That's my cousin doing the mando, a cultural ambassador for Goa! BC
Thanks for this posting FN. Doriacha larari(spelling) is one of my favourites, Enjoyed the singing - wish the musicians/singers would smile ! Mervyn Maciel ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2018 19:32:41 +0530 From: Frederick Noronha <[email protected]> To: Goanet <[email protected]> Subject: [Goanet] Hindu tinge to last Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Message-ID: <camcr53+-fb-cxbrrocvud2ggpz0d1ap7+fbm5uwfwqnarpu...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" Anirban Bhaumik (@AnirbanDHdel) tweeted at 7:21 pm on Sun, Jul 15, 2018: Hindu tinge to last Pravasi Bharatiya Divas https://t.co/qJ2BxtBTdP @deccanherald (https://twitter.com/AnirbanDHdel/status/1018493188951166976?s=03) Get the official Twitter app at https://twitter.com/download?s=13 -- _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ _/ _/ FN * ????????? ???????? * ??????? ???????? +91-9822122436 _/ RADIO GOANA: https://archive.org/details/@fredericknoronha _/ _/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/ ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2018 08:58:14 +0100 From: Mervyn Maciel <[email protected]> To: "Estb. 1994! Goa's Premiere Mailing List" <[email protected]> Subject: [Goanet] Subject: Amchem Cantar, a documentary on Goan music by Ruth Message-ID: <cal65l0ubzhmjzhe2izsr1wnvnzopl76vsn5uh+r3_cn3jlm...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" I'm sorry, my earlier comments were made in a hurry - having listened to the entire video, I was pleased to see that smiles were not lacking in the couple dancing the mando! Apologies. Mervyn Maciel ------------------------------ Message: 8 Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2018 23:34:31 +0900 From: Joao Barros-Pereira <[email protected]> To: goanet <[email protected]> Subject: [Goanet] Some fish, please? Message-ID: <CAHg__J49D=NEH3OK0GRY9UbJ6W9yAJtu9ThDckTj=bxbuew...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" Don't worry, the growing scare of having eaten polluted fish will subside, and we Goans tomorrow will forget about what we are blowing hot and cold today. That is the story of Goa, and our politicians know it only too well. What will not go away is the basic problem; the fishing ban for two months during the monsoon when no mechanized fishing is allowed in Goa. We have a fishing ban, and yet we want business to go on as usual? We love our fish curry and so we import fish from outside Goa during the fishing ban. Is the ban on fishing only symbolic, and we do not understand the implications of it? Our politicians will find a solutions to this problem - as they always do - in a way in which their pockets and suitcases do not become any lighter. This attitude of ours is seen in more than one activity area, and is a characteristic of the Goan, visible in all its glory in the so-called development of our state. Now, we have a great new clean fish market building full of contaminated fish laced with formalin. And, we are told differently than earlier - the formalin is within the permissible limits. Good news for fish eaters? With fish imported from far away states, don't we need chemical preservatives to make the fish look smart and taste edible? We can't have it both ways or can we? Was it Marie Antoinette who said, if there is no fish, eat meat or vegetables? Can this problem be solved easily? It can if you don't mind eating fish which has dangerous preservatives in it. Our fruit are are often sprayed with chemicals so they ripen early, and the early bird catches the worn by making a killing in the fruit market. If you - the consumer - happen to get killed in the process, bad luck. There is nothing fishy in the recent FDA discovery regarding contaminated fish. It is to be expected, to say the least. Either we withdraw the ban on fishing or shut down the wholesale and retail fish markets during the two-month fishing ban during the monsoon. The fish available in Goa through non-mechanized methods is of a small quantity and can be said to be food on the table for a small percentage of Goans, very small. We need to keep a strict watch on our borders because of the way we are; some people will try and slip a few truckloads through our sleepy borders as we Goans love fish very much but love easy money even more. People who want to eat fish during the ban on fishing during the monsoon season can eat it but maybe at their own risk. Like the fishermen, the wholesale fish agents and sellers can take a well-deserved two-month vacation for the good of Goa, Goans, and above all, themselves. ------------------------------ Message: 9 Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2018 11:53:08 +0000 (UTC) From: Bernado Colaco <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: [Goanet] Good-bye Goa, Good-bye! Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Interesting to note that Goans have been blind for so many decades.? BC No, I'm not applying for a Portuguese passport with the intention of settling in Swindon, England. Nor am I contemplating suicide in the near future, using rat poison. I'm only saying my last good-bye to the Goa which I have known, and loved. ************************* ------------------------------ Message: 10 Date: Mon, 16 Jul 2018 00:31:52 +0530 From: Goa Desc <[email protected]> To: goanet <[email protected]> Subject: [Goanet] Uncontrolled trade destroying ROEN OLAMIS, the edible mushroom Message-ID: <CAGV7Psw6Sb5GKAf0+BFMVLeHFUfDoe94JAfdi5Yp=hvvk-e...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" -------------------------------------------------------------- Do GOACAN a favour, circulate this email to your family members, relatives, neighbours and friends. Help other CONSUMERS to be better informed. --------------------------------------------------------------- Uncontrolled trade destroying ROEN OLAMIS http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/PageImages/storyImages/2018/07/01/88065.jpg --------------------------------------- The Navhind Times 01/07/18 ---------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Message: 11 Date: Mon, 16 Jul 2018 00:32:18 +0530 From: Goa Desc <[email protected]> To: goanet <[email protected]> Subject: [Goanet] Novel mushroom pigment discovered in Goa Message-ID: <cagv7psxuvro8txwjmfwtce2omlefextd28oraljvgawp6ad...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8" -------------------------------------------------------------- Do GOACAN a favour, circulate this email to your family members, relatives, neighbours and friends. Help other CONSUMERS to be better informed. --------------------------------------------------------------- Novel mushroom pigment discovered in Goa http://epaper.navhindtimes.in/PageImages/storyImages/2018/07/15/89164.jpg ------------------------------------- The Navhind Times 15/7/18 -------------------------------------- ------------------------------ Message: 12 Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2018 18:57:19 -0400 From: Roland Francis <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Subject: [Goanet] If Babies Could Talk. Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 The Story. The Nirmal Hriday at Ranchi, the Jharkhand State branch of Calcutta?s Sisters of Charity missionary order that looks after destitute adults, children and the dying, find themselves in the middle of a case of alleged baby-selling by a nun and a lay employee. Also involved are 256 missing babies that the state government says are not accounted for. The Ranchi police have come up with evidence of a ?confession? by the nun who has not been allowed access to her Mother House, the Church Authorities or their lawyers. Dramatis Personae: (beside those mentioned above) 1. The Chief Minister of Jharkhand State is a BJP member. Jharkhand is part of northern India?s cow belt, notorious for Hindu extremism, mob killings, tribal uprising supported by the Communist Party and suppression of ?low caste? communities and religious minorities. Despite this, Christian missionaries find this State, fertile ground for their work. 2. The Police. This is basically part of a chaotic and lawless forested region of India and was carved out of the Chotanagpur plateau of Bihar, one of India?s tribal dominated and poorest states. Police in this and neighbouring states (except West Bengal) have to operate hand-in-glove with politicians, local gangsters and organized crime like the Coal Mafia, the Mining Mafia, the Liquor Barons, roving dacoits, you get the picture, or their own lives will be in danger. 3. The CBI. Usually a process that requires Home Ministry sanction is required for a probe, but in this case, a senior police official is asking for investigation into the Charity?s foreign donations, although unrelated to the baby-selling allegation. 4. The Catholic Church. Cardinal Telesphore Toppo, Archbishop Felix Toppo and Bishop Theodore Mascarenhas with the latter as spokesman are, the area?s top officials. They are standing squarely beside the Sisters. So are other Indian Church related NGOs. 5. The opposition parties consisting of the Congress Party, the Trinamool Congress? Mamta Banerjee and the Communist Party?s (Marxist) Brinda Karat are firmly supporting The Sisters of Charity who are headquartered in Banerjee?s State West Bengal which borders Jharkhand. The CPM controls the tribals of Jharkhand who form a substantive segment of that state. It is in such circumstances that justice must find a way to prevail. Roland Francis Scarborough. End of Goanet Digest, Vol 13, Issue 310 ***************************************
