Floreat Saligão
(May Saligão Flourish)
C. Hubert de Sousa
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REPRINTED IN 2019








*© C. Hubert de Sousa. First edition: May 6, 1973. The first edition was
printed and published by F.D. Dantas at the Printwell Press, Luis de
Menezes Road, Panjim. This edition: 2019 The permission of the family of
the late author for reproducing this book is gratefully acknowledged.
Released to mark the 90th anniversary of the Salig* ã
*o Institute. This edition is devoted to Fr Desmond (**Demi) de Souza,
CSsR, son of the author, a concerned human being and an inspiring priest
who served in many parts of the globe, from the Philippines to Goa and
beyond.*
Published by
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*Goa,1556, Saligão 403511 Goa. http://goa1556.goa-india.org,
[email protected] +91-832-2409490 Goa,1556 is an alternative publishing
venture, named after the year of the accidental arrival of Asia's first
Gutenberg-inspired printing press in Goa. Today, more than ever, Goa needs
a voice to understand itself and articulate its priorities. *
------------------------------

Cover design by Bina Nayak http://www.binanayak.com. Epub edition created
in Salig*ã*o by Goa,1556. Typeset using LyX, http://www.lyx.org in AE
(Almost European) Roman, 10 point.




*Dedicated to my wife Julia for her love and devotion and patient
forbearance for my many faults and foibles*
Introduction
By F.J. Campos
WHEN, towards the end of last year, the talented author of this volume
informed me that he had decided to discontinue the *Saligão Bulletin*, I
replied that his decision would sever another cherished link between me and
the dear village of my birth. Some days later, however, there came another
letter from him informing me that he intended to write a volume containing
the life-sketches of those sons of Saligão, past and present, who had
achieved eminent success in their respective spheres of life.
This was good news indeed. But added to this information was a request that
I should write an introduction to this volume. It was an embarrassing
request, I am now blind, unable to read and write, and any literary
composition, however trivial, is now to me a painful task.
On the other hand, there was the prospect of associating myself, in
howsoever insignificant a way, with the names of the most distinguished
sons of Saligão, many of whom I knew and admired in my young days. That the
volume was to be a souvenir of the impending centenary of the church in
which I was baptized was a further inducement. After some hesitation I
decided to accede to the request.
Before I proceed to deal with the contents of this volume something has to
be said about this author. To the present generation of Saligonenses in
India and aboard, the author’s name and his talents and achievements
certainly need no introduction. But this volume, though not a *monumentum
aere perennius*
*1A monument more lasting than bronze–used of an immortal work of art or
literature. *, will live at least for two or three generations hence. It is
for the benefit of its readers, these future sons of Saligão, that the
paragraph that follows is primarily intended.
Mr. C.H. D’Souza comes from a well-known family of Nigvaddo, Saligão. He
was born in 1897 in Calcutta, where his father Ottoline D’Souza was a
leading pianist. He had his school education first at Kurseong and then in
Calcutta from where he passed his Senior Cambridge Examination with Honours
and with a scholarship of Rs. 15 p.m. for two years.
In 1916, deciding to take up Mechanical Engineering for his career, he
joined the Shibpur College of Engineering, Calcutta where he won an
entrance scholarship of Rs. 20 p.m. for four years. There being no degree
course in Mechanical Engineering at the Calcutta University at that time,
he had to take the diploma course which he passed with first-class honours,
standing first among all the students from Bengal, Bihar and Orissa. He
thereby won the Sussex Trust Scholarship of Rs. 150 p.m. for three years
and in 1920 was sent by the Bengal Government for practical training at the
workshops of the famous of Ruston and Hornsby of Lincoln
2
Ruston & Hornsby, later known as Ruston, was an industrial equipment
manufacturer in Lincoln, England, the company's history going back to 1840.
The company is best known as a manufacturer of narrow and standard gauge
diesel locomotives and also of steam shovels. Other products included cars,
steam locomotives and a range of internal combustion engines, and later gas
turbines. The company is now part of the Siemens group of Germany.
, England. Here, in addition to his scholarship, he was able to earn
sufficient wages which enabled him to maintain himself comfortably.
While in Lincoln he took part in various sports and captained the Ruston
