*HATH KATRO KHAMB: FACT OR FACTOID (THE PILLORY THAT BELONGS TO NONE)*

Amidst the stunning UNESCO World Heritage churches and convents of the city 
of Goa (Old Goa) has once historically called, one notices a solitary black 
basalt pillar near the Bom Jesus Basilica, located at a busy intersection 
now overshadowed by a flyover. The pillar, mounted on a round pedestal, is 
accompanied by a stone plaque that reads ‘Pelourinho Novo’ (New Pillory). 
The pillory consists of two distinct pillar sections: the upper part, 
topped with a capital, is round in shape, while the lower part is octagonal 
and rests on a square base.
*Figure: Pelourinho Novo (2022)*
*Figure: Stone tablet with description at the foot of the pillar*

Structures like this pelourinho can be found in various Portuguese towns 
and villages, as detailed in Antonio Manuel Amar Rosa’s masters thesis ‘*Os 
Pelourinhos da Lusitania’ (*1820–1974).
*Figure courtesy: Arquivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo website*
*Figure: Pillory of Lisbon, Municipal Square, Lisbon, Portugal*

Similarly, numerous former Portuguese colonies in the East Indies were 
marked by Pelourinhos, as highlighted in Antonio Boccaro’s 17th-century 
work ‘*Book of the Plans of All Fortresses, Towns, and Villages of the East 
Indies.’*
*Figure courtesy: Antonio Boccaro; Book of the plans of all fortresses, 
towns and villages of the East Indies*

The Pelourinho Novo in Goa is first clearly depicted on the late 
16th-century map by Dutch traveler Jan Huygen van Linschoten and the early 
17th-century map of Old Goa by Manuel Godinho de Erédia.
*Figure courtesy: Linschoten (1595), A ilha e cidade de Goa metropolitana 
da India e partes orientais…*
*Figure: Undated image of the Pelourinho Velho in the map of the City of 
Goa*

The pillory is later depicted in a sketch in the 1886 book ‘*A Índia 
Portuguesa’ *by Portuguese explorer António Lopes Mendes, under the 
subtitle *Pelourinho Novo*.
*Figure courtesy: Lopes Mendes (1886) A India Portuguesa*
*Figure courtesy: Arquivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo website (Luis 
Benevente collection)*
*Figure: Undated image of the Pelourinho Novo*

Recent 21st-century online sources however have referred to the pillory as 
the ‘Inquisition pillar’ and in the local language as ‘Hath Katro Khamb,’ 
meaning the pillar where the hands of those who refused conversion were cut 
off. The Goa Inquisition* spanned between 1560–1820 but this anecdotal 
account lacks contemporary documentation or primary evidence relating to 
the Goa Inquisition or the non-conversion of Hindus.

*This misleading narrative appears to have been initially spread around 10 
to 12 years ago by a right-wing group based in Goa called the Hindu 
Janajagruthi Samiti and also published the same on their website, who 
constructed a false story around the pillar, which has since been 
institutionalised and widely accepted to be the truth. Not much information 
is detailed about the pillar and the sources for their alleged claims 
nonetheless in recent years, the group has called for the pillar’s 
protection, along with a list of other demands*.
*Figure courtesy: Google (I*
*Figure courtesy: Google*

The Goa Inquisition* database produced from extensive archival research and 
compiled by Bruno Feitler and Alan Machado, affirms that hand-cutting was 
never a punishment used during the Inquisition. The Inquisition tribunals 
were established in locations, such as Brazil, Portugal among others, nor 
is there any evidence of hand-cutting being a form of punishment despite 
the presence of pelourinhos in these regions.

In 2008, respected Goan heritage activist Percival Noronha explained in a 
news report that the original Pelourinho Novo had fallen into disrepair 
after the liberation of Goa and was found about 20 meters away from its 
original location. It was the Athaide family who later relocated and 
re-erected it on their property after completing the construction of their 
house. The property with the house is now dis annexed from the pelourinho 
by the road construction. The author has confirmed the legitimacy of the 
claim by verifying land records and asserts that the property located 
across the road, on survey number 122/1 of Ella village is indeed owned by 
Dr. Pedro de Ataide. If the pillar truly held significant historical 
importance, it would not have been neglected or abandoned by the government 
or others, only to gain historical recognition at a much later time.

The original site of the pelourinho is said to have been where the Gandhi 
statue stands today, yet there are no written records linking the original 
site to the cutting of hands or its association with the Inquisition. 
Erstwhile this site was where seven roads converged along with the main 
commercial street Rua Direita, as noted by Walter Rossa. Jan Huygen van 
Linschoten in his work makes an excellent description of this street. It is 
astonishing, says he, to see here the crowd of sellers and buyers during 
the market hours. Persons of all creeds and races mingle together, with 
large umbrellas in their hands, which protect them from the heat of the sun 
in the hot season and the rain during the monsoons (Linschoten, Histoire de 
la Navigation, 1596).

