I only just had an opportunity to study the article by Mr Nascimento, 
circulated by FN. (below)  It is fascinating except for those 'rose-tinted 
glasses' that have not yet been put to bed. My comments:

One has to be careful with articles such as these. I cannot, for instance 
believe that 'When Afonso de Albuquerque conquered Goa (1510) he respected the 
religious 
  norms, which were administered through effective laws. He allowed the customs 
  and traditions to continue, and did not increase the taxes already existent.' 
 

Such alleged benevolence on the part of a foreign power is difficult to 
conceive. It flies in the face of the principles of colonialism, economics and 
religion. Are we expected to just accept such statements without the slightest 
hint of evidence, especially when they are propogated by the remnants of that 
very same colonial system? Such statements should not go unchallenged because 
our colonialists, like all colonialists, interfered  with everything that did 
not suit their economic interests. 

Encouraging the formation of a landed proxy class that serves colonial 
interests is an essential part of the strategy of foreign control. That, I 
believe, is why my very own vagatore was created. 

[email protected]



From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [SALIGAONET] Comunidades de Goa 
http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2010/04/25/comunidades-de-goa/
Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:08:14 +0530










Dear Frederick,
 I was glad to receive my article on 
Communidades de Goa sent by you via saligaonet. I am also happy to 
know you are collecting the best articles for the Saligao Book as Valmiki 
said. Keep it up. Please be in contact. Loves to u and yrs.fr. nascimento 
mascarenhas

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: 
  Frederick Noronha 
  To: [email protected] 
  
  Sent: Tuesday, October 12, 2010 2:53 
  AM
  Subject: [SALIGAONET] Comunidades de Goa 
  http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2010/04/25/comunidades-de-goa/
  

  Comunidades de Goa
  April 25th, 2010 at 6:08 pm (Customs, History) 
  by Fr. Nascimento Mascarenhas
  “Whether to abolish or reorganise comunidades has been a 
  subject of much discussion. These are otherwise known as agricultural 
  associations. Let us try and focus attention on this extremely old 
institution 
  activity. The exact date of organising comunidades is not known, but 
  Portuguese historian Joao de Barros, in his publication Decade II, Fr. 
  Francisco de Sousa in his book Oriente Conquistado, and Afonso Mexia, 
  in his book Foral de Usos e Costumes, establish the date as 1526. It is 
  known that centuries earlier, a few people from across the Ghats came to Goa. 
  They were agriculturists, in Cape Canar( Karnataka), and not having good 
lands 
  for cultivation, were attracted by the freshness and beauty of Goa.
  The first people to live in Goa divided themselves into families called 
  Vangores, each vangor representing a family. In order of 
  preferences, these were again classified and called first, second, third, 
etc, 
  vangor. The territory was again divided into malos, meaning 
  provinces, and each of the malos into gaos, or village. A 
  certain number of vangores were transformed into ganvponn or 
  comunidade. It is clear that the term gaos led to the formation 
  of the term comunidade. Which in the early days was the most elevated 
  form of family control in respect to religion, economics and society.
  The gauncares of each village divided the plots, a part being 
  determined for religious service another for the maintenance of its employee, 
  and the third for the barber and other mediums. The comunidade got its 
  income from fields, fishing, in the lakes and rivers, which income was 
  distributed between the Ganvcares. The ancient Hindu and Muslims 
  princes who established themselves much later over the Konkan dominion, 
  maintained the comunidades in the village, extracting a nominal tax 
  known as foro.
  When Afonso de Albuquerque conquered Goa (1510) he respected the religious 
  norms, which were administered through effective laws. He allowed the customs 
  and traditions to continue, and did not increase the taxes already existent. 
  On 16 September 1526, Afonso Mexia, organiser of the vendor of Royal 
Treasury, 
  in the name of King Joao III of Portugal, published a decree ‘Foral dos 
  Usos e Costumes’ to regulate the rural economy of village Comunidades 
  and bring them under civil administration. With this, the comunidades 
  came under the direct tutorship of the government.
  The new constitution regime in Portugal, whilst determining new ways of 
  public administration, did not alter the working of comunidades. A 
  decree dated 15 September 1880 gave comunidades the new name of 
  associacoes Agricolas, which brought immense benefits to the 
  cultivator, and allowed him to hold onto land for three years at a time, on a 
  nominal foro (tax). A law in 1886 translated the existing legislation 
  into a more efficient administration of the comunidades.
  In October 1929, to improve the working of the agricultural department, a 
  new workshop called inspection of comunidades was established. On more 
  than one occasion the Portuguese thought of reorganising and even making 
  comunidades extinct.”
  [Reference: “Goa those bygone days” by Antonio Menezes in Mirror, 29 
  December 1996].
  Comunidade de Saligao 
  The village was administered by the Comunidade, an 
  institution of village administration retained by the Portuguese and which 
  stands till our present times. Under it, the common land of the village was 
  vested on the Ganvponn, the corporate entity of the village. 
  There were village helpers, the carpenter (thovoi) or mesta, the 
  barber (mhalo), the shoe-maker (mochi), the washerman 
  (modvoll), the crier (parpoti) and blacksmith (vinani). 
  Some of them had their own namoshins or cultivable lands. On questions 
  affecting the interests of the whole village, the Ganvponn decided by 
  vote.
  The 12 Christian Brahmin Vangors (clans) of Saligao Comunidade had one vote 
  each. The members of the 12 “vangodd” enrolled themselves as 
  follows:
  1st Vangodd: CRUZ, FURTADO
  2nd Vangodd: GAMA, COSTA, MELO, SEQUEIRA
  3rd Vangodd: SOUZA
  4th Vangodd: REMEDIOS, SOUZA, DANTAS
  5th Vangodd: MELO, SOUZA
  6th Vangodd: CORDEIRO, FIGUEREDO, MELO, MACHADO, NUNES, PAIS, 
  RAMOS, SALDANHA, SOUZA 
  7th Vangodd: SEQUEIRA
  8th Vangodd: ALMEIDA, ABREU, MENDONCA, NORONHA, 
  SOUSA
  9th Vangodd: COUTINHO, LOBO, MONIZ, DIAS, MASCARENHAS, 
  MATIAS, MENEZES, PINTO, SERRAO, SOUSA
  10th Vangodd: COSTA, COELHO, CARVALHO, CAMPOS, FERNANDES, 
  GOMES, MONIZ, MARQUES, SOUZA
  11th Vangodd: MASCARENHAS, CARNEIRO
  12th Vangodd: AZAVEDO, FERNANDES, VAZ
  The above are all Brahmin ganvkar and their primary enrolment 
  as members of the Comunidade to receive zon (dividend) was after 
  having completed the age of 12 years. They were known as joneiros 
  gauncares.
  Kulcharins
  There are others who receive zon only. They are called 
  Paustes and Taikilles or Kulcharins. They are outsiders 
  established in Saligao, working for the Community and receiving zon a 
  little less than the ganvkar. Their primary enrolment is after 
  completing the age of fifteen and are of the following surnames: ALMEIDA, 
  DIAS, MONTEIRO, SEQUEIRA, VAZ, SOUZA, FERNANDES. They are only 
  joneiros but not ganvkar.
  Some Peculiarities:
  
