'Goa Inquisition was most merciless and cruel'
        
September 14, 2005

Richard Zimler's novel, Guardian of the Dawn, documents the
little-known Portuguese Inquisition in India, in 16th century Goa
[Images]. He points out that, apart from their laws and religion, the
Portuguese also imported and enforced their infamous methods of
interrogation to subdue troublemakers.

Zimler has won numerous awards for his work, including a 1994 US
National Endowment of the Arts Fellowship in Fiction and 1998
Herodotus Award for best historical novel. The Last Kabbalist of
Lisbon was picked as 1998 Book of the Year by British critics, while
Hunting Midnight has been nominated for the 2005 IMPAC Literary Award.
Together with Guardian of the Dawn, these novels comprise the
'Sephardic Cycle' -- a group of interrelated but independent novels
about different branches of a Portuguese Jewish family.

Intrigued by his novel, as well as his reasons for writing it, Senior
Features Editor Lindsay Pereira decided to ask him a few questions.

You were born in New York and went on to study comparative religion.
Why the decision to write about the Portuguese inquisition in Goa -- a
whole other world?

About 15 years ago, while doing research for my first novel, The Last
Kabbalist of Lisbon, I discovered that the Portuguese exported the
Inquisition to Goa in the sixteenth century, and that many Indian
Hindus were tortured and burnt at the stake for continuing to practice
their religion. Muslim Indians were generally murdered right away or
made to flee Goan territory.

I couldn't use that information for my novel but decided, a few years
later, to do more research into that time of fundamentalist religious
persecution. I discovered that historians consider the Goa Inquisition
the most merciless and cruel ever developed. It was a machinery of
death. A large number of Hindus were first converted and then
persecuted from 1560 all the way to 1812!

Over that period of 252 years, any man, woman, or child living in Goa
could be arrested and tortured for simply whispering a prayer or
keeping a small idol at home. Many Hindus -- and some former Jews, as
well -- languished in special Inquisitional prisons, some for four,
five, or six years at a time.

I was horrified to learn about this, of course. And I was shocked that
my friends in Portugal knew nothing about it. The Portuguese tend to
think of Goa as the glorious capital of the spice trade, and they
believe -- erroneously -- that people of different ethnic backgrounds
lived there in tolerance and tranquillity. They know nothing about the
terror that the Portuguese brought to India. They know nothing of how
their fundamentalist religious leaders made so many suffer.

What were you trying to do with this cycle of novels? Did you set out,
initially, to merely inform your audience about that period in
history?

I always set out first to tell a good, captivating story. No reader is
interested in a bland historical text. People want to enjoy a novel --
and find beauty, mystery, cruelty, love, tenderness and poetry inside
it.

Within that story, I do try to recreate the world as it once was.

In the case of Guardian of the Dawn, I want readers to feel as if they
are living in Goa at that time. I want them to see the cobblestone
streets of the city and the masts of ships in the harbour, to smell
the coconut oil and spices in the air, to hear calls of flower-sellers
in the marketplace. I want them to feel the cold shadow of the
Inquisitional palace falling over their lives.

In my cycle of novels, I have written about different branches and
generations of the Zarco family, a single Portuguese-Jewish family.
These novels are not sequels; they can be read in any order. But I've
tried to create a parallel universe in which readers can find subtle
connections between the different books and between the different
generations.

To me, this is very realistic because we all know, for instance, that
there are subtle connections between what our great-grandparents did
and what we are doing.

The research involved in Guardian of the Dawn is obviously immense.
Could you tell me a little about the kind of preparatory work you had
to put in?

To write the book, I tried to read everything I could about daily life
on the west coast of India -- more specifically, in and around Goa --
at the end of the sixteenth century. The Internet has made that sort
of research much easier than it used to be, and I was able to order
books about everything from traditional medical practices -- including
recipes for specific ailments -- to animals and plants indigenous to
that region.

