GOAN GAZE, WONDERLANDS AND WANDERLUST
By
DALE LUIS MENEZES

Once upon a time, travelling for pleasure was a privilege that was reserved 
only for the wealthy. And hence such kind of travel was always viewed as being 
exotic. With the turning of the tides and time, the opportunity to travel 
became available to the middle-class and as one can observe, it is this class 
of people that make a large chunk of ‘holidayers’ in any destination. The 
production of travelogues is an interesting genre of literature, for often such 
travelogues are a dialogue and engagement with the land travelled to with the 
land that the traveller hails from. There is always a comparison between the 
geography, history and politics and it is this comparison that can possibly 
give insights into various aspects of the destination as well as of the 
traveller.
        With such a frame of mind, I opened Brenda Rodrigues’ travelogue My 
Journey Through Wonderlands. Brenda and her husband, Joe are vastly travelled 
persons. The list of their travels becomes mind-boggling when compiled: USA, 
Scotland, England, Germany, the Netherlands, Africa, China, Southeast Asia, 
Canada, Northeast India and many, many more. Careers of travel spanning 40-odd 
years, Brenda and Joe Rodrigues have seen it all! A passionate writer and a 
keen observer, Brenda would write short travelogues which were then sent to 
friends and family as newsletters. These newsletters are now the backbone of 
this book, spanning 400-odd pages! 
        Before getting into the nitty-gritty of the book, an interesting detail 
which one gets to know about this globe-trotting couple is the amazing and 
brilliant network that they have established of friends (that also includes 
priests) and family across India and the world. After reading the book, I must 
say that Brenda and Joe Rodrigues have made clever use of such a network. In 
this aspect they must be seen as immensely lucky too, as they have friends and 
family who “insist” and pester them to visit their native countries or regions, 
offering sometimes even free air tickets. How I envy them!
        Turning our attention to the book: the first and foremost aspect of My 
Journey Through Wonderlands that needs commenting is the structure that the 
author has chosen. Brenda Rodrigues has decided to follow a chronological 
structure rather than a thematic or geography-centric arrangement of her 
writings. Now this gives rise to a problem because Brenda Rodrigues has 
travelled to one destination many times over a period of many years and because 
there is an over-emphasis in maintaining the chronological structure of the 
narrative, many sections seem to be repetitions or read like staccato notes of 
a faithful court reporter. The author’s aim seems to be to report everything 
that she has seen and this need diverts the author’s attention from a deeper 
engagement with the history, geography and politics of the lands she visits. 
She tries hard to produce comments on the things and places she has seen, but 
with description being central to her reporting, the stray one-line comment
 s that we find seem to be digressions and out-of-place. 
        Such details that one can easily find using the internet need not be 
repeated in a travelogue which could be unique (or in a sense is unique) for a 
very Goan gaze that it provides. Because of our peculiar location as the 
‘Orient’, we need to know exactly how Brenda Rodrigues as a person (as well as 
a woman) engages with the history, the people and the politics of the places 
she has travelled to. Hence, the author in the humble opinion of this reviewer 
should have asked herself, when she had set out to compile her writings for a 
wider audience, as to what unique insights she could have brought to her 
writing that would be different from so much literature that has already been 
produced about all these places. The author has travelled to the regular 
tourist spots and even those less-travelled ones but fails to provide insights 
regarding the people and the places. A great opportunity seems to have been 
lost despite the availability of an amazing network of well-wishing frie
 nds and family.
        The reason why I consider travelogues interesting and take them 
extremely seriously is because they represent the Other for the Self. In this 
sense, I feel that the travelogue of Brenda Rodrigues has not been able to 
shake off some of the colonial imageries and metaphors. For instance, she 
perceives herself as travelling to “wonderlands” as the title suggests and 
through her book there is a conscious or unconscious acceptance of the lens of 
colonial exoticization through which she views the Other. This way, what is 
disappointing is that even Goa becomes an exotic land. A further parallel with 
the colonial imageries and metaphors is that having spent her entire life in 
Bombay (apart from the globe-trotting!), after retirement Brenda and Joe 
Rodrigues  decided to buy a second home in Goa in Chorão, and hence one whole 
chapter is dedicated in the description of this island (for this also forms 
part of the “wonderland” narrative).
        Chorão is also the place where one of the earliest conversions to 
Christianity had taken place and the comments of the author regarding this 
history needs critiquing. Brenda Rodrigues discloses that she felt “…ashamed to 
think of how terribly the Hindus were made to suffer at the hands of religious 
fanatics who believed they were doing God’s work.” First, Catholics of today do 
not need to feel ashamed of the past as buying into this discourse of ‘shame’ 
automatically places the Catholics of today in a second-class-citizenship 
position and secondly, we need to also recognize that many who converted were 
themselves suffering under various types of oppressions; a possibility that 
needs to be also considered.  While I do not hold Brenda Rodrigues responsible 
for this ‘shame’, her short but insensitive parenthetical comment which asks, 
“(Is it poetic justice that today the tables have been turned?)” (p. 410), 
needs to be distanced from. I will strongly point 
 out that there is no justice as well as poesy in such kind of thinking and 
imaginings.
        The unique way in which we are positioned in this space of Luso-Goano 
or Indo-Portuguese history and culture, there is an immense potential in 
rethinking and breaking new ground when we travel to other places. This means 
that we can reinvent the other as well as the self with a deeper engagement 
with the Indo-Portuguese history and culture. When for the first time Brenda 
Rodrigues and her family landed in Portugal, they “…were happy to be visiting 
the ‘land of our ancestors’ – so to say!”. Despite the inverted quotes the idea 
that Portugal is our fatherland, in a genetic sense of origin, should be done 
away with. And when they found the food in Portugal so similar to “our own”, 
Brenda Rodrigues hurriedly concludes that “…most of our recipes have come to us 
through the Portuguese.”
        In focusing on the examples of Goa and Portugal, what I hope to bring 
out is the need to produce a rigorous assessment of the history, culture and 
politics by a traveller whose journey originates from our side of the world. 
This journey may be to a wonderland or a promised land, but it must be 
undertaken in a spirit of not being impervious to the ground realities.
        Comments/feedback @ www.daleluismenezes.blogspot.com 
END OF ARTICLE

My Journey Through Wonderlands by Brenda Rodrigues (Saligão, Goa: Goa 1556), 
2012; pp. xvi+420, Rs. 450/- [ISBN: 9789380739373]
        
        


Find my writings @ www.daleluismenezes.blogspot.com
-------------------------------
Push thought to extremes
-Louis Althusser
-------------------------------

Reply via email to