Good evening
I am attaching below an image of my article titled Os Martires de Cuncolim,
which was published on OHERALDO (July 27,  2023 edition).
Also I am writing here the whole of the researched and compiled matter
submitted for publication.
Kindly find the same
With regards
Frazer Andrade



*Os Mártires de Cuncolim*

Cuncolim is a little village in South Goa, blessed with fertile soil and is
bound by deep rivers, which led to traders and artisans settling here.
Historian Teotónio Rosário de Souza, in his writings mentions that the
metal industry in this village, which made guns, was of extreamly good
quality. Afonso de Albuquerque mentions that they were comparable in
quality to the arms manufactured in Germany at that time. However in the 17
th century, the manufacturing of arms in Cuncolim was banned by viceroy Dom
Jerónimo de Azevedo.

It is the month of July. The anniversary of the Cuncolim incident (15th
July 1583) has just been a few days ago. One may come across many,
demanding the need for the state to commemorate the chieftains (gãonkars)
who were executed by the Estado da índia for killing five Jesuit
missionaries and several native Catholics, as the first ever revolt against
the Portuguese.  This is certainly a great example of the prevailing
amnesia about Goa’s past. This amnesia is not wholly but at least partially
induced on purpose. This is clearly seen from how the well-known Cuncolim
incident has been woven to satisfy as many nationalist tropes as possible.
The Portuguese are regarded as continuous oppressors, Goa as a land of the
Hindus, religious conversions as forced and violent, natives as Hindus
alone and as united against foreign rulers with no mention of castes. All
of this, makes the Cuncolim revolt, the first war of independence.

It is a fact that although nationalists insist that Goa was Hindu before
the arrival of the Portuguese, many Goans of the time were actually Muslim
while several others were part of indigenous communities with their own set
of distinct beliefs and traditions.

For Nationalists it is truly a matter of pride, since they believe that the
first ever revolt against the Portuguese (foreign) rule, in India (did
India exist in 1583?)  took place in our beloved state of Goa, in Cuncolim
on the 15th day of July in 1583. However one needs to understand that when
the Portuguese (Afonso de Albuuerque) attempted to conquer   Goa in
February 1510, he was welcomed by by some Goans but opposed by others. The
opposition was led by the Sultan of Bijapur and succeeded in driving away
the Portuguese by the end of May. It was in November that Afonso conquered
Goa for the second time. Thousands of soldiers and laymen lost their lives
in the battle and the turmoil that followed. Shouldn’t these individuals
who lost their lives (many of whom were Goans or residants of Goa) during
this period be considered as martyrs for the cause of seeking
independence?

During the initial years of the first half of the 16th Century, the
southern parts of Goa were mainly ruled by Adilshah. During this time it
was only three talukas i.e Tiswadi, Bardez and parts of Salcéte which was
inclusive of today’s Mormugão, that were under Portuguese governance.
Cuncolim was still under the control of the local ‘*Sanātana*’ Chieftains.
Salcéte came under the Portuguese rule in 1543.

Though Goa was very important a port for trade and control, and a major
strategic advantage for the Portuguese, their prime aspiration was
introduction and promotion of Latin Christianity (though Christianity was
first introduced into India and Goa by Saint Thomas, the apostle of Christ
Himself), in accordance with the papal bull ‘*Romanus Pontifex*’, which
granted the patronage of the propagation of the Christian faith in Asia, to
the Portuguese.

Cuncolim was inhabited by a devout ‘*Sanatana*’ population who mainly
belonged the warrior ‘Kshatriya’ caste. There were 12 ‘*vangodds*’ (clans)
of gãonkars living here. Their names, were Mhal, Shetkar, Naik, Mangro,
Shet, Tombdo, Porob, Sidakalo, Lokakalo, Bandekar, Rounom and Benklo. These
Gãoncars, had common ownership of the village and paid all taxes and were
also the ‘mahajans’ (founders and caretakers) of the main village temple.
In 1583, five Jesuit priests led by Pe. Rodolfo Acquaviva received orders
from their superior to go to Salcéte to find an appropriate site for
constructing a church.

The five Jesuit priests met at the Orlim Church on the 15th day of July in
1583, and from there proceeded to Cuncolim, accompanied by Gonçalo
Rodrigues a European (Portuguese) and 14 local neo-converts, with the
purpose of setting up a cross and finding a suitable space for building a
church. Meanwhile, the gãonkars from Cuncolim, after holding a meeting,
showed up in large numbers, armed with lances, swords and other weapons,
towards the spot where the Clergy had arrived.

In accordance to the writings of one Mr. Anthony D'Souza, in the *Catholic
Encyclopaedia*, Gonçalo Rodrigues stretched his gun towards the advancing
crowd, but however was stopped by Pe. Pacheco who said "We are not here to
fight". Then, he addressed the crowd, saying "Do not be afraid". Following
this, the villagers began their attack on the party.





Pe. Rudolph received five cuts from a spear and a scimitar and was killed
on the spot. As per D'Souza, he died asking God to forgive the attackers.
The crowd then turned on Pe. Berno who was horribly mutilated and Pe.
Pacheco who was badly wounded with a spear, knelt on the ground stretching
his arms in the form of a cross. Pe. Anthonio Francis was shot with arrows,
and his head was split open with a sword.

