Dear fellow goanet readers

A well known actor/comedian in the United Kingdom recently described London as 
"no longer English". On my way home 
from work, as I travel by bus, observing fellow passengers around me, he was 
quite right of course. However this bus 
journey also brought home some interesting "truths". Most, if not all of the 
passengers on the bus, spoke in their native 
tongues. Whether it was to each other or on their mobile phones, I certainly 
could not understand a word of what any of 
them were saying. Even mothers spoke to their children in their native tongue. 

What makes communities from around the world, now living in the United Kingdom, 
so proud of their language? Do they 
see their native language as essential to their sense of belonging and 
therefore have never given it up? So why is our 
community so different? 

Moving from these shores, let's take a look at the French, they are delighted 
to hear any tourist attempting to put together 
a few words of French however grammatically incorrect. The fact you tried 
matters more to them. If you spoke to a them 
in English, they would frown on you but would happily start a dialogue with you 
in Konkani even though you would not 
understand each other but somehow got the message across. 

Often, I have questioned, how it has come about I can't read, write or speak 
Konkani very well. My origins are from Goa, 
both my parents come from the same village Saligao. Most of my social time was 
spent with our community. Was Konkani 
not spoken in this "closed" environment, and if not, why not? At least I can 
thank my father's mother for my limited 
knowledge of Konkani as she didn't speak any English. 

I have brought this matter up several times with my mother. Even when she has 
conversations with her friends, all of 
whom speak fluent Konkani, why do they always converse in English? 

At the centre of this, it could be that our parents saw the reading, writing 
and speaking of English as essential for our 
"future" and thus the need for it to be spoken at all times. Who knows? Today I 
feel all this obsession about speaking 
proper English still continues and quite frankly it has to stop. And it has to 
stop now this day, this hour, this minute. The 
English language needs to be compartmentalised as "useful" and "needed" by some 
of us to sustain our livelihood but not 
given the status of being "superior" or "above all else" or as our parents 
viewed as "fashionable" and "our future". We 
need to follow other communities and be proud we have our own language, Konkani 
and feel comfortable using it in public.

Konkani is not just our mother tongue. It is at the heart and essence of who we 
are as a community. The meaning of 
words, phrases and sentences are unique to our culture and completely lost when 
translated into English. What about all 
our songs. Take the example of the lovely Konkani wedding song blessing the 
bride and groom, this just wouldn't be the 
same in English, would it?

In the United Kingdom the freeze on Konkani has started to thaw. Over the last 
few years, I am delighted to see Konkani 
in our cultural events springing back to life as more of it is being spoken 
here. The beautiful singing of Konkani hymns at 
the recent 84th Commemoration Mass of Fr Agnelo attended by over 500 of his 
devotees was a real testament to our 
finest, talented musicians based in Southall. It is not just the new arrivals 
from Goa, even those who have never spoken 
the language before are starting to say a word or two. 

Its a sure shift back to our roots, or may be the recognition that now it is 
time for us to stand up, claim back the language of 
our birth right and show that in time all will not be lost. 


Rose Fernandes
Thornton Heath, Surrey, United Kingdom

29 November 2011
















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