Breaking the Afro-Indian Silence

by V. M. de Malar
vmingoa at gmail.com


It began last night with startlingly unique sounds, with song and ecstatic 
dance and inexpressibly moving ancient rituals. Strong voices rang out with 
praise and passion, singers rose to whirl about in delirious abandon as 
emotions rose to fever pitch, as the Sidi Goma group, the Mystic Musicians and 
Dancers of the Black Sufi Saint, Gori Pir, lit up the grounds of the 
International Centre on the Dona Paula plateau at the opening of the 
conference for study of The African Diaspora in Asia (TADIA).

It's going to be an enriching feast for the next ten days. Along with lectures 
and fascinating discussions, there's a Festival of African and Afro-Diasporic 
Cinema  from the 15th through the 19th, and an intriguing Festival of Song, 
Music, Dance and Drama, also starting on the 15th, including another chance to 
see the Sidi Goma group (at 8:00 PM on January 16th). All the conference 
events, including concerts and movies, are free of charge and open to the Goan 
public, as space permits.

TADIA is an historic event, the first serious collective attempt to examine 
and analyze the African diaspora in Asia which has very deep and ancient 
roots, and a misunderstood but very real cultural significance. The trans-
Atlantic African dispersal is endlessly studied, but the much older 
relationship between India and Africa is still barely understood, let alone 
properly contextualized. Taboos and racism have kept the lid on study of this 
intercultural exchange for far too long, it's time to put all that behind us, 
to understand and fully embrace this much-ignored aspect of our shared 
heritage.

Here in Goa, we've had contact with Africa for at least a thousand years. Our 
territory was a primary distribution center for African slaves, had whole 
battalions of African troops stationed on our soil even right up to 1961, and 
we obviously have significant African admixture in our perpetually murky gene 
pool. Yet we still know almost nothing about this aspect of our collective 
experience. Last night served as a ray of light into this societal darkness, 
drums accompanying the thrilling Indo-African performance broke an 
uncomfortable silence that has held for generations.

Of course, Goa is only one place that's associated with the African diaspora 
in India. We're talking about a very diffused populace that scattered across 
the subcontinent, which has been here, in parts, probably for millennia. The 
slave trade is central, most came as chattel and part of the Arab (and later, 
European) trade with India.

But there have been prized African soldiers and generals at Indian courts 
across many centuries, and even aristocratic African rulers of Indian 
principalities (such as the Siddi nawabs of Janjira).

Our little patch of the Konkan coast has always been an entrepot, an entry 
point for traders who sought to gain access to the wealthy Deccan. And the 
Arabs who came here for centuries before the Portuguese conquest undoubtedly 
brought Africans with them. But it is clearly the colonial period that has had 
the most impact with regard to diaspora, as Panjim became the locus of an 
international slave market which dispersed these African unfortunates 
throughout the European colonies further East, and particularly to Ceylon. The 
Siddis of Karnataka, who still speak a kind of Konkani, are another by-product 
of this time; they're descended from escapees who made it across the border.

>From this period, we see evidence of tremendous cultural syncretism. The 
classic Goan chicken cafreal is clearly an import, using African marination 
techniques and bearing the "kaffir" name, but one can also detect a foreign 
slave's hand and tastes in the signature sorpotel. Well-to-do Goan families of 
the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries always kept African slaves, as did the 
Portuguese hierarchy and clergy, the entire cultural (and genetic) impact of 
all these Africans in Goa is yet to be studied properly.

The genial Belgian-turned-Brazilian-turned-Panjimite convenor of TADIA, Jean-
Pierre Angenot, has spent two years (of what was once retirement) preparing 
for this wonderfully conceived, stimulatingly multidisciplinary and unique, 
Africanist jamboree on the Dona Paula plateau. It's another signal that we're 
slowly heading in the right directions as a destination, as a culture, as a 
thinking society. So, a hearty Goan welcome to TADIA and to all the Siddis of 
India. (ENDS)


------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: VM is an early Goanetter, who put his money where his mouth 
is and returned to do something in Goa in late 2004, while in his thirties. 
The above article appeared in the January 10, 2006 edition of The Herald, Goa.

GOANET READER WELCOMES contributions from its readers, by way of essays, 
reviews, features and think-pieces. We share quality Goa-related writing among 
the growing readership of Goanet and it's allied network of mailing lists. If 
you appreciate the above article, please send in your feedback to the writer. 
Our writers write -- or share what they have written -- pro bono, and deserve 
hearing back from those who appreciate their work. Goanet Reader too welcomes 
your feedback at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

GoanetReader is edited by Frederick Noronha - fred at bytesforall.org

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Goanet, building community and creating social capital since 1994
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|                    Goa - 2005 Santosh Trophy Champions                 |
|                                                                        |
|      Support Soccer Activities at the grassroots in our villages       |
| Vacationing in Goa this year-end - Take back & distribute Soccer Balls |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

Reply via email to