Hornsby hockey team and was sent up for the County Cap. With his hockey
team he played in several villages of Lincolnshire and thus came into
contact with the life and beauty of rural England.
In 1923, on the completion of his practical training, he went to London and
thereafter a two-year course secured the degree of B.Sc., Hons (London.)
and with it the Associate Membership of the Institution of Mechanical
Engineers (London). In 1925 he returned to India but, inspite of his high
qualifications and practical training, he could secure only a subordinate
post as Plant Draftsman at Matunga Workshops, G.I.P. Railway.
Within two years, however, Mr. D’Souza was found too good for this post and
his name was put up for the superior service before the Public Service
Commission. He was successful and was thus one of the first four Indians
selected for the rank of officers in the Mechanical Engineering Department
of the Indian State Railways. From 1929 to 1952 Mr. D’Souza held various
responsible posts in the Mechanical Department of the G.I.P. Railway and
acted for some periods as the head of this department.
He was responsible for the design and construction of the first seven
air-conditioned coaches in India in 1950 and then the next twenty two in
the year of his retirement, 1952. They were equal to the best luxury
coaches on the Continental Railways, known as Wagon-Lits.
Because of his high qualifications and experience Mr. D’Souza was admitted
as a full member of various Institutions of Engineers in England and
America, such as the Consulting Engineers of England, etc. In 1949 Mr.
D’Souza won the Stewart Dyer Award of 15 pounds for the best paper
presented before the Institution of Loco Engineering, London, on “The
Design of an Indian Railway Passenger Coach”. After his retirement Mr.
D’Souza practiced for ten years in Bombay as a Consulting Mechanical
Engineering and Industrial Adviser and was responsible for establishing,
besides several small scale industries, the first Wagon Building Factory in
Western India for Mackenzie Ltd..
In 1950 he represented India at the International Railway Congress in Rome
and took part in the discussion of the safe running of trains at high
speed. Since his retirement in Goa in 1962, he has been a member of the
council of the Association of Engineers, Goa, and a Consulting Engineer to
the Goa Chamber of Commerce and Industries and Caritas (Goa). He spends his
leisure in writing books, technical and non-technical.
His *Saligão Bulletin*, now unfortunately defunct, was highly esteemed by
Saligonenses in India and abroad.
We shall now turn to the contents of the volume before us. The author tells
us that the writing of this volume has been to him a labour of love. To
judge from the mass of information that he has collected, it must have been
hard labour indeed. I would boldly call some of it real research, even
though I can imagine Prof. Patrocinio D’Souza raise his eye-brows at my
temerity.
It is not surprising then that with this mass of information at his
disposal and with the help of his facile pen, the versatile author has been
able to present to Saligão a volume that should be a source of pride to its
people and serve as an incentive to its present young generation and to the
generations that will succeed it. The volume will certainly be a most
appropriate souvenir of the first centenary of our church.
On going through the life-sketches of the eminent Saligonenses of the last
century, the reader will be surprised that little Saligão, with its purely
rural surroundings, devoid of any educational facilities beyond instruction
in the 3 Rs, should have produced men of the stature of Francisco Salvador
Pinto, Padre Geronimo Caetano D’Souza, Mgr. Joaquim Jose D’Abreu, Dr. Jose
Ribeiro and Dr. Claudio da Gama Pinto.
These men, who were born during the early Victorian Age, seem to have been
cast in the mould of the great Victorians. Only one of them, Dr. Gama
Pinto, had the opportunity to prove his mettle in the international sphere,
as has been so ably described in this volume. The others could but rise to
the highest levels attainable within their cramped surroundings.
I knew two of these in my young days, Padre Jeronimo Caetano and Msgr.
Joaquim Jose. They both had the stamp of intellectuality impressed upon
their brows. The young Joaquim Jose at his examination for the priesthood,
held in the presence of the archbishop, entered into a heated argument with
his examiner and was about to overthrow him when the Archbishop intervened
with his “*Basta, basta*
*3“Enough, enough!” *.”
Padre Jeronimo Caetano was one of the outstanding intellectuals of the
Church of Goa and the finest pulpit orator that Gos has produced. As he
ascended the steps of our pulpit an air of tense expectancy filled the
