Pork and the Goan pre-Portuguese Past: Food habits that surprise

(A version of this article was first published in the Gomantak Times 25
August 2010)

It seems almost lost in the mists of time now. That time when the idea of *Goa
Dourada*,a Goa that was Lusitanian, or Portuguese,  needed to be fought with
another idea. The idea that eventually emerged to contest that of *Goa
Dourada* was that of *Goa Indica*; the Goa that was Indian. If one idea
pointed to a Lusitanian inspiration for Goa , the other pointed more
properly to a brahmanical inspiration for Goa . The support for *Goa Indica
*was found in geographical contiguity, in Puranic legend and sundry other
clues.

 Now this Indic connection for Goa was not unwarranted. There was a need to
overact the rhetoric overdrive of the *Estado Novo*,* *and *Goa Indica *played
its role in this ideological battle. The question remains however, if *Goa
Indica* managed to capture the entire essence of Goa , or was it another
incomplete cliché that needs to necessarily give way to another? Where would
this new cliché come from if at all? Thankfully, Mother India in her variety
provides the answer to that question. In the early 1980’s a group of
scholars who had suckled right at the brahmanical breast of the Mother
emerged with an interesting intellectual agenda. Styling themselves the
Subaltern Studies Group, this group of scholars argued that there was much
in the history of the subcontinent, and the manner in which we thought about
it that had to change. We had to move away from the understanding of history
as the progress led by great men, to a history that features the non-elite
groups, the subaltern, as agents of social and political change. This focus
on the hitherto small people of history, was matched by the independent
growth in the Dalit movement in India . As a result, we can today actively
think of crafting a history of India based on Dalit and subaltern
experiences and push back brahmanical histories from the centre-stage it has
occupied till date.

 One of the many problems with *Goa Indica* is that when it thought of the
pre-Portuguese past, it thought of Goa as a brahmanical centre. The history
of this pre-Portuguese past was the history of the great men and groups in
the brahmanical tradition. There was, and is, no space for the
non-brahmanical groups in the imagination of a pre-Portuguese Goa . Having
said this though, it must be pointed out that Goa Dourada, at least when
used within the Goan context, was a reference to the self-image and
perceptions of the Lusitanianised brahmanical and elite groups. Between the
two cliches, you have the nationalist, and imperialist imaginations of the
elite and the brahmanical. If one has to redress this understanding of Goa
then, at the same time not fall into Lusitanian moulds for Goa , where
should we go? Where do we find the trope that will allow us to place at the
centre, the experiences and histories of the Goan subaltern?

 Happily it appears that we may not have to go too far. Perhaps the answer
was sitting before our very noses all the time and thanks to our elitist
obsessions we just didn’t recognize it!

 The eating of pork is essential to any Catholic feast or festive occasion,
and many assume that the consumption of pork was something that was
‘imposed’ and introduced to the ancestors of today’s Catholics by the
Portuguese and the accompanying missionaries. What if however, this was not
quite the story? What if pork was already a part of the Goan diet before the
Portuguese came in? Would that possibly change the way in which we look at
the constituents of Goan Catholic culture?

 It is possible, and no doubt documented, that the missionaries urged pork
on to the populace that converted to Catholicism way back in the 1500’s.
However, to assume that this was the first time the converts to Catholicism
had ever consumed pork is to assume that the entire population that
converted was possessed of brahmanical sensibilities. If one looks around,
at social groups in the rest of Mother India, one realizes that there is a
good portion of the non-brahmanical population of the sub-continent that
quite enjoys eating pork. We can also safely assume that these groups were
insulated from the rigors of that famed beast, the Holy Inquisition in Goa ,
and that their pork-consumption is not a savory leftover from their
missionary-scarred past. The consumption of pork then, it turns out, is not
in fact some Portuguese introduction to Goan cuisine, but in fact
foundationally (pre-Portuguese) Goan!

 A significant social scientist in Goa, was recently contemplating the fact
that the social groups, at least in Catholic Bardez, who were professional
cooks were groups that in other parts of India were seen an untouchable.
What caused then, this scholar wondered, for the missionary priests, to
attach cooking as the traditional occupation of this group on their
conversion to Christianity? If one realizes that these groups were in any
case consuming Pork, and that the missionaries came from Europe with a taste
for porcine flesh, then voila! One sees a natural partnership being
produced! This association begins to make more sense when one realizes that
the first Christians in Goa , were not members of the Brahmanical castes,
but in fact the non-brahmanical castes, no doubt eager to get away from the
stuffy sensibilities of the brahmanical groups. The fact is that only after
the enactment of penal legislations did segments of the brahmanical groups
convert to Christianity.

 Realizing that the consumption of pork was a part of the pre-Portuguese
culture of Goa pushes us to realize that there is much that we assume to be
Portuguese impacts on Goan culture that are in fact remnants from the
elusive pre-Portuguese past. To be sure there was some amount of colonial
influence in the manner in which pork consumption spread. But for that
matter, most of the constituents of sub-continental cuisine, are the result
of the intervention of the Portuguese. It was because of the colonial
transportation of American spices that we have the Indian cuisine that we
are familiar with today.

 In sum then, while the idea of *Goa Indica* was relevant and helpful, it is
time we started relooking the clichés we use to describe Goa . Looking at
the practices of the non-brahmanical groups in Goa , would perhaps give us
another interesting angle to enter the Goan experience.

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Read my thoughts at www.dervishnotes.blogspot.com
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For a successful revolution it is not enough that there is discontent. What
is required is a profound and thorough conviction of the justice, necessity
and importance of political and social rights.
(B R Ambedkar)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Goa-launch of the well-received *Into The Diaspora
Wilderness* by Selma Carvalho on Aug 29, 2010 (Sunday) at 11
am at Ravindra Bhavan, Margao. Meet the author, buy a signed
copy (only Rs 295 in Goa till stock lasts).
http://selmacarvalho.squarespace.com/

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