*An ASI publication from 2004 titled ‘World Heritage Series – Old Goa’ as 
well as the 1979, Gazetteer of the Union Territory Goa, Daman, and Diu: 
District Gazetteer (Page 808) titles the monument as The Old Pillory, a 
lone pillar on a raised platform and is of basalt, with iron rings, and 
states that it might have once been a part of an ancient Brahmanical 
temple. These publications make no mention of its use in the Inquisition or 
as the site where hands were severed.*

At the time of writing this article, the Goa Archaeology and Archives 
Department is set to declare the artifact a state-protected monument under 
‘The Goa, Daman, and Diu Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and 
Remains Act, 1978’.
*Figure: Present location of the Pelourinho Novo (2006)*

Pelourinhos were typically places where corporal offenders of the law faced 
punishment, and were whipped publicly. They also served as sites for the 
public announcement of municipal decrees or laws (Serrão, 1986). However, 
no historical evidence exists that the specific pillar in question was used 
for either of these purposes or the false narrative of the severing of 
hands as previously mentioned.

In the vicinity, in front of the lawns of St. Francis of Assisi Church, 
stands another pillar that, while resembling a Pelourinho, did not function 
as one. The base of this pillar has been hollowed out to accommodate 
plumbing, with metal spigots installed and connected to a small stone basin 
or trough, transforming it into a public water fountain.
*Figure: Fountain pillar on the lawns in front of the St. Francis Assisi 
Church, Old Goa*
*Figure: Fountain pillar on the lawns in front of the St. Francis Assisi 
Church, Old Goa*

*Over the last few years these malicious campaigns surrounding the pillar 
have only exacerbated and spread online to include new malicious narratives 
that now vilify St. Francis Xavier and for this very precise reason I began 
a quest to investigate deeply into the very claims surrounding the pillar. 
These false and malicious narratives lacking any authenticity read that St. 
Xavier ordered for the cutting of hands of those Hindus who refused to 
convert to the Christian faith. During his ten years sojourn in the East, 
Francis Xavier returned to Goa about four times but his total stay in Goa 
did not exceed eleven months, this is a well documented fact.*
*Figure courtesy: Facebook*
*Figure courtesy: Facebook*
*Figure courtesy: Internet*

In light of the false, malicious misinformation campaigns driven by 
right-wing groups for their agendas, it is essential to distinguish between 
fact and factoids. These distorted narratives hinder meaningful, credible, 
and intellectual discussions, often serving as vehicles for political 
propaganda rather than fostering genuine understanding.

“Given this, the recent historians on the Goa Inquisition have struggled to 
communicate the new research and facts from the opening and study of the 
archival sources, the complexities of its history, how it worked, who was 
tried, and for what reasons because political propaganda is always the 
loudest in every discussion about it. Historians find it difficult to 
discuss any data that does not fit this propaganda”- Dale Luis Menezes, PhD 
researcher in South Asian history at Georgetown University, in the preface 
of the book *‘The Trial of Catarina de Orta by the Goa Inquisition’*.

So also, Goan-origin researcher Alan Machado who has spent a considerable 
amount of time analyzing archival material and data through his publication 
*‘Goa’s 
Inquisition: Facts, Fiction and Factoids’* has this to say about the Goa 
Inquisition “Writing the history of the Inquisition involves a balancing 
act and an unbiased evaluation of the primary archival data, not selective 
repetitions of earlier histories compiled largely from secondary sources”.

*History is a set of lies agreed upon – Napoleon Bonaparte*

* The Inquisition or Inquisição, the Portuguese name which means to 
investigate or inquire, was an ecclesiastical tribunal set up to primarily 
investigate cases of heresy amongst the neo-converts and New Christians. 
The subjects of religious conversions, anti-Hindu laws and religious 
policies that widely cause public outcry were never directly handled by the 
Inquisition tribunal or fell under its jurisdiction. This misunderstanding 
largely stems from A.K. Priolkar’s 1961 book* ‘The Goa Inquisition: The 
Terrible Tribunal of the East’* which has significantly shaped public 
opinion in India regarding the Goa Inquisition. The Inquisition in Goa is 
unfortunately one of the most misinformed and distorted subject for this 
very reason, while the book in recent years has been largely discredited by 
serious researchers and historians on the subject who have gained access to 
the global archives for the lack of sufficient archival data and 
misinformation.

*Reference*

   1. Goa’s Inquisition: Facts, Fiction and Factoids – Alan Machado

https://archive.org/details/goa-inquistion-book

2. A database of individuals sentenced by the Inquisition of Goa from 1650 
until its final abolition in 1812

https://domusdados.unifesp.br/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=hdl:20.500.12682/rdp/QUN1E4
 
<https://archive.org/details/goa-inquistion-book>
Looking to hide highlights? You can now hide them from the “•••” menu.

[image: Cédric Lobo]
<https://medium.com/@cdricnevillelobo?source=post_page---post_author_info--5957d255a00d--------------------------------------->
Written by Cédric Lobo 
<https://medium.com/@cdricnevillelobo?source=post_page---post_author_info--5957d255a00d--------------------------------------->
0 Followers
·2 Following 
<https://medium.com/@cdricnevillelobo/following?source=post_page---post_author_info--5957d255a00d--------------------------------------->

https://medium.com/@cdricnevillelobo/hath-katro-khamb-fact-or-factoid-the-pillory-that-belongs-to-none-5957d255a00d

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Goa-Research-Net" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/goa-research-net/e88b02e4-da68-49f3-8854-ba2624d0a611n%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to