    The Fernandes and Marques of the 10th Vangodd of Saligao 
    Communidade are dodde-zonnkar (double zonkar), that of Saligao 
    as joneiros-ganvkar and of the Comunidade de Chorao. In the 
    Communidade of Chorao they are known as Brahmin-Kulacharins. (vide, 
    Livro de Comunidade de Chorao, Ilhas, Goa) 
    In the Comunidade de Saligao, the alimony corresponding to one 
    zon is paid to the only son of a deceased ganvkar. When 
    male children are more than one, the eldest received the zon in full 
    and the others received one-half each. This alimony was extended to the 
sons 
    of Kulacharins in Saligao Comunidade (vide, Gomes Pereira, Rui, Goa 
    Gaunkari, The Old Village Associations, Vol. II, p. 59).
    A few members of the first five vangodd of the Comunidade de 
    Saligao had, to the exclusion of the other members, the right to celebrate 
    the feast of Novidade (vide, Gomes Pereira, Rui, Gaunkari…, 
    Vol II, p. 116). In my younger days at least two of my friends, the late 
    Caetano Antonio dos Remedios from Tabravaddo and Mel D’Souza from Arrarim 
    were presidents of the ‘Festa de Novidades’ which was celebrated on 
    August 6. It is celebrated now too but without a president and at a changed 
    date in the month of August.
    Every Comunidade member of Saligao has to register his name by himself 
    or through proxy (ganvkar) annually in the Book of the Comunidade in 
    order to receive the zon of that particular year in May. All 
    these enrolments ( primary or yearly) are done by the Escrivao. The 
    member will not receive the zon for the particular year if he has not 
    registered his name in the book. 
http://www.saligaoserenade.com/2010/04/25/comunidades-de-goa/
Frederick Noronha :: +91-9822122436 :: +91-832-2409490



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