Prof. Peter Nazareth, whose work I admired from my college days four decades back, passed away on May 22, 2026, his friend and the editor of a festschrift dedicated to him, Steve G. Ellerhoff, informed.
With his impressive anthology [Goan Literature: A Modern Reader. Journal of South Asian Literature. Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter, Spring 1983, Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University] he convinced quite a few Eng Litt students of our generation that Goan writing (in English and in translation) offered a wide, impressive if still under-recognised field for study. Those who read the anthology were amazed to see the breadth of the work he had collated, in days when the Internet was a decade away, and communication was still by air-mail and typewriter. He did this work with the assistance of an Afro-American student, Joseph K. Henry.
He was generous with his mentoring, always encouraging and supportive, and took every opportunity to review a deserving Goa book in prominent journals like World Literature Today. Even if it was modestly self-published (in the Goa of the 1990s), but read well.
Peter, who was close to 85, worked till 2021, and retired after even managing for a year into the pandemic. He is still remembered as a prominent Ugandan writer, and often mentioned in the context of Makerere University (once called the "Harvard of Africa") and Uganda as a whole. His contribution to the International Writing Programme of the University of Iowa, where he was Professor of English, has often been acknowledged.
His statistician-brother John Nazareth (and me, to a lesser degree) failed to convince Peter to visit Goa. This was a place where he had a small if well-informed fan following, thanks to his writing, reviewing and editing work on this region. An earlier generation of the Nazareths had migrated to Malaya, Uganda, and then, his family went on to the US, departing from Idi Amin's Uganda.
His roots were in the Bardez village of Moira.
Ever grateful for his kindness in being so ready to share his knowledge, his politeness when explaining any point, and his repeated egging on those junior to him with generous encouragement.
Peter will be warmly remembered. FN
PS: The attached e-copy of a festschrift gives an insight into the man Peter was, and how he was known to writers from across the globe.
E&OE
Written after a late night of work... Please excuse errors or oversights.