Re: [Goanet] Subject: Re: Goanet Reader: Butcher, baker, minstrel, hunter, frontiersman

2014-04-29 Thread Victor Rangel-Ribeiro
Selma Carvalho certainly deserves praise for the pioneering work she is doing, 
and has been doing now for quite a few years. It was far from easy for her to 
put all that information together on Goans in East Africa, but she persevered 
in the face of difficulties, and I for one am grateful that at last we have a 
reference work on hand. Perhaps those who find something lacking in it should 
direct their efforts now at providing whatever additional information they are 
privy to, so that it can be accessed and archived, making her finished book 
even better.

Victor Rangel-Ribeiro


On Thursday, April 24, 2014 1:27 PM, Mervyn Maciel 
mervynels.watuwasha...@gmail.com wrote:
 
As I've said before, and I make no apology for repeating it here  - we,
Goans
from East Africa,should be proud that Selma Carvalho, someone who had
never set foot on African soil before, has done so much in preserving a
slice of
our history for posterity. None of us, former British Goans from East
Africa, had
ever attempted such a task before.
  My good friend, Dr. Christine Nicholls, who edited Selma's recent book
A Railway runs through had this to say in a private message to me:

I enjoyed working on Selma's book. She did a lot of research and has told
a fascinating story. 

   By all means, let us be constructive in our criticism, but also
honourable to
give praise where praise is due.



Mervyn Maciel


Re: [Goanet] Subject: Re: Goanet Reader: Butcher, baker, minstrel, hunter, frontiersman

2014-04-25 Thread Gabe Menezes
On 24 April 2014 16:04, Mervyn Maciel mervynels.watuwasha...@gmail.comwrote:

 As I've said before, and I make no apology for repeating it here  - we,
 Goans
 from East Africa,should be proud that Selma Carvalho, someone who had
 never set foot on African soil before, has done so much in preserving a
 slice of
 our history for posterity. None of us, former British Goans from East
 Africa, had
 ever attempted such a task before.
   My good friend, Dr. Christine Nicholls, who edited Selma's recent book
 A Railway runs through had this to say in a private message to me:

 I enjoyed working on Selma's book. She did a lot of research and has told
 a fascinating story. 

By all means, let us be constructive in our criticism, but also
 honourable to
 give praise where praise is due.



 Mervyn Maciel


RESPONSE: I have not read the book, if it is about British East African
Goans, who emigrated to the U.K. then it is completely wrong to state/infer
that their emigration was made possible because of the Steam ship, the
Railways and the car! It was Air Transport and I make no apologies for
pointing this out as a fact. If it was about our forefathers then again it
is wrong, as I have stated, Cars and the Railways did not  make this
possible not even Steam ships; someone told me 'They came in Dhows...

-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.


[Goanet] Subject: Re: Goanet Reader: Butcher, baker, minstrel, hunter, frontiersman

2014-04-24 Thread Mervyn Maciel
As I've said before, and I make no apology for repeating it here  - we,
Goans
from East Africa,should be proud that Selma Carvalho, someone who had
never set foot on African soil before, has done so much in preserving a
slice of
our history for posterity. None of us, former British Goans from East
Africa, had
ever attempted such a task before.
  My good friend, Dr. Christine Nicholls, who edited Selma's recent book
A Railway runs through had this to say in a private message to me:

I enjoyed working on Selma's book. She did a lot of research and has told
a fascinating story. 

   By all means, let us be constructive in our criticism, but also
honourable to
give praise where praise is due.



Mervyn Maciel