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The 'haunting' of Padre Lourenço

by Fr. Nascimento Mascarenhas
 
If I were to tell you real, true ghost stories from Goa and India, and say that 
Goan ghosts did exist, you would probably scoff and brush them aside as the 
weird beliefs of an old man. You would of course be right, but in the olden 
days in the village of Saligao things were quite different. Let me tell you the 
stories of the “haunting” of Padre Lourenço, the haunted tree near the Seminary 
and Saligao’s very own Goan ghost of Christalina.
It was the second week of May in the year 1952 that Padre Inácio Lourenço 
Pereira was appointed as supervisor of the construction of the Saligao-Pilerne 
Seminary (Seminary of Our Lady, Saligao, Goa). He hailed from Albutriel in 
Portugal (Diocese of Leiria), the place where Our Lady appeared to three 
shepherd children at Fatima. He was a missionary along with his priest brother 
working in Madras-Mylapore diocese. He replaced Fr Paulo Arcanjo Menezes from 
Sangolda, who from 1936 to 1952 was in charge of building of the Diocesan Minor 
Seminary.
Portuguese priest
Fr Menezes used to walk every Sunday from his residence near the unfinished 
seminary to St Anne’s Chapel in the village to celebrate Mass there. However in 
April 1952 he went on a year’s sabbatical leave to East Africa. As soon as 
Padre Lourenço arrived, the chapel committee members requested him to come to 
St Anne’s to celebrate Mass for the parishioners of the three wards — Donvaddo, 
Mudd’davaddi and Tabravaddo-Mollembhat. Padre Lourenço readily accepted the 
proposal and on 25 May 1952 along with his domestic help known simply by the 
name ‘Frank’, drove to the chapel along with a Donvaddo lad who directed them. 
We youngsters at once fell in love with this fair and hefty Portuguese priest 
as he had a big jeep, which was a rarity in those years. After the Mass, we 
altar boys forgot about our breakfast as we went on a joy ride to the seminary 
at the invitation of the new chaplain.

Saligao Seminary. Pic by Frederick Noronha
 
The work of the seminary was completed by November 1952 and the inauguration 
took place on 6 December 1952. His eminence Cardinal Manual Gonsalves 
Cerejeira, Patriarch of Lisbon, inaugurated it with due pomp and solemnity. Top 
goverment officials,a large number of priests and seminarians of Rachol 
Seminary, and a sizeable crowd of people gave a festive look to the 
inauguration. We, the boys of Mater Dei Institute, were dressed in our Mocidade 
Portuguesa uniforms to receive the dignitaries with a salute. Even the 
‘Christuleacho vôd’ (haunted banyan tree) shook mightily at the command given 
by our troop master.
A few weeks later, one fine Sunday morning in January 1953, the parishioners at 
St Anne’s gathered for the usual Mass, but there was no sign of Padre Inácio 
Lourenço Pereira. So some elders and youngsters walked briskly up the Donvaddo 
hill to his residence near the seminary. What a sight it was! His workers and 
helpers were all around him. Padre Lourenço remained motionless.
Padre possessed by a Goan ghost?
Frank and others began to unfold the happenings of the previous night. As usual 
Padre Lourenço had gone for a walk around the seminary road, but that 
particular night he did not return. As there was no sign of him, some of the 
workers went in search of him. They found him quite close to the infamous 
banyan tree believed to be haunted by Christalina’s ghost, flat on the ground 
with his face in the mud. They shouted for help and their companions came with 
the jeep. They carried him to the jeep, drove to the residence and placed the 
good priest in his bed. All along he remained speechless and motionless. Then 
someone shouted ‘Christalina’ and the news spread like wildfire in the entire 
village of Saligao and the neighbouring villages that Padre Lourenço was 
possessed by the ghost of Christalina. It was an instant talk of the town and 
fear engulfed the folks of Saligao.
In the evening some people, including my uncle Anselmo Mascarenhas, went to 
visit the padre. Rumours were spreading that Padre Lourenço was talking in 
Konkani and in a female voice. People now began concocting all kinds of ghost 
stories and the bizarre incident had a lasting impression on my young mind. I 
lived with it for years till I entered the seminary of Saligao in 1957. So was 
there any truth to this real ghost story in Goa?
If my memory serves me correctly, by Lent Padre Inácio Lourenço was out of the 
Hospital Escolar and dispatched to Leiria, Portugal, in March 1953. A cross was 
fixed to one of the branches of the banyan tree by Frank and other workers. 
With the exception of Frank, who remained in Goa, all the others left. Frank 
was absorbed as the driver of the Prelate at Archbishop’s House.
I joined the seminary of Saligao-Pilerne in 1957. One day a few of us went with 
our Spiritual Director Fr Robert Vas to observe the cross on the banyan tree. 
Indeed, the vertical part of the cross was intact, while the horizontal part 
was missing. Was one of the famous Goan ghosts — Christalina — active once more?
Glowing haunted tree
In later years, one night we saw the whole banyan tree glowing in the dark. 
Some professors, prefects and quite a number of sturdy seminarians directed 
themselves towards the suspectedly haunted tree. When they returned we crowded 
round them, expecting to hear some scary ghost stories of macabre Goan ghosts 
led by Christalina. But they sheepishly said that the light was from four carts 
carrying petromax lights, parked near the tree; the cart owners were busy 
tightening the brakes for the downhill ride to Saligao! We all had a hearty 
laugh.

Christalina's tree in Saligao, Goa. Pic by Frederick Noronha
Many years later, much after I was ordained a priest, I met up with Frank at 
the Archbishop’s Palace and enquired about the incident. He told me exactly 
what had happened to Padre Lourenço and how the ghost stories in Goa about 
Christalina played on the minds of the workers of the seminary. He said it was 
at that time that they nailed a cross on one of the branches of the banyan 
tree. Padre Lourenço was muttering some incomprehensible words, was taken to 
hospital and later on sent back to Portugal.
I asked him if it was true that a “gaddi walla” experienced in removing the 
spirit and bottling had been summoned, or if any exorcism was done, as the 
seemingly real ghost stories circulating at the time postulated. He answered in 
the negative. In 2002 I had the good fortune to travel to Portugal and on to 
Fatima for the beatification ceremony of Francisco and Jacinta Marto. Pope John 
Paul II performed the ceremony, in the presence of Sister Lucia — I was 
fortunate to see the visionary.
A few days later I happened to meet the Rector of the Sanctuary of Cova da Iria 
from the parish of Santos o Velho in Lisbon. His name was Monsenhor Luciano 
Guerra. As I knew that our old chaplain Padre Inácio Lourenço Pereira was from 
Albutriel, I enquired if he knew the priest. He smiled and said that Padre 
Lourenço had been his predecessor at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Fatima and 
that he knew that he and his brother had been missionaries in India. He said 
that both the brothers were buried in the cemetery at Albutriel in the Diocese 
of Leiria. I said a prayer for the chaplain’s soul but did not mention anything 
about the ghost stories in Goa about Christalina story, to avoid scandal.
Nevertheless, for the elders of Saligao village the perceived real ghost 
stories are evergreen, and the Goan ghosts, especially Saligao’s own Goan ghost 
Christalina and the haunted tree near the Saligao Seminary remain a veritable 
institution. In fact the Hindu villagers living close to the haunted tree have 
built a small niche and offer gifts to the spirit, whom they call Ximecho 
Devchar or Boundary (Protecting) Devil.. 
 
http://saligaoserenade.com/2009/01/the-haunting-of-padre-lourenco/
 http://saligaoseranade.com/
 






















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