The other Goa ... The Bitter-Fruit Tree

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Frederick Noronha

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May 10, 2026, 10:31:01 PM (10 days ago) May 10
to The Third Thursday Goa Book Club
The other Goa

In The Bitter-Fruit Tree and Other Stories, Prakash Parienkar uncovers
another Goa, where Sattari’s forests pay the price for modern progress.

   Published : Oct 04, 2025 17:08 IST - 4 MINS READ
   Janhavi Acharekar

   COMMents

  The stories are set in the forested Sattari region in interior Goa,
   Here, a villager from Sonal Tar fills water from the Mhadei river in
   Sattari.

   The stories are set in the forested Sattari region in interior Goa,
   Here, a villager from Sonal Tar fills water from the Mhadei river in
   Sattari. | Photo Credit: PRASHANT NAKWE

   The English translation of the award-winning Konkani writer Prakash
   Parienkar’s short stories by Vidya Pai could not have come at a more
   appropriate time, when Goa is being pillaged in the name of
   development. Set in the forested Sattari region in interior Goa and
   written over three decades, the stories simultaneously reflect the
   State’s present reality and contrast it with the past. They are a
   timely reminder of the State’s rich natural and cultural heritage.

   Derived from his Konkani anthology Varsal, Parienkar’s stories are a
   look at Goa’s inner world. A world, it is apparent, that he knows
   closely, understands, and loves. Not only is it far removed from the
   tourist’s stereotype of Goa, it is a world away even from the Goan city
   of Panaji.

   “In his introduction to the story collection Varsal, Parienkar touches
   on the sheer diversity of life and flora and fauna that one can see in
   these parts. He talks of the range of folk customs and religious
   traditions and the tough life faced by the villagers as they eke out a
   living even as they face Nature’s fury or revel in her bounty,” says 
  Pai in the translator’s note.

   Also Read | Rich and real

   The stories hark back to simpler and, yet, paradoxically, complex
   times. Caste discrimination, rural-urban conflict, human-wildlife
   conflict, rampant deforestation, the effects of construction and
   corruption—all feature here. But these pithy stories are primarily
   about the human condition; they draw the reader into the daily
   realities of Goan rural life and touch a chord.

The Bitter-Fruit Tree and Other Stories

   By Prakash Parienkar, translated by Vidya Pai

   Farmers, basket weavers, religious revellers, forest-dwellers—all find
   themselves thrown into challenging life situations. A Mahar (Dalit)
   runs from pillar to post to be allotted a burial ground for his dead
   wife. A woman hopes and prays for her pregnant cow to give birth to a
   female calf. Another rejects an abandoned baby because it is a girl and
   she already has six of her own. A couple watches unseasonal rain
   destroy the crops that could have changed their fortune. A Catholic is
   torn between faith and family when asked to become a “Konknno”—convert
   to Hinduism—by his only relative.

A rich, deep read

   The under-represented and marginalised are given a voice and we see
   life from the perspective of indigenous minorities and oppressed
   castes—Dhangars, Gaonkars, Mahars, Vanarmares, all find a rightful
   place in this anthology. “The vanarmaro who habitually hunted monkeys
   with arrows was now a hunted animal himself,” says the narrator in “The
   Crescent Moon”, when a youth from the tribe falls prey to a mob fuelled
   by village rumours.

  In “The Bitter Fruit Tree”, we feel the Mahar Tilgo’s pain as he
   carries his wife Goklem’s corpse on his back across the river, so as
   not to taint the Dasara celebrations in the village. In contrast to the
   pomp of the Dasara ceremony, where the idol of the local deity Lord
   Ravalnath goes to meet the goddess Santeri, is Goklem’s sorry funeral
   procession with Tilgo as the sole pallbearer, accompanied by his cat.

   The theme of violence and death at a religious festival is carried
   forward in “The Sacrifice” when the chopping of a fruit-laden mango
   tree for the festival of Shigmo leads to discord and, ultimately,
   tragedy. In “Desolation”, a story around the Narakasur effigy that is
   traditionally burnt before Diwali, Parienkar turns around the notion of
   the mother figure as he juxtaposes an abusive mother with the demon.
   The Bitter-Fruit Tree and Other Stories is derived from Prakash
   Parienkar’s Konkani anthology Varsal.

   The Bitter-Fruit Tree and Other Stories is derived from Prakash
   Parienkar’s Konkani anthology Varsal.  | Photo Credit: By Special
   Arrangement

   The author evokes local traditions ranging from the religious and
   cultural to the agrarian and culinary. Be it the “puran” style of
   tilling fields unique to Sattari, the cashew harvest, the making of
   nassaney bhakris (finger millet flatbreads), boiling the bark of the
   assonem tree to treat wounds, or the festival of Gorvanchopadvo
   celebrated in honour of cattle, he brings alive the simple life of
   rural folk.

   Throughout, Parienkar mourns the loss of the old way of life, the
   passing of an era. In “Water”, when the village taps run dry because of
   a broken pipeline, Goklem, the village elder, says: “We should curse
   ourselves for our own actions that have led to this. Didn’t the whole
   village drink water from the well before this tap was set up?”

   Also Read | A green revolution in Goa

   In “A Forest Sanctuary”, when the government starts evicting villagers
   residing on forest land, Avdu refuses to leave, saying: “This land
   belonged to my forefathers. Why should it be surveyed?”

   The stories show the author’s intimate knowledge of Goan culture and
   society, and they address the loss of transmission of local and
   indigenous knowledge to the younger generation. “The Old Man of the
   Hills” is a charming story of a field ingeniously created in the forest
   by Dongracho Baba. “Here you may not get the food you want but this
   forest will never let you starve,” says the old man, who remains rooted
   in the forest, to his city-obsessed son.

   This slim volume makes for a rich, deep read. Pai’s translation retains
   the nuances and the Konkani flavour of the stories.

   Like the dense forests of its setting, The Bitter Fruit Tree and other
   Stories packs in a profound intensity.

   Janhavi Acharekar is an author, a curator, and creative consultant.


_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
_/  Frederick Noronha  फ्रेडरिक नोरोन्या  * فريدريك نورونيا‎
_/  AUDIO https://archive.org/details/@fredericknoronha
_/  http://goa1556.in +91-9822122436 784 Saligao Goa
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

Jeanne Hromnik

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May 11, 2026, 5:13:51 AM (10 days ago) May 11
to goa-bo...@googlegroups.com
What a pity this book is not available on kindle on amazon.com
I'm aching to read it!
Jeanne

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