By: Rev. Fr. (Dr.) Victor Ferrao [ Rev. (Dr.) Victor Ferrao holds a
Doctorate in Philosophy of Science with specialization in Science Religion
Dialogue from the Philosophy Department of Jnana-Deepa Vidyapeeth, Pune]
Published in: *Think Goa, Goans, Goaness*
Date: January 25, 2026
Source:
https://www.jnanamrit.com/2026/01/25/deconstructing-nationalist-historiography-of-goa/

Goa’s history is frequently told through a dramatic arc: Portuguese
conquest in 1510 followed by four and a half centuries of colonial rule,
ending with integration into India in 1961. This dominant nationalist
narrative casts Goa as a long-suffering territory that was finally
“liberated” and returned to its rightful place within the Indian nation.
Yet this telling often resembles a spiritualist biography, an idealized,
almost hagiographic account that elevates heroic figures, celebrates a
supposed pre-colonial golden age, and frames the entire colonial period as
an unnatural interruption of an authentic Indian destiny.

Such accounts reduce Goans to passive objects caught in a “dark history” of
foreign domination. They present the people of Goa less as historical
agents and more as victims caught in the waiting room of history awaiting
national redemption. This article argues for moving beyond these
nationalist meta-narratives—narratives heavily inflected with religious
meaning—and toward histories that recognize distributed agency: Goans as
active participants who made choices, collaborated, resisted, adapted, and
sometimes profited within the structures they inhabited. Victimhood
stories, while emotionally powerful, must be replaced by accounts that
accept collective responsibility for both the bright and shadowed aspects
of the past.

The Nationalist Meta-Narrative as Spiritual Biography

In many nationalist retellings, Goa itself becomes a spiritual entity—an
ancient land with deep civilizational roots that was temporarily alienated
from Bharat by an alien power. The Portuguese era is portrayed as a long
night of denationalization, cultural suppression, and religious coercion
from which Goa was ultimately rescued in 1961. Figures who advocated for
integration are frequently canonized as founding fathers of Goan
nationalism, their lives narrated almost as journeys of awakening and
sacrifice.

This framing serves a clear teleological purpose: it makes the post-1961
present appear as the natural and morally correct outcome of history. The
pre-Portuguese past is romanticized, often with strong Hindu civilizational
overtones, while the Indo-Portuguese centuries are flattened into a single
story of oppression and resistance. The result is a highly selective
biography of the territory rather than a social history of its people.

This spiritualized narrative tends to erase the profound hybridity that
actually characterized Goan society. Over generations, Goans created
distinctive forms of language, architecture, cuisine, music, dress, and
religious practice that cannot be reduced to either “Indian” or
“Portuguese” labels. Yet nationalist historiography frequently downplays or
delegitimizes these syncretic realities in favor of an imagined purer
origin.

Religion as the Hidden Engine of Nationalist History-writing

A second major distortion arises from the entanglement of nationalist
history with religious identity politics—particularly the project of
constructing a continuity Hindu civilizational. In this lens, the
Portuguese period is remembered almost exclusively for conversions, the
destruction of temples, and the activities of the Inquisition. These were
undoubtedly violent and coercive episodes. However, the selective emphasis
on them often serves a contemporary political purpose: to position Goan
Catholics as people who must be “re-Hinduized” or at least reminded of
their supposed original civilizational belonging.

This religious framing produces a stark binary: indigenous Hindu culture
versus alien Christian imposition. It marginalizes the lived experience of
Goan Catholics, who developed their own distinctive forms of Christianity
deeply rooted in local language, landscape, and social structures. It also
obscures the fact that caste hierarchies, landlordism, and exclusionary
practices persisted strongly across religious lines throughout the colonial
centuries and beyond.

When history is written primarily to serve religious-nationalist
mobilization, it becomes difficult to acknowledge complexity: moments of
collaboration between Goan elites and colonial authorities, periods of
mutual cultural influence, or the active role played by some Goans in
sustaining colonial institutions for reasons of social mobility, economic
advantage, or simple survival.

Distributed Agency: Goans as Historical Actors, Not Objects

A more honest historiography begins by distributing historical agency
across Goan society rather than concentrating it in the hands of either
Portuguese rulers or later nationalist heroes.

Goans were never merely passive recipients of colonial policy. Some
resisted openly through rebellions, petitions, and intellectual critique.
Others negotiated within the system—gaining education, entering the
professions, acquiring land titles, or rising within the church hierarchy.
Still others collaborated for reasons of pragmatism, ambition, or belief.
Lower-caste and Indigenous communities often developed their own survival
strategies, forms of everyday resistance, and alternative religious
expressions that official chronicles rarely recorded.

Women, too, were historical actors whether as maintainers of household
economies, participants in market networks, quiet dissenters within
families, or, in later periods, active contributors to anti-colonial
organizations. Even the much-mythologized Goan diaspora did not simply flee
or passively await return; its members actively shaped transnational
networks of ideas, capital, and identity.

Recognizing this distributed agency dismantles the comforting but
misleading image of a homogeneous, uniformly victimized population. It
replaces the passive object with the active subject.

>From Victimhood to Responsibility

Victimhood narratives have emotional and political utility: they create
solidarity, justify claims for redress, and provide moral clarity. Yet they
also carry costs. When a society defines itself primarily through what was
done to it, it risks absolving itself of responsibility for what it did.

In Goa’s case, responsibility includes uncomfortable truths:

1. Some Goans participated in the mechanisms of conversion and cultural
policing, whether for social advancement or under coercion.
2. Upper-caste Hindus and Christians alike often collaborated in
maintaining exploitative agrarian structures.3. Communal tensions, caste
discrimination, and exclusionary practices were reproduced within Goan
society across religious lines.
4. Internal hierarchies and inequalities were not solely imported; they
were also locally sustained and adapted.

Accepting these shades does not cancel the real suffering inflicted by
colonial violence, conversion separation, cultural erasure campaigns, or
economic exploitation. It simply refuses to externalize every failing onto
an outside enemy. A mature historical consciousness holds both truths
simultaneously: the damage done to Goans and the damage done by Goans.

Toward a Plural, Responsible Goan History

Nationalist historiography, especially when cast in spiritual-biographical
form, offers comfort and coherence at the price of simplification and
exclusion. It flattens Goans into symbols rather than treating them as full
historical subjects. It often serves contemporary religious and political
projects more than it illuminates the past.

Let humbly offer a richer approach:

1. Center the plurality of Goan voices and experiences rather than a single
teleological storyline.2. Cultural hybridity as a creative achievement
rather than a symptom of alienation.
Distribute agency across classes, castes, genders, religions, and regions.
4. Replace narratives of pure victimhood with narratives of complex,
morally ambiguous agency.
5. Accept collective responsibility for both the luminous and shadowed
parts of the Goan past.

Only through such a reckoning can Goans claim full authorship of their
history not as objects of someone else’s dark chapter, but as co-authors of
a complicated, living story that continues to unfold.

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