church. I can still recall the strange, unconventional sentences and the
stentorian tone with which he opened his great Good Friday sermons. At his
oratorical best, he would make one fancy that a Vieira
4
Father António Vieira (February 6, 1608, Lisbon, Portugal – July 18, 1697,
Bahia, Portuguese Colony of Brazil) was a Portuguese Jesuit philosopher and
writer, the “prince” of Catholic pulpit-orators of his time.
or a Lacordaire
5
Jean-Baptiste Henri-Dominique Lacordaire (12 May 1802 – 21 November 1861),
often styled Henri-Dominique Lacordaire, was a French ecclesiastic,
preacher, journalist, theologian and political activist. He re-established
the Dominican Order in post-Revolutionary France. Lacordaire was reputed to
be the greatest pulpit orator of the nineteenth century.
had reappeared in our pulpit. Goa will hardly ever see the like of this
great son of Saligão again.
The life-sketches of the distinguished men of the succeeding generation
reflect the great change that had come over our village when the growth of
its population and the decay of its rural economy compelled many of its
ablest and most restless sons to emigrate to British India, East Africa and
elsewhere.
As is well known, the most successful of these emigrants, as a body, were
those who settled in Karachi. This is evidence by the life-sketches of
their sons, Cincinnatus D’Abreu, Joseph Vaz, I.C.S., and the D’Mello
brothers. I remember having met Cincinnatus D’Abreu, and Joseph Vaz once or
twice in Saligão when I was very young.
Cincinnatus D’Abreu had an impressive personality and yet an easy manner
about him. In his ancestral home he played to us the first phonograph ever
brought to Saligão.
Roque D’Mello, who went down heroically with the *S.S. Maloja*
6
*SS Maloja* was an M-class passenger steamship of the Peninsular and
Oriental Steam Navigation Company. She was completed in 1911 and worked a
regular route between Great Britain and India. In 1916 in the First World
War she was sunk by a mine in the English Channel off Dover with the loss
of 155 lives.
, had been my contemporary at St. Xavier’s College and was a bright
student. He and his younger brother Tony, the prince of Indian Sport, were
the sons of Pedro Joao D’Mello of Sonarbatt. Their brilliant eldest brother
was a Colonial Civil Servant. Unfortunately his life-sketch is missing in
this volume, presumable for want of sufficient information.
Of our emigrants to East Africa, the most successful were the businessmen
M. R. D’Souza, Vitorino Saldanha and A. Figueiredo. The life-sketch of
Vitorino Saldanha, who as a boy caught bulbuls and sold them in the weekly
market at Calangute, reads like a saga of self-help and phenomenal success.
It deserves to be studied by our young men of today, especially by the less
favoured ones.
A life-sketch of a different genre but which should arrest similar
attention is that of Antonio Joao D’Cruz, an emigrant to Burma. He came of
illiterate parents but through sheer self-help he turned himself into a
well education, accomplished and well-groomed gentleman and rose to a high
position in the Postal Department in Calcutta. Not only this, he taught his
good-looking, though insufficiently educated wife, Rita Maria, to speak
perfect English within a couple of years of their marriage.
We now come to the life-sketches of the eminent Saligonenses of the present
generation. They are mostly children of our emigrants who, having availed
themselves of higher education now easily within their reach, could join
the professions of their choice or take up other careers of equal status.
It is an impressive array of talent and achievement which the author places
before us: an Archbishop and a Bishop, the First Lady of W. Bengal, a
Major-General and a Brigadier, brilliant educationists, doctors and
engineers, an Income-tax Commissioner, an economist of international
repute, a painter of European renown, a noted pianist and, last but not
least conspicuous, the foundress of a religious congregation.
Their life-sketches have indeed been an eye-opener to me, as they will be
to many another who reads this volume. I could add to these life-sketches
interesting personalia about these outstanding persons and their
background, but I have already transgressed the limits of my space. I shall
only add that all of us, who have sprung up from the same ancestral soil as
they, look up with pride at the heights they have reached and at the things
they have achieved.
Saligonenses at home and abroad will surely be grateful to the author for
this very informative and heart-warming little book. Likewise I, who have
for so long been away from my beautiful homeland and whose days are now
fast nearing their end, am grateful to the author for this opportunity of
associating myself with such a book. *Floreat Saligão.*
