When India celebrates its diaspora, the emphasis is always on NRIs in the West. Silvia Braganca’s newbook on her huband, Aquino de Braganca, theGoa-born advisor to a host of African leaders, offers a startling look at a barely-known thread in NRI history, peopled by anti-colonial activists who helped to steer the nationalist movements of sub-Saharan Africa.
Battles Waged, Lasting Dreams is a labour of love that was put together quite idiosyncratically, but that can be forgiven for the sheer achievement of pinning down the contours of this riveting narrative, full of excitement and energy, deeply evocative of the era of decolonisation.
If anyone knows about Indian revolutionaries in Africa, it is via the prism of South Africa, where Mahatma Gandhi found his feet as a political leader. In later years, several South Africans of Indian descent played an important role in the African National Congress.
But there was another set of anti-colonialists who streamed out of Portuguese Goa in the first half of the twentieth century and became role models for later struggles in Africa. Many of them had similar influences: nationalist Indian politics, anti-Portuguese sentiment and then further radicalisation by study in Europe and contact with Marxist revolutionaries there.
This was already happening by the 1920s, when Goa-born Tristao Braganza Cunha was studying at the Sorbonne and became the conduit for the Indian National Congress in France. His accounts greatly influenced Romain Rolland’s influential biography of Gandhi.
By the 1940s, there were several Goans (often European-educated) at the forefront of the liberation struggles in British and Portuguese colonies in Africa. They included Pio Gama Pinto, the ideologue of the Kenya African National Union, which came to power in 1961 (he was assassinated four years later by political rivals), and Fitz de Souza, who represented the Mau Mau in court during the height of the British battle to retain control of its colony. De Souza later helped to draft the Kenyan constitution. Joseph Murumbi, the son of a Goan-Masai marriage, went on to become Vice-President of Kenya.
Most influential of all was Aquino de Braganca, born into a family from Mapusa, in North Goa. Like almost all Goan boys of some means in those days, he was educated at the Lyceum in Panjim but then had to leave the territory for lack of further opportunities. In his case, a desire to study physics and mathematics led him first to Karnatak College in Dharwar and then to join the steady outflow of young Goan fortune-seekers to Mozambique, in Portuguese-held East Africa. He was changed forever by the harsh apartheid-like circumstances in the colony. Within a few months, he headed to Grenoble in France to pursue further studies.
In France, Braganca met the philosopher Frantz Fanon, and was inspired by his anti-colonial views. He founded a political party for the freedom of Goa and plotted the liberation of all the Portuguese colonies in Africa. He and other revolutionaries from across Africa gathered under the banner of CONCP – the Conference of Nationalist Organisations of the Portuguese Colonies. In the end, every one of these movements succeeded, and the Portuguese were eventually compelled to leave Africa. “Aquino de Braganca was a great revolutionary,” Nelson Mandela said. He “prepared the ground”.
When freedom came to Mozambique in 1975, it was Aquino de Braganca who negotiated it in secret meetings between FRELIMO (the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique) and the Portuguese, on behalf of his close friend, Samora Machel, who soon became president. That relationship led to Braganca’s death. He was accompanying Machel on a presidential tour in 1986 when their plane crashed in mysterious circumstances.
But he’s still remembered as a giant of the time of decolonisation. Silvia Braganca quotes Joaquim Chissano, the ex-President of Mozambique, recounting how he’s often asked about this Goan revolutionary: “Many Presidents remember. Mugabe remembers. Kaunda certainly remembers. How many times did I not hear Nyerere talking about Aquino de Braganca? People have something that they keep and they use. I am sure that this happens with Aquino.”
Category Archives: Goan-descent writers
Os Brahamanes (romance)
Sandra Lobo commented, via Goa-Research-Net:
http://1857revolt.wordpress.com/2010/09/07/titles-in-portuguese/
] as one of the three titles in Portuguese which count as a response “in Europe” to the 1857 revolt in North India. The other two are Dr Felix Maynard’s translated work De Delhi a Cawnpore : diario de uma senhora ingleza : paginas da insurreição da India, and Canto do Indio; in: Poesias de Ernesto Cibrão, 1857-1860, Paris 1861.
