*MoneyControl Book Review*


For those of you who may have missed the book review of *Goa, 1961 *on
moneycontrol.com on 6 August 2023, here is the text:



https://www.moneycontrol.com/news/lifestyle/books/book-review-facts-after-facts-valmiki-faleiros-new-book-aims-at-a-complete-story-of-goas-liberation-11105541.html



*Facts after facts, Valmiki Faleiro’s new book aims at a complete story of
Goa’s liberation*



*India is turning 76 on August 15. Goa, however, was freed later. In his
new book ‘Goa 1961: The Complete Story of Nationalism and Integration’
author Valmiki Faleiro goes back 62 years to retrace the events that led to
Goa’s Liberation on December 19, 1961.*



PREETI VERMA LAL | August 06, 2023 / 07:07 PM IST



Reading 408 pages of Valmiki Faleiro’s latest book *Goa 1961: The Complete
Story of Nationalism and Integration* can addle your brain. Names clutter
the pages. Quotes are scattered everywhere. Dates peep from the margins.
Incidents and opinions raise their heads often. The story of Goa’s
liberation from Portuguese rule on December 19, 1961 jumps from forgotten
facts to not-often-spoken-beginnings to stories that common history has
conveniently dropped by the sidewalk. And, of course, there’s the tale of
the 36-hour military intervention in Goa that has been oft told and retold.
Amid an overplay of facts, the book turns into a maze, you forget where you
began and do not know where the end is.



For the latest book, Faleiro — who's written *Patriotism in Action: Goans
in India's Defence Services* and *Soaring Spirit: 450 Years of Margao's
Espírito Santo Church 1565-2015 *previously — has rummaged through 150
sources, pored over reams for months to put together a book that talks not
only of Goa before and in 1961 but also brings in a plethora of emotions,
diverse narratives and events. All with the insightfulness of a researcher
and an occasional daub of wry humour.



Look, for instance, at a few fascinating facts that dot the book:



•         The Nizam of Hyderabad was keen on buying Goa from the Portuguese
to have a seaport of his own and join Pakistan as the third wing of that
country.



•         A Goa-based civilian airline, Transportes Aéreos da India
Portuguesa (TAIP), began operations in 1955 with two de Havilland
quad-engine Herons, each carrying 14 passengers. TAIP was the first
civilian airline from India whose airhostesses wore the* sari* as uniform.
Every time a flight landed in Lisbon, its airport staff would say, Já
chegaram as pombinhas brancas de India (‘The white doves of India have
arrived', referring to the white saris that the Goan airhostesses wore in
summer).



•         As early as 1750s, an armed insurrection against the Portuguese
was masterminded by the first native Bishop Mateus Castro Mahale.



•         There were several instances of looting and atrocities by the
Indian army before/after the December 16 military operation. Such was the
menace that Goan mothers changed ‘bogey man’ to ‘Sikh man’ to frighten kids
into obedience. (In earlier times, it was ‘Albuquerque’ and his long beard!)



•         President JF Kennedy is said to have told the Indian ambassador
to the USA, B.K. Nehru (about use of military to liberate Goa): You spend
the last fifteen years preaching morality to us, and then you go ahead and
act the way any normal country would behave ... people are saying, the
preacher has been caught coming out of the brothel.



•         On December 22, 1961, Los Angeles Tidings said: Overnight, Pandit
Nehru had become Bandit Nehru.



•   A British newspaper ran the headline: Nehru, Sanctimonious Bully.



On December 19, 1961, India announced to the world that Goa had been
'liberated' from Portugal. But even after 60 years, the Goans are divided
about the syntax of that fateful day. Was Goa liberated? Was it invaded by
India? Having lived in Goa for nearly 7 years, I have heard both sides of
the story.



On August 9, 1965, the Supreme Court of India held that Goa was 'acquired
by conquest’ but Faleiro says “it was both a conquest and a liberation”
buttressing his stance with historical facts. In the book, he vehemently
refutes the Christian/Hindu leaning as a definite pro/anti-Portuguese. The
nationalist fervour and the desire to break the shackles of foreign rule
was not divided along religious lines, his strongest argument being that
the first cry for freedom was raised as early as 1750s by Bishop Mateus
Castro Mahale, a Catholic.



In this book, Faleiro refutes a few long-held stereotypes and brings back
people who have sadly been relegated into oblivion. Like Prakash Rao Jesus,
a major of the 50 Para Brigade that participated in the military operation.
During the build-up, Major Jesus sent a Christmas card to Vassalo e Silva,
the last Governor General of Portuguese Goa. Scribbled on the card was “See
you on my birthday — Jesus”. The card was intercepted by military
intelligence and Major Jesus was reprimanded. But the Director General of
Military Intelligence (DGMI) chuckled at Jesus’ cheekiness and invited him
for evening drinks. The card is still displayed in the office of DGMI.



Faleiro’s book is a heavy academic read. If you love an overdose of facts,
this is your book. I, however, prefer reading anything, everything that’s
lyrical in tonality, even if the tale is of a conquest or military
intervention. Death certainly seems less harsh in a rhapsody.



In these 408 pages, I did get lost amid Faleiro’s facts. However, next
time, I am scrounging for authentic information about Goa’s history, *Goa
1961: The Complete Story of Nationalism and Integration* will be my handy
ready-reckoner. I am ready to swear by the Faleiro facts.

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