Down Memory Lane 
A martyr of Goa freedom struggle 
Organiser
Prem Vaidya 

"The blood of the martyrs is said to be the seed of liberty." But as
time passes we tend to forget them while enjoying the fruits of liberty
that they gave us.  Dr Tristao de Braganza Cunha (T.B. Cunha), an Indian
patriot, rightly called the Father of Goan Nationalism, was the first
Goan to think, "Goa could not be isolated from the Indian freedom
struggle." He raised his head against the brutal force in
Portuguese-India when others bowed. 

He was born on April 2, 1891 in the village Chandor in Goa. After
completing his school education in Panjim, he went to Pondicherry to
French College and completed his B.A. and then went to Paris to study
further at the Sorbonne University where he obtained a degree in
electrical engineering. 

This was the time when Mahatma Gandhi's Civil Disobedience Movement in
India was in full force. The vibrations of Indian freedom struggle
reached TB Cunha in France. He became a regular contributor to French
papers, The Clarte and L'Humanite, reporting the Indian news. The
Jalianwala Bagh tragedy was first made known to the people of France and
then to the whole of Europe through TB Cunha's mighty pen. According to
K.M. Panikar, Tristao Braganza Cunha was in effect nationalist India's
first ambassador in France where he highlighted all the events of the
Indian freedom struggle through his pen. TB Cunha, filtered out much of
the information in France that was banned and blocked by the British
authorities. Returning to Goa in 1926, TB Cunha started his political
activities. 

Along with five Goan nationalists, he secretly founded the Goa Congress
Committee in 1928 for the liberation of Goa, Daman and Diu. To have a
proper recognition he rushed to Kolkata where the Indian National
Congress session was going on. He met the Congress leaders and succeeded
in getting his Goa Congress Committee affiliated with the Indian
National Congress on December 30, 1928 under the article III (F) of the
Congress Constitution. This was the time when with iron hands from
Portugal the dictator Dr Oliveira Salazar was ruling the meager
population of 600,000 Goans. The police were all powerful. Though the
printing press came in Goa in 1556, which was the first in whole of
Asia, there was no freedom of press. 

Even the wedding cards could not be printed without the police
permission. There was utter absence of political rights and elementary
civil liberties. Salazar knew that the formation of a nation comes from
the feeling of patriotism and so on every 25th November, people of Goa
were reminded that they were conquered people. All school children along
with their teachers were made to bow in front of the statue of Afonso de
Albuquerque-the first conqueror of this land on November 25, 1510!
Speaking at Kolkata session of the Hindu Mahasabha in 1939, Veer
Savarkar said: "Our first and foremost aim in our political activities
must always be to guard the unity and integrity of Hindustan intact.
Hindustan to us does not only mean the so-called British-India but
comprises even those parts, which are under the French and Portuguese
possession. Gomantak (Goa) and Pondicherry are as integral parts of our
motherland as Maharashtra and Bengal." The Indian freedom fighter Dr Ram
Manohar Lohia, gate-crashed into Portuguese-India on June 18, 1946 and
tried to address a first public meeting in the history of Goa at Madgaon
(Mathgram). He exhorted Goans to raise the banner of revolt, spoke about
the civil liberties for Goans and asked them to join the rest of India
to throw foreign rulers from the Indian soil. For the first time the
whole of Goa resounded with slogans of "Jai Hind." 

Among the Goan leaders who had associated with Dr Lohia were brutally
assaulted and bayoneted- the mark of which TB Cunha carried with him to
the grave. He was kept in dark damp cell at Fort Aguada. Later a case
was registered against him. He was the first civilian to be tried by the
military tribunal and was court-martialed and sentenced to eight years
imprisonment and deported to the Portugal prison of Peniche. After his
release from Portugal he came back and landed on the free soil of
Independent India on September 4, 1954. He continued his fight for the
freedom of Goa. Due to the long imprisonment and suffering, TB Cunha's
body was not responding like his spirit to the struggle. Yet he kept to
a desk job as the editor of Free Goa and carried his fight through his
pen till the last day. He died on September 28, 1958. Loknayak
Jaiprakash Narayan was one of the pallbearers. 

TB Cunha's last wish-'the integration of Portuguese pockets with
India'-was fulfilled three years after his death. On December 19, 1961,
Portuguese Governor-General, Vasselo de Silva, surrendered his forces in
Goa, Daman and Due to the India Army. 

During 1985' India was celebrating a yearlong centenary of the Indian
National Congress and the Government of Goa had celebrated the Silver
Jubilee of Goa's liberation on December 19, 1985. On the initiative of
this author, Films Division assigned him a documentary film on Goa's
freedom struggle entitled "The soil that was ours". 

While filming, it pained me to see a broken dilapidated and neglected
headstone of Tristao Braganza Cunha at the Sewri Cemetery in Mumbai on
plot No.9, lane J, grave No.  16. With heavy heart, I placed the wreath
and decided to do something. I had arranged the very first show of the
documentary film The soil that was ours at Panjim, Goa.  

Tristao Braganza Cunha, a slab of stone-how can it contain a soul? But
it is so... The scene in the documentary had its immediate impact. Shri
Pratap Rane while enjoying the documentary whispered, "Mr Vaidya, what
do you think, if I bring Cunha's remains to Goa and give him a
respectful burial? "Excellent." After 28 years of the freedom fighter's
death, his body was exhumed and brought to Goa. 
The writer can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED])

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