A tribute to a departed friend … Peter Nazareth on Lino Leitao
Lino Leitao in Goa. Photo: FN
I first heard of Lino Leitao in Missisauga, Canada in 1977 when I was driving to a conference in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Friends of mind showed me a book they had found in a bookstore, Goan Tales. They laughed at the author, whom they knew, because they said he looked like a beachcomber, not a writer. I got the book and liked it so I decided to write a review for World Literature Today, which published it in Autumn 1978 This is what I said:
Lino Leitao was born in Goa under Portuguese rule, was educated in Goa and Canada, taught for many years in Uganda and is now teaching in Quebec. The five stories in Goan Tales, his second collection, are all about the Goan community and are set in Goa, India, Entebbe, Nairobi and Mombasa. The reference point in all cases is Goa, the ancestral homeland, where people return to get married, to have their children educated or to retire. Goans seem to live in a cocoon in Leitao’s stories. Africa rarely enters the bubble of communal existence, except for one story, ‘The Son.’
A woman who has entered an arranged marriage with an older Goan gives birth to a son — an African son, to everybody’s shock. The father is the African servant, who had offered her love and understanding. Returning to Nairobi several years later, she still looks youthful because of an inner peace, and she openly acknowledges her brief but genuine love. Leitao is generous towards true love, in whose name all can be forgiven, and he is hard on both the ‘gossip-powr’ of Goans and the fact that very few Goans are able to resist what ‘people’ are saying.
Leitao has a sharp eye for Goan behavior. He sees the Goans as very deeply Roman Catholic, like all Latin peoples, and he does not scorn their faith, while recognizing contradictions and hypocrisies. In ‘The Miracle’ Goa becomes impoverished during World War II, while the people keep waiting for the Blessed Virgin to appear. She finally seems to appear twice; the first appearance is not believed because the ‘see’ is not poor but a teacher; the Church ignores the second because it does not want a tourist attraction to rival that of Fatima in Portugal. The second ‘seer’ ends up rich and believes in Her for She was the one who performed this miracle of a good and rich life for him.
I tracked down Lino Leitao and wrote to him because I wanted to include his stories in two anthologies I was invited to edit: ‘The So’ in Goan Literature: A Modern Reader, an issue of the Journal of South Asian Literature, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, Winter/Spring 1983; and ‘Dona Amalia Quadros’ in African Writing Today, an issue of Pacific Quarterly Moana, Hamilton, New Zealand, July/October, 1981.
I reviewed his next volume of stories, Six Tales, in World Literature Today, Spring 1982. I said:
Lino Leitao continues to create a sociology of Goans in his third collection of short stories. The stories are set in Goa and East Africa, the last one with a protagonist who has gone to Goa on leave from Canada. ‘The Hidden Truth’ is about a woman left behind after her arranged marriage to someone from abroad. Needing love, she is seduced by her brother-in-law and gets pregnant. The son survives and is eventually adopted by her husband. The lover, who abandoned her when she became pregnant, dies. The story begins with the funeral of her husband. People expect her, in the traditional manner, to weep over his coffin. After a damningly long dry-eyed period, she finally weeps hysterically, and people are convinced of her dutiful love for her husband. What they do not know is that she sees the face of her lover in the coffin, the lover whose funeral she could not attend.
I commented,
Leitao has affection for his characters and implied criticism for the hardness in Goans going by traditional mores. We see this in ‘The Hindu Goan.’ There were few Hindu Goans in East Africa, and the one in the story is exceptional, more so as he falls in love with and marries, but does not possess, an Ethiopian woman. He dies in an accident after one of the Goan men jeers that he has slept with the Ethiopian woman, who, the man says, is a prostitute.
Lino and I met for the first time in March, 1991 at the ‘International Conference on Goa: Continuity and Change’, held at the University of Toronto. We got on very well.
I reviewed his first novel for World Literature Today, Spring 2000. This was The Gift of the Holy Cross, published by Peepal Tree Press in Leeds, England in 2000.