Brother Aranha, wounded at the outset by a scimitar and a lance, fell down
into the thick crop of a paddy field, where he is believed to have layed
until he was discovered by an unknown person. Aranha was then carried to a
Hindu idol, to which he was forced to bow his head. Upon his refusal to do
the same, he was tied to a tree and was shot to death with arrows. The spot
where this tree once stood is marked with an octagonal monument surmounted
by a cross, which was renovated in 1885 by the Patriarch of Goa.

Gonçalo Rodrigues and fourteen native new converts were also killed. Of the
latter, there was Dominic, a young boy of Cuncolim, who was a student at
Rachol Seminary, and had accompanied the priests on their expeditions to
Cuncolim and pointed out to them the Hindu temples. He was killed by his
very own Hindu uncle for being associated with the priests.

Alphonsus, an altar-boy of Pe. Pacheco had followed him closely with a holy
book. His hands were cut off on his refusal to part with the book and was
cut through his knee-joints to prevent his escape. He survived in this
condition until the next day when he was found and killed. He was later
buried in the church of the Holy Holy Spirit in Margão in South Goa (the
fourth edition of the building). The remains were then transferred to the
fifth edition of the church in 1675.

Following the massacre in Cuncolim, the captain-major in charge of the
Portuguese Army garrison at the Fort in Assolna, was determined to inflict
harm to the chieftains in return of brutally killing the Jesuit priests. As
punishment, the Portuguese army raided and destroyed orchards and fields in
the village and unleashed many atrocities on the local population of
Cuncolim.

The Kshatriya gãonkars of Cuncolim were then invited for a talk at the
Assolna fort situated on the banks of the River Sal where today, stands the
Assolna church and in an act of betrayal of their trust, sixteen of them
were summarily executed by the Portuguese authorities. It is said that one
among them escaped execution by jumping into the River and swam to Karwar
located , in the present day state of Karnataka.

After the execution of the the gãonkars, the villages of Cuncolim, Velim,
Assolna, Ambelim and Veroda refused to pay taxes on the produce harvested
from their orchards to the Portuguese government. Hence their lands were
confiscated and entrusted to the Condado da Marquis de Fronteira. The
temple of the Goddess Shri Shantadurga Cuncolikarian was relocated to the
neighboring village of Fatorpa, situated about seven kilometres away from
Cuncolim. The Church of Nossa Senhora de Sáude was constructed by the
Portuguese at the site of the massacre.

It is necessary to mention that the village of Cuncolim was not united as a
whole against the Jesuits and their companions. We can say this since
firstly, the elites were devided among themselves; a newly converted
Christian local villager is said to have rescued one of the Portuguese
missionary attacked.

One clear evidence of divisions amongst the villagers was the case of
Domingos da Costa, a Brahmin youth from Cuncolim, studying in Rachol  who
was killed for accompanying  the soldiers who had earlier destroyed local
temples from Cuncolim.

The bodies of the 5 priests were thrown into a well, which still stands
today inside the chapel of St. Francis Xavier, located in Cuncolim. The
bodies, when discovered after about two and a half days, but showed no
signs of decomposition. They were solemnly buried in the church of Our Lady
of the Snows at Rachol, and remained there until 1597. The bones were
exhumed and were shifted to the St Paul’s College, in Old Goa. The remains
the Cuncolim Martyrs are now housed at the Sé Cathedral and the Basilica de
Bom Jesus in Old Goa.

The five priests were declared as martyrs by the Catholic Church in 1741.
On 16 April 1893, the five martyrs were beatified at St. Peter’s Basilica
in Rome. This beatification was celebrated in Goa in 1894, and the feast
has ever since then been celebrated with great solemnity in Cuncolim. The
Calendar of the Archdiocese of Goa has fixed the 27th day of July as their
feast day.

The greatest fatality in the whole narrative of the Cuncolim massacre, is
the complete delebrate exclusion of the Bijapuri rule, even though the
region within which Cuncolim was geographically located, was managed by
governors appointed by the Adilshahi administration of Bijapur which was
known for supplying soldiers for Adilshah’s army.  Goa definitely did not
even exist at that point in time, before the Portuguese put it together out
of  many territories, kingdoms, chieftains, some parts of which stretched
out into today’s Konkan  and Canara coasts also Deccan. Considering this,
if one wants to wipe off all Portuguese traces in today’s Goa, it means
wiping off the map of Goa too!

Cuncolim’s narrative was mainly about the local landed elites fighting to
protect and preserve their indigenous lifestyle which was inclusive of
their casteist peivilages over the village land and gãonkari.  In fact the
natives of Cuncolim continued insisting that their hereditary pre-Christian
and caste dependent privileges in various rituals be continued even in the
20th Century.

 A lot of nationalists will not prefer commemorating Adilshahi rebellions
in the same manner as they do for the Cuncolim rebellion. This is since the
notion about the nation is that of it being a Hindu one. However, one
cannot deny that, as a struggle for the freedom of Goan elites, the revolt
of Cuncolim definitely wasn’t the first. The Adilshahi revolts were
considerably bigger, more costly in terms of ‘martyrs’ they yielded and
were much earlier in time.

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