https://www.heraldgoa.in/Edit/By-invitation/Goa-is-fracturing/193393

An unusual interview with Damodar Mauzo in the latest issue of *Outlook
Magazine* is yet another warning sign that Goans are drifting apart in
fundamental ways, with dreadful implications for the future. Speaking to
Mayabhushan Nagvenkar, the distinguished 2022 Jnanpith Award winner shared
his apprehensions that communal divisiveness has corroded the famous
harmony of India’s smallest state: “Even during the Portuguese times I have
never felt this. Because I move around, I find people who are educated, who
are sensible otherwise, they speak about things which I cannot even
imagine. People are thinking in such terms, particularly when it comes to
Hindu-Muslim or Hindu-Catholic issues.”

Mauzo’s writings are rooted in his experience growing up and living in
coastal Salcete, where he spent decades serving the community from his
ancestral family general store. Now, he says, “Many of my well-wishers,
good friends in the village would invite me to conduct their house-warming
ceremonies in my presence or to raise a toast at (Catholic) weddings. I
have raised a toast at not less than a dozen church weddings till some
years back. It has stopped now, why? I am not haunted by this, but I see
this change happening.”

What could have made this cultural shift? It’s hard to pinpoint: “I have
played football with fellow Catholic students. Nowadays, it is slowly
brewing. Earlier, say ten years ago, I was invited very often to functions
at the Church during Christmas, New Year. Of late, it has stopped.
Probably, they are not on bad terms with me, but they do not want to give
exposure to me or maybe look at me as ‘the other’, which I am opposed to.”

This cri de coeur from from Goa’s pre-eminent intellectual presence recalls
the late Padma Shri award winner Maria Aurora Couto’s 2015 public statement
at the time of the medium of instruction (MoI) imbroglio that was being
cynically stoked into sectarianism: “I am deeply saddened by the spiralling
descent into communalism in Goa, among my friends who have valiantly fought
for secularism and liberal values all their lives. Intolerance which is
vitiating the air nationally will do irreparable damage to Goa’s legendary
secular ethos. Debate and dissent by all means, but do not vilify an entire
community and its leaders. The communal virus, if allowed to infiltrate the
Goan psyche will not leave a Goa we wish our children to inherit.”

Right about the same time that Couto spoke out, she surprised the brilliant
young architect Vishvesh Kandolkar (he is now on the faculty of Goa College
of Architecture) at their first meeting, by asking him what he thought of
then-chief minister Manohar Parrikar’s remark that “a Catholic in Goa is
also Hindu culturally, because his practices don’t match with Catholics in
Brazil except in the religious aspect. A Goan Catholic’s way of thinking
and practice matches a Hindu.” Kandolkar responded, “on the contrary, Goan
Hindus are culturally Catholic.”

Kandolkar’s account is in his excellent *Unmooring Goan Identity: Maria
Aurora Couto and the Architecture of the Hotel Mandovi*, part of the
inaugural issue of *The Peacock Quarterly,* the new flagship cultural
magazine from the Entertainment Society of Goa which was launched at
Maquinez Palace earlier this week (where I am on the editorial team). The
architect recalls that “Parrikar’s assertion that Goan Catholics were
culturally Hindus seemed to have disturbed Couto, and she therefore became
fascinated with my reply, exchanging emails with me on the topic up until
2021. Thinking back, the architectural history of the venue of our first
meeting, The Hotel Mandovi is a perfect example which represents the
complexity of framing Goan cultural identity.”

This is a fascinating reading of the imposing presence of one of Panjim’s
most beloved landmarks (which has been somewhat mysteriously shuttered
since 2019). Kandolkar says Hotel Mandovi “was constructed during the
Portuguese colonial period in 1952, to cater to pilgrims” who were expected
in the greatest number ever that year, for the fourth centenary of St.
Francis Xavier’s death, and “among other buildings in Panjim from that
period, marks a departure from the use of region’s Indo-Portuguese style of
architecture in Goa [in] connection to the Art Deco movement that
flourished in British Bombay during the 1930s-40s; the hotel is designed by
Bombay-based architects Master, Sathe, and Butha.”

Kandolkar muses that “while the patrons of The Hotel Mandovi used
architecture to make a symbolic gesture towards Goa Indica, the very
occasion for which it was built in the colonial time period disrupts easy
categorizations. The fact that The Hotel Mandovi was built to cater to the
1952 Exposition, a Catholic religious festival, means the building’s
history is intrinsically linked to Goa’s Catholic identity. More
importantly, pilgrims venerating St. Francis Xavier belong to various
religions, castes, classes and nationalities. The diverse worship of Goa’s
Patron Saint is a reminder that Goans cannot be divided into
strait-jacketed categories of religion.”

This is a complex picture: “At the same time, the opposite is true; that
is, politicians assert the construction of Goan identity as Goa Indica to
benefit from the rise of B.J.P. at the national level. For example,
Catholic upper caste politicians, such as the late Francis D’Souza, who was
the Deputy-Chief Minister in Parrikar’s B.J.P. Government, had called
himself a “Christian Hindu”. Does one dismiss this as an exception to the
majority view of Catholics in Goa? Not really. To continue to hold on to
power, upper caste Goans, whether Catholic or Hindu, have always mirrored
the ideology of the metropole, be it Lisbon or Delhi… In reality, both
constructions of Goan identity are a myth, which gets conveniently used by
contemporary politicians and corporations for profit.”

In his* Outlook* interview, Damodar Mauzo said he didn’t think that Goa’s
increasing communal fracturing will heal quickly: “In the immediate future,
I don’t see it. [But] I am optimistic. I think 10-15 years later, people
will realise their folly and we will be able to re-establish democracy.”
For his part, Kandolkar concludes that “Perhaps our meeting at The Hotel
Mandovi would have signaled to Couto that ongoing efforts by contemporary
politicians to un-hinge Goa from its Portuguese past would not be so easy.
So long as Goans continue to have open dialogue with each other, embrace
caste and religious differences, and celebrate Goa’s complex history,
through art and architecture, Goan identity will not be easily co-opted or
erased.”




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