Preface
AT the time of writing the profiles of the leading people of Saligão, I
will have completed my 75th year and started my 76th. I am, therefore, in a
way a living link between the past generation of our people and the present.
I have seen the last days when the majority of our people were agricultural
labourers. In the sugarcane plantations, for which Saligão was famous, and
in which avocation they earned their livelihood and saved some money, with
which they educated their sons and daughters and enabled them to reach a
higher standard of life by migrating from Goa.
All the education to which they themselves could aspire in their youth, was
that available at the church parish school, which taught them the 3 Rs.
rudiments of reading, writing and arithmetic and the basic knowledge of
music up to playing of the violin and singing from written music at sight.
The next step from agricultural labourers to which our people climbed was
that of cooks, butlers, domestic servants and musicians. Hence, after
leaving the shores of Goa and going to places like Bombay, Baroda,
Calcutta, Madras and even Zanzibar, a good number of them earned their
livelihood by their music, by learning to play various instruments and
forming orchestras and bands which played for the more enlightened
maharajahs, rajahs, sultans and for the European people for their dances,
parties and social gatherings.
The domestic servants faithfully served their masters and received their
rewards, not only in salaries but usually a nest egg of some sort.
The money earned in these callings was much higher than in the
back-breaking labour of farming in Goa. It was carefully saved by them, by
living a very economic and frugal life, at great self-sacrifice and
channelled to Goa, to buy a plot of land in their village, build a suitable
house, and give their children higher education upto the professions. To
see their children well settled in life was their greatest ambition.
The background of the next succeeding generation, consisted in seeking
employment in Government service or in big commercial houses, in India and
abroad, where they rose to subordinate positions of eminence,
responsibility and trust. The Europeans took an immediate liking to them
for their intelligence, honesty, integrity and hard work.
A small minority took the profession in which they as a rule excelled and a
smaller number still took to business in which they made their fortunes,
especially in East Africa.
While it has been fairly simple for me to record the profiles of eminent
sons and daughters of Saligão of my generation, starting from about 1897 or
even a decade or two earlier, it has been a matter of considerable
difficulty to delve into the lives and achievements of similar eminent
people of Saligão of a much earlier generation. The work involved has been
a type of research for which the sources have been scarce, consisting of a
few living persons, some old books, magazines, or newspaper cuttings, and
the best has been done with these scanty materials at my disposal.
I wish to express my gratitude to all my co-operators and helpers, who have
gone out of their way to assist me in this project, and specially to Mr
Francis John Campos of Saligão and Hyderabad who has read through the
profiles with meticulous care and suggested various improvements. If I have
been compelled to leave out the profiles of any prominent persons of
Saligão deserving a place in this book, it has not been due to any malice
on my part, but rather for want of co-operation on the parts of those who
could have helped me with information but did not choose to do so,
preferring to hide their own light or that of their relation under a bushel
in their unnecessary false modesty.
The object of these profiles is two-fold:

   - To acquaint the present and future generations of our people with the
   profiles of the lives of people of Saligão who have brought renown and
   credit to themselves and to our little village in Goa.
   - To stimulate a desire in the minds and hearts of the present and
   future generations of our youth to emulate the lives of these great men and
   women of ours and surpass their achievements if possible, always bearing in
   mind with pride, that it is an honour to be sons or daughters of this
   physically small but potentially great village called Saligão among all the
   villages of Goa, nay even among the 6 lakhs of villages of Mother India.

If I have to some extent succeeded in these self imposed tasks, which have
been for me a labour of love for our village and its people, I would
consider my efforts and labour amply repaid.

*C. Hubert De Sousa Consulting Mech. Engineer and Industrial Adviser*


[TO BE CONTINUED]

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