The Saligao Blues: Goa’s global village *9 min read* *.* Updated: 22 Feb
2019, 09:25 AM IST *Vivek Menezes*
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   - Saligao is struggling to preserve its open-minded cultural fabric. Due
   to the impact of migration, native Goans have become a minority in their
   homeland
   - Residents feel there’s a crisis brewing in Saligao. There’s
   unemployment, and land sharks are running amok. There’s also a huge problem
   of garbage

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In 2008, my family left our home in Goa to spend the summer vacation in
London where we came across a poster advertising Sotheby’s annual sale of
Indian art. That’s how I ended up in the front row at the auction house in
Bond Street, when they announced *The Red Road* and white-gloved liverymen
carried out the massive, magnificent oils-on-canvas by Francis Newton
Souza. I found myself breathless, pierced to the core as recognition
flooded my brain, “Saligao!" Here was a straightforward rendition of the
landscape of the North Goa village where the artist was born. Barely able
to contain myself, I watched in mute agony as it sold for just over a
million dollars, then swiftly disappeared out of sight forever.

When you think of Indian villages
<https://www.livemint.com/Opinion/ltVMhFyDHKRjEdpXzmTPKI/Palanpur-a-fascinating-story-of-income-growth-social-chang.html>,
you don’t generally associate them with record-setting modern art sold in
London. That’s because when you think of an Indian village, much of what
comes to mind doesn’t apply to Goa. To be sure, there’s unlimited pastoral
beauty here, complete with gleaming paddy fields leading up to hillside
cashew plantations.

But right alongside is an astounding history of migration
<https://www.livemint.com/Politics/8WPPsZygqR7Mu6e3Fgy55N/A-million-migrations-Journeys-in-search-of-jobs.html>dating
back over three centuries. Much is made of the native ‘Susegad’ or devotion
to leisurely contentment that characterizes the Goan world view, but that
attitude has been hard won by generations of hard strivers all over the
world. This is the story of Souza’s village, and also the singularity of
India’s smallest state.

Precisely this distinction struck Graham Greene, when he visited
immediately after decolonization. His 1964 essay in *The Sunday Times*
entitled *Goa the Unique* points out, “The houses in the Goan village were
built with piety to last. There are few extremes of poverty and affluence:
most houses, however small, are constructed of laterite blocks with brown
tiles of great beauty. They were built by Goans, not by Portuguese…often by
Goans in exile, in Aden or in Africa, who hoped to return one day, for the
far-ranging Goan has loyalty to his village you seldom find elsewhere."
Inevitably, “on the first Indian village outside Goa on the road to Bombay
you are back to the mud huts and broken thatch".

What explains these fundamental differences between Goan villages and those
across the state border? One reason is the age-old Gaunkari (later
Communidade) tradition of collective land ownership with distributed
dividends, called by the polymathic scholar D.D. Kosambi, “this remarkable
form of profit sharing, which is not known in so clear-cut and recognizable
form elsewhere in India". While still riddled with inequalities, the
economic relationships derived from this ancient system are less feudal
than other parts of the subcontinent.

However, it is above all waves of migration that defines the contemporary
cultural history of Goa’s villages. Then and now, the unshakable bedrock of
Goan identity remains the international passport. Most people here are born
with the right to at least two: Portuguese (thus European Union) and Indian
passports. Official statistics reveal Souza’s village now has less than
10,000 residents, but there are undoubtedly at least twice as many
Saligaokars scattered in diaspora.
[image: (Top) The Red Road by Francis Newton Souza is a straightforward
rendition of the landscape of Saligao village where the artist was born,
and (above) Leticia De Souza portrait from Saligao ladies 2007.  Photo by
Dayanita Singh](Top) The Red Road by Francis Newton Souza is a
straightforward rendition of the landscape of Saligao village where the
artist was born, and (above) Leticia De Souza portrait from Saligao ladies
2007.  Photo by Dayanita Singh


OPEN FOR BUSINESS

The history of the western coastline of India is written in confluence. Dig
as far back into recorded time as the written word allows, and you find the
name of Goa already inscribed, as open for business.

But it was unexpected events in Europe that set Saligao and its neighbours
permanently on the road. The initial trigger was the rise of Napoleon, his
ambitions reverberating panic throughout Europe. Fearing (accurately) the
French would target their precious *Raj* (rule) by collaborating with Tipu
Sultan, the British sailed into Portuguese Goa to pre-empt use of its port
against their fleets. In the end, their garrisons remained put from 1799 to
1813.

That lengthy stay provoked epiphany. The British were delighted to discover
skilled cooks without taboos about handling meat, adept clerks who had
already mastered the Latin alphabet, proficient musicians in the western
tradition, experienced tailors who knew all about gowns and coat-lengths.
Even better, this hard-working bonanza came without the usual Indian
proscriptions about travelling abroad. In his quirky 1962 monograph *Goan
Emigration*, the Saligao writer J.B. Pinto exults “Goan cooks, butlers,
pantry boys, dhobis, bakers, tailors, shoemakers, musicians, clerks, ayahs,
were given exclusive monopolies throughout the length and breadth of then
undivided India".

The Goan 19th century following this fortuitous alignment of supply and
demand belongs in the foremost annals of globalization. Some 20% of the
population territory steamed out with alacrity, many of them to Karachi.
Even while city’s initial plans were being formulated, Manuel D’Abreu
landed up, quickly summoning dhows filled with Saligaokar relatives. Today,
Karachi is the fifth most populous city in the world, and in between is the
making of thousands of Goan families.