I said that the novel
begins in Goa during Portuguese colonial times. The land is suffering from drought, which ends when Mario Jacques is born; people believe he is a messiah. But what kind of messiah, when Goans are divided, Hindu versus Catholic? When the landlord class, Catholic and Hindu, oppresses and exploits the workers and peasants? When Goa has been colonized for over four centuries, physically and mentally, while India is ending a hundred years of British colonial rule? Mario becomes a political figure, an unsuccessful one except that he is made a scapegoat for the antinationalists. When he escapes to India, he is disillusioned by politicians, for they want to enrich themselves at the expense of the people.
Jozin-Bab, who has lived for a long time, says to him: “Always remember this, Mario: A nation that doesn’t aspire to be an industrial giant may be exploited by the others. But a nation that doesn’t grow spiritually will be in worse trouble.” Mario is scapegoated for a murder he did not commit and hanged on a cross. His dying words are in Sanskrit, thus indigenizing the message of the Crucifixion.
Lino began work on a second novel. I read a portion of it many years ago. It was a highly erotic account of the affair of a married woman and her lover, a womanizer. However, there was a spirituality from the Vedas underlying this story, which moved between present and past. I don’t know whether he ever completed this novel, but he did complete several short stories. Twelve short of his stories were published in the journal Short Story International, the most important journal for short stories. I don’t know of any other writer who had more stories published in this journal.
One of the stories in SSI, ‘The Accident’, was originally published in The Massachusetts Review and is the most complex multicultural story Lino ever wrote. It is set in Montreal during the time the Quebecois were considering quitting Canada. It covers Goans; Canadians; the Baganda from Uganda; the illusions of white people about Amin’s “nationalism”; the Asian expulsion from Uganda; the question of whether ‘Asian’ had contributed to Uganda (they had, the narrator says, an example being that it was a Goan tailor who designed the outfit that became the Kiganda national dress, known as the busuti or gomisi). The story ends making a connection in Canada between the three aliens in Canada who are black, brown and white.
Lino was always appreciative of what I did to get his work out. He expressed his gratitude in many ways. Confluence recently published a story by him which he dedicated to me. Earlier, he reviewed the second edition of my novel, In a Brown Mantle, in World Literature Today, Autumn 1982. He concluded his review:
“When first published in 1972, In a Brown Mantle was prophetic of both Idi Amin’s coup and his expulsion of Asians from Uganda. But the novel is also a story of many Third World countries. Its prose is easy, yet it has an astonishing power to stir the mind. People who live under the oppression of their own bourgeoisie will find much to ponder in this book.”
In 1998, a Goan from London published a letter to Goa Today disagreeing with a fine interview with me by Fred Noronha a few months earlier. The writer proceeded to completely misunderstand my novel, The General is Up, concluding that it had no “moral rectitude”. And the lowest blow: he said I was an unworthy son of my father. Lino phoned me to cheer me up. “At least you got a Goan to read!” he said.
Lino Leitao was a very good writer of short fiction. He sometimes needed a sympathetic editor to tighten up what he wrote, and I did it whenever I could, but that is not a reason for concluding he was not a good writer because, in fact, every writer needs and uses good editors. But Goans tended to misunderstand his writing from another angle. They looked for the real life people on whom he based his stories and then blamed him both for gossiping about stories from real life and getting it wrong because of differences from the real life stories. Or perhaps they were really blaming him for revealing secrets that they thought should not be revealed about Goans to the outside word, ‘secrets’ that showed Goans were human. They did not know that every writer uses models from real life, but these models go through the creative imagination before emerging in well structured works of art. It was his knowledge, his understanding of people, politics and history, his empathy for human beings and his thirst for ending oppression that made him a good writer. I mentioned earlier that some people thought he was like a beachcomber, not a writer.
Lino Leitao is gone but his stories live. One of them has been accepted by Professor Ezekiel Alembi for a forthcoming volume of East African short stories.
