Bruto da Costa was a lawyer, journalist and politician who defended the right 
of Goan people to decide their own political future





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________________________________
De: [email protected] <[email protected]> em 
nome de Eugene Correia <[email protected]>
Enviado: 6 de dezembro de 2023 15:27
Para: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Assunto: Re: [GRN] Pamphlets

I saw in my small collection, a tattered copy of Yesterday, Today and... 
Tomorrow, A Tragicomedy in Three Acts and Twelve Scenes, by A.A Bruto da Costa, 
and I suppose he was a Doctor, perhaps a medical doctor. It was published in 
1963.
However, I post here to know if anyone has a copy, for the first page of mine 
is tattered and the cover-page and inside page is unreadable. If some has the 
play, I wish to get a copy of the cover and inside pages. I read it decades 
ago, and since the Goa Liberation anniversary is coming up, I wish to quote 
from it. I am not very sure know if the play was an attempt at India's takeover 
of Goa and what the future holds or was it predicting a "tragicomedy", as Bruto 
da Costa envisaged Goa would become in later years.
I know he addressed a Letter to Nehru, but don't know where I could locate it. 
Does anyone know if it's in the Goa University Library or elsewhere?
Also re-reading, Goan Struggle for Freedom by M.K. Gandhi, published by 
Navajivan Publishing House. Recollecting Liberation and the glow of freedom. 
Where has Goa gone?

Eugene Correia


Eugene Correia



On Wed, Dec 6, 2023 at 10:04 AM V M 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Dear Frederick,

Thank you very much for that German resource on Swahili - it turns out the 
first known written literature in that language was found in Goa! Amazing fact. 
I will examine closely for more places to look.

About the avid embrace of  English language education by Goans in Goa from the 
first decades of the 19th century, yes it is true it happened first in the 
Bardez villages where the majority of educated men went off to work in British 
India (and later to Persia, Aden, East Africa and Singapore as well). But by 
the 20th century, it was routine for all families of means to send their 
children to study in boarding schools across the border in Belgaum, Pune and 
much farther afield as well.

It has always fascinated me how disproportionately the Goans were represented 
from the beginning of college education "for natives" in Bombay - the first 
class at Grant Medical College was half Goans!

Warm regards,

VM


On Wed, 6 Dec 2023, 02:06 fredericknoronha, 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
On Tuesday 5 December 2023 at 19:08:55 UTC+5:30 vmingoa wrote:
Goans in Goa pursued English language education with much alacrity from the 
second half of the 19th century. Few peoples anywhere - but especially the 
subcontinent - have ever embraced English so enthusiastically as the Goans. 
There's no question of imposition but merely access to opportunity, and 
Portuguese lost out for very good reasons.


Would you see this as happening uniformly across Goa or in some pockets (such 
as parts of Bardez, and among the daispora in the then English-ruled regions)?


Elsewhere, of course, like all other Indians in their transnational dispersal, 
Goans have adopted and mastered a wide range of languages.I have been looking 
for Goan writing in Swahili. There must be some. If anyone has references, 
please share.

Check this an example here:
https://afrika.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/i_afrika/Swahili/literatur_prae_uhuru.pdf
 
<https://afrika.univie.ac.at/fileadmin/user_upload/i_afrika/Swahili/literatur_prae_uhuru.pdf>

FN

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