beef Curry.

Many of its leading figures have thrived in India’s armed forces, where the current Air Chief Marshal N. A. K Browne is an Anglo-Indian, and in the country’s extensive railways, which they once dominated.

The actor Ben Kingsley, entertainers Sir Cliff Richard and Engelburt Humperdink, and the former Olympic athlete Sebastian Coe, are claimed by the community as some of their highest achievers.

But since India’s independence in 1947 the community in India has gradually dwindled in size and its leaders now believe it is facing a battle for survival unless it can reverse the trend.

Dr Charles Dias, the community’s sole member of the Lok Sabha parliament has launched a new campaign to win greater government support to help preserve its culture and to encourage more Anglo-Indians to marry within their own community.

He met India’s law and minority affairs minister Salman Khurshid to press for land to be allocated for housing estates, new Anglo-Indian cultural centres and reserved places for Anglo-Indians in Indian universities.

The community is currently suffering a housing crisis, he said, because many had lost homes given as part of their jobs in the Indian Railways and could not afford to buy land.

“We’re setting up a marriage bureau because otherwise our Anglo-Indian girls and boys will marry outside and dilute our population and culture.

“Anglo-Indian culture is a good thing, our language, culinary traditions. We are a distinctive community and we must stay together,” he said.