Lino’s stories are a gift to us. We must know how to accept the gift. –Peter Nazareth, University of Iowa
Reproduced with permission of the writer. This was first e-published on the New Diaspora mailing list [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/newdiaspora] Nazareth can be contacted via PNAZARETH05@msn.com
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Patagonia? Where’s that?
Biblophile-friend Dr Nandkumar Kamat reminded me about the upcoming release of a new book ‘From Goa to Patagonia’ slated for August 24, 2007 at 4.15 pm at the Kala Academy’s meeting hall. This not only sent me scurring to my cluttered email in-box, but it also saw me go off in a hurry to the Wikipedia to understand what this was all about.
Patagonia?
This was how that amazing online encyclopedia, the Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org), explained it: “Patagonia is the southernmost portion of South America. Mostly located in Argentina and partly in Chile, it comprises the Andes mountains to the west and south, and plateaux and low plains to the east. The name Patagonia comes from the word patagon used by Magellan to describe the native people who his expedition thought to be giants. It is now believed the Patagons were actually Tehuelches and Aonikenk with an average height of 1.80 m compared to the 1.55 average for Spaniards of the time.”
This book is by Alfredo Bachmann de Mello, the Uruguay-based Goan-bon son of renowned doctor-scientist Dr. Froilano de Mello and his Swiss wife. Some years back, I ran into Alfredo “Fred” via cyberspace, and we had many an interesting exchange till (I think) we disagreed in our perspectives and lost touch. He had then also drawn my attention to a book he published, explaining who the ‘real Columbus’ was. (Frankly, history not being one of my favourite subjects, I found that text a bit too complex to adequately follow. That book of his is called “El Verdadero Colón” in Spanish, and in English it’s “The Real Colon: Columbus is a misnomer”.)
Head of the Lisbon-based Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias history department Dr Teotonio R de Souza, while welcome the growing number of Goan memoirs and autobiographies, gives a preview of the book’s content. He also refers to De Mello’s father’s possibly misunderstood role in representing colonial Goa in Lisbon.
Of the book, de Souza writes: “Despite some unpleasant memories, Alfredo de Mello does not display any hangover of colonial past. He revealed very early in life his conviction that all empires had their end! This understanding of history and his joie de vivre pervade his memoirs, giving them a seriousness and without making them dull.
“In between some colourful descriptions of his deft control of a pony galloping downhill at Matheran while still a child; a confrontation which ended badly for a cobra in his home compound at Altinho in Panjim; a rub of the ring of the Archbishop-Patriarch that left him with bleeding nose; and his first experience of the pleasures of Eden with a young British eve while a boarder at Bishop Cotton’s in Bangalore, there is much we can learn about social life in the capital city of Goa as well as about the wild-life in rural Goa of those years.”
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A Goan author… with the setting of the Buddha’s times
Below are three reviews of a book by Amita Kanekar, a Mumbai-based writer whose roots are in Goa. -FN
The Hindu, May 1, 2005
The Buddha emerges a more rounded figure in this reinterpretation, says R. KRITHIKA
A Spoke In The Wheel: A Novel About The Buddha, Amita Kanekar, HarperCollins, Rs. 395.
THE traditional legend of Buddha’s renunciation and search for enlightenment is, in many ways, unsatisfactory. Could one be as divorced from the reality of his/ her times as the legend implied? Also the characters seem unreal cardboard cutouts rather than real live people, who felt, loved, lived and hated especially when compared with extant literary sources on social life of this period in Indian history.
Good use of history
Against this background, Amita Kanekar’s A Spoke in the Wheel is interesting reading. Described as historical fiction, the book draws from Indian history to such good effect that one can’t help wondering if things actually did happen this way. The period of the Buddha was one of great philosophical ferment. There were six main schools of thought, the Vedic ritualistic tradition was under attack and people were beginning to look at alternate schools of thought. Both politically and socially too, it was a time of changes. Republicanism had come to the fore.
The book moves at two levels. A monk, Upali, (who lives in Asoka’s times) is writing the story of Buddha’s life. Upali has lived through the Kalinga War and is not quite sure about the reasons for Asoka’s conversion is it a true inner change or is it politically motivated? Continue reading