The tapestry of meaning that connects generations of disparate and
far-flung villagers to homestead, locality and faith practices persists to
an unusual degree in Saligao. Recently, I was surprised to see the
smartphone screen saver of Shivanand Salgaocar (whose father was among the
pioneers of iron ore mining and export in 1950’s Goa) displaying the
unmistakable ‘roinn’ sacred anthill deity of his distant ancestors, despite
the fact his family left the village long before he was born.

His daughter Swati, who has degrees in architecture from Yale and Columbia,
startled me by admitting she could relate. “There has always been a strong
emotional draw. One of my first memories is standing in front of a tin
shed, over a large anthill. It was drizzling, and I was perplexed as to how
this was supposed to be a temple, but also in awe of how religion could be
something so minimal, quiet and natural."

The call of Saligao

It’s not Goa I come to, it’s Saligao," says Dayanita Singh, who many people
believe is India’s greatest living artist (I certainly do). Two decades
ago, she plunged into an indescribably intense relationship with the
village, photographing its inhabitants extensively, then hosting the
pivotal exhibition *De Mello Vaddo* in the high-ceilinged premises of the
sedate Saligao Institute.

Today, Singh’s artwork is exhibited in venues few Indian artists reach. She
tells me the early exhibition in Saligao changed everything. “It was a
seminal show for me, because it led to the vast possibilities of being part
of a domestic archive. I made 40 laminated prints, and double-taped them to
the walls of the Institute. When the exhibition was over, people peeled the
images from the walls and carried them back home all over the village,
where they still hang in 33 different homes. This gesture shaped forever
the way I want to disseminate my work."

On and off throughout the year, Singh lives in a minimally restored (and
tasteful) century-old house, hemmed in closely by watchful Goan neighbours
who protect her privacy and solitude. She says, “I think of myself as only
the caretaker of this house which was built in 1910 [note: the original
owner was attendant physician to the Sultan of Zanzibar] and could not
imagine leaving here. It has become my laboratory for thought."

Those are most winning sentiments, and it is true many other neo-Goans have
also moved in with sincere intentions of maintaining the open-minded
cultural fabric that attracted them in the first place. Yet, there’s no
denying the impact of demographic displacement over the past two decades,
as native Goans have become a decided minority in their homeland. Ramesh
Ghadi, multi-talented proprietor of the popular Ghadi Fitness, told me
“Crisis is building in Saligao. There’s a problem of unemployment, and
because very few companies on the industrial estate [note: built on
appropriated Communidade land] offer decent wages, only outsiders are
employed there."

This puts pressure on precious land resources. Ghadi says, “Many panchayat
members are directly or indirectly connected to land dealers. These sharks
are now eyeing farming and orchard land. Hill cutting and filling of fields
is becoming an everyday story. The village is on sale. Money and vote bank
politics are now playing a big role in giving house numbers to the illegal
constructions. If it is not stopped right now, there will be an ugly
disaster. All these years we have been divided on religion, caste, Gaunkar
and non-Gaunkar, but it’s high time we get united to save our village."

Ghadi’s recollections of his agrarian childhood often enliven Saligao
internet groups, where loyal villagers keep time-honoured bonds alive by
means of the latest technology. In fact, the first time I dialled up to the
Internet in 1995, there was Saligao, in the presence of Herman Carneiro and
Frederick Noronha, who created Goanet on the World Wide Web long before the
rest of India caught up to the potential of the new medium.

Recently on the humming Saligao-Net group on Facebook, there came news of a
brand new farmer’s market initiative to connect local farmers to consumers
living nearby. Its main champion, the nurse-turned-painter Clarice Vaz told
me, “It’s true there are big problems in Saligao. But we have to do
something to turn things around. I am trying to break through the caste and
class barriers by creating activities for all of our mutual benefit. That
gains trust. At that point all Saligaokars unite."

In conclusion

I cry for my fate," the fervently adored chanteuse Lorna Cordeiro (who was
born in Saligao in 1946) sings in Noxibak Roddtta, the classic Konkani
lament about abandonment. That emotion is omnipresent in the villages of
this tiny state, as they stagger from combined, potentially fatal assaults.
A broad consensus holds that the model of development being imposed is
anti-people and unsustainable, while the rule of law is trashed and
undermined by the absence of accountability in a vacuum of governance.

Perfectly emblematic of the fate of this trash-strewn “tourist
destination", the proximate cause of Saligao’s eventual destruction is
likely to be garbage. Overruling heated protests, in 2016 chief minister
Manohar Parrikar inaugurated an imported 140-crore “integrated solid waste
treatment plant" on the plateau above the village. The state government
claims success, and just this week announced plans to more than double
existing capacity. But all those who live with the impact of the facility
say this means decapitation of their way of life.

Gabriella D’Cruz is a young environmentalist who grew up in Saligao, and
has just returned after studying at Oxford. She told me, “My childhood was
an absolute dream, I spent most of my time outdoors, discovering new paths
through the hills with my friends, fishing from secret freshwater springs,
wading through monsoon soaked fields with my grandmother, and being chased
by little old ladies for stealing tamarind from their gardens." But now,
“we are subjected to a very unpleasant odour especially in the monsoons.
The garbage leachate that runs through the soil has polluted wells, which
is extremely worrying. Unsegregated garbage is both an environmental and
public health concern".

D’Cruz and Ghadi and every thoughtful Saligaokar instinctively reaches back
to the past when envisioning strategies to confront existential challenges
facing their village. They know endurance mandates comity, and the coming
together of the entire community. After all, if their ancestors and
relatives could make it happen in Rangoon, Nairobi, and London, there must
be a fighting chance it could happen here too, where it all began.

*Vivek Menezes is a widely published writer and photographer.*


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