Duarte Drumond Braga
Investigador | Researcher
Centro de Estudos Comparatistas | Centre for Comparative Studies
Faculdade de Letras | School of Arts and Humanities
Universidade de Lisboa | University of Lisbon
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Dom Moraes apparently wrote the review below (needs to be verified)... FN
Goan exile: in
search of an identity
Somebody
recently sent me a slim paperback called "A Kind of Absence: Life in the
Shadow of History". The author has a very melodious name. João da Veiga
Coutinho, and the blurb tells me that he was born in Margão, but now lives
in Philadelphia. He would seem to be a fairly elderly person, and to have
traveled widely in the course of his career. The book is very difficult to
describe. On the surface it is a collection of essays and fragmentary prose
pieces, but they do not seem to be particularly connected in terms of
chronology. What connects them is that they are all to do with the theme of
exile. The theme interests me. Wherever I have lived I have felt an exile,
and this would worry me less if I knew from where.
The book is about
a specific kind of exile: the exile of Goans from their homeland. The author
seems obsessive about the great numbers of Goans who have traveled, and in
many cases settled, in other countries, and he seems to find this a unique
phenomenon. I don’t think it is at all. I have spent the last few months
traveling through India in search of a book, and in every state I have
visited there is a long history of people who have gone abroad to better
their fortunes in one way or another.
Two Asian countries, the two
largest, China and India, are like this. They have continually been
overpopulated, in the sense that they have always had populations too large
to be sustained by the resources and available technologies of the time. So
people left their birthplaces, at first to look for a life somewhere else in
the country, then, as travel became possible, to look for it
overseas.
Wherever one goes in the world today one sees Chinese
faces, or some indications of Chinese blood; in many places one sees
Indians. Where in India they come from is irrelevant. The numbers that have
left Punjab probably equal the numbers that have left Kerala. That Goa has a
monopoly on exiles is simply not true. The Indian subcontinent has been left
by millions of people over the last two centuries.
But Mr. Coutinho
also inquires into the components of an exile, particularly a Goan exile,
and he seems to take himself as an example. He says that his childhood
memories of Goa are sharp. He recollects the kinds of plants he saw, or
smelt, or touched. But he tells us that he now cannot describe them, since
throughout his schooldays, presumably under the Portuguese, he was forbidden
to use the Konkani words which to him were the natural names for various
kinds of flora and fauna. Some part of this book is well conceived, but it
is also confused, and it uses too many words to describe what, when it comes
down to it, are relatively simple ideas. However, it is a book deeply
committed to itself, and some part of it is very well written.
There
are several ways to look at Goan history, most of which Mr. Coutinho
refutes. What he cannot refute comes down to the simple fact that Goa is a
small place, and that for much of its history it was situated on islands,
like Bombay before the British. It was therefore more or less cut off from
the more important events on the mainland, or they affected it at a second
hand. Any event that affected Goa directly, like the Portuguese invasion and
occupation, naturally had a more powerful effect on the people that it might
have done on the mainland. This produced some curious results. Goan Hindus
submitted to conversion but retained their original casts, almost like
Talismans.
Goan Christianity had other unique features, amongst them
the fact that it was practised with slight local differences from village to
village, as Hinduism had been. The territory drifted rudderless for four
centuries under Portuguese rule, and during this time many people left it
for unmysterious reasons, like the need for employment. In 1961 the mainland
once more directly affected Goa, this time by the Indian occupation or
liberation or whatever one wants to call it. This has had some fortunate
effects and some which are far from fortunate. A great influx of people from
the mainland has caused the state to lose the identity it acquired through
four centuries of colonisation, the only real identity it had ever had. It
has not yet acquired a wholly Indian identity. If and when it does, it will
be like any other small Indian state, allowing for local idiosyncrasies. The
whole reason for Mr. Coutinho’s quixotic quest will disappear.
Many
people have commented on the fact that Goans have a strong sense of their
homeland, which is why so many of them return to it.
These remarks
have been prompted by the decisions of the two famous and sophisticated
Goans to live in the state they were born. Mario Miranda went back to his
ancestral house at Loutolim, Frank Simões built a beautiful villa at
Candolim. Many other Goans have returned home with less publicity, and of
course many other people non-Goans have chosen to live there of late,
because it is a pleasant place to live.
All over India and the world
there are Punjabis who want to retire to Punjab, Keralites who want to go
home. It is a very Indian trait to want to end your life where you started
it. In fact, the modern Indian urban population is still close to its rural
roots.
People still want to identify with the village of their
ancestors. It is worth note the memories of village life that called Miranda
and Simões back to Goa, and which seem to inspire Mr. Coutinho in his search
for the identity of the Goan exile. But judging from what I saw when I was
in Goa last November, soon even the villages may have
vanished.
Panjim, Goa
February 14, 1999
The above
review appeared in the February 14, 1999 edition of The Herald,
Goa.
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On May 26, 2023, at 2:29 PM, Frederick Noronha <frederic...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On 26-May-2023, at 9:30 PM, Frederick Noronha <frederic...@gmail.com> wrote:
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