When I write a novel, I want to get all the details right, so this is
very important. Of course, it was also vital for me to know as much as
I could about Hinduism and Catholicism. As you mentioned, I studied
Comparative Religion at university, so this was pretty easy. One of
the main characters in the novel is a Jain, which is a religion I have
always been curious about, so I read three or four books about Jainism
as well. It was wonderful to be able to learn a bit about Jain belief
and practice. Writing is always a great opportunity for me to keep
learning.

Tiago Zarco is a character you manage to strongly empathise with.
Where did he come from? Was there factual data on someone he was
actually based upon?

Yes, he's someone I really like -- and for whom I feel a strong
empathy. He's a good man who is changed by his suffering and who
decides to take revenge on the people who have hurt him and his
family. But I did not base him on a real person. I think, in a way, he
was born of my previous two novels, because I tried to make him
someone who could fit into the Zarco family and yet be fully developed
as an individual. With Tiago, I tried to ask the question -- how far
can we bend our own moral code to fight evil?

In other words, can we use deception and even violence to try to
destroy a cruel system of fundamentalist religious fervour like the
Inquisition?

Re-examining the Inquisition seems apt, more so at a time like this
when religious fanaticism is changing the world in ways unknown to us.
What do you, as an author, believe we ought to take away from a study
of it? I couldn't agree with you more, and that is one of the reasons
I wrote Guardian of the Dawn. Put simply, I think we all need to be
alert to the intolerance in our societies and in ourselves. We ought
to maintain government and religion completely separate -- such a
separation is the only guarantee we have of freedom of expression. We
ought to learn from the ancient Asian tradition, which is to respect
the religious beliefs of others and not impose our own Gods on them.

Did you visit Goa at any point? If not, what did you base your
descriptions of the state upon?

No, I decided not to go to Goa, because I didn't want any images from
modern Goa to infiltrate into the novel. I didn't want to risk
inadvertently putting something from today into it. So I based my
descriptions on other areas of the world I've visited that have
similar flora and fauna -- Thailand, for instance. Also, I read all I
could about the city so that my descriptions of the buildings, for
instance, would be accurate. I then used my imagination, which is the
most important thing for a writer. I now have a landscape in my head
that is Goa -- and the surrounding region -- in 1600. I don't know how
it developed. It's almost magical.

Portugal, today, is still a country deeply steeped in a Catholic
tradition. Do you think people are aware of the Inquisition and what
it meant back then? Would they look at this as a re-opening of old
wounds?

No, few people here know anything about the Inquisition. Many of them
would rather not examine what their ancestors did, both in Portugal
and its colonies. But others are very curious about what they didn't
learn in school about their own history. Yes, in a sense I am opening
old wounds. But I think it's important to do that. I think that we
need to face the bad things we do -- both individually and as a
society. In general, the Portuguese have been very receptive to my
books.

Guardian of the Dawn has been a Number One bestseller here, for
instance. A great many readers tell me I have opened a door to a part
of their history they know nothing about. I'm proud of that. And I'm
proud of having made it possible for Indians and Jews who were
persecuted and imprisoned to 'speak' to modern readers through this
novel. I think that's important because I don't want their suffering
-- and their heroism -- to be forgotten.

As an author -- more specifically, an author devoted to history -- you
have a unique perspective on the past. As a journalist, how important
is examining the past to you?

As a journalist, it's important, because I think we can change the
world by exposing past injustices. By writing about atrocities, we can
change policy and avoid future wars. We can get war criminals
punished. We can help people win fundamental human rights.
Unfortunately, so much journalism is superficial and stupid that there
is little room left for important articles.

Do you plan, in future, to base your work on other periods, or
religious themes? Or do you plan to break away from the genre of
historical fiction?

I have written a new novel that has just come out in England [Images]
called The Search for Sana, which is about two women -- one
Palestinian, one Israeli -- who grew up in Haifa together in the
1950s. It's about how their friendship is destroyed by political
events that lead to tragedy for one of them. I am now working on a
novel set in Berlin in the 1930s, in which one of the main characters
will be a member of the Zarco family. So this will bring the cycle up
to the 20th century. Where I will go from there is anyone's guess.

Read an exclusive extract from Richard Zimler's novel, Guardian of the Dawn!
http://in.rediff.com/news/2005/sep/14inter1.htm

Reply via email to