*Why more Goan Catholics than Hindus…*


We have seen so far twenty-nine Goan-origin military officers who rose to
the top three ranks in their respective arm of the defence services of
India. They are:



Army – one COAS (Gen SF Rodrigues), one Vice Chief (Lt Gen Stanley
Menezes), two Army Commanders (Lt Gen Eric Vas and Lt Gen Walter Pinto),
four Lieutenant Generals (Lt Gen CA Barretto, Lt Gen FT Dias, Lt Gen KL
D’Souza and Lt Gen MA Fernandez) and twelve Major Generals (Maj Gen
Krishnarao Rane, Maj Gen Sydney Pinto, Maj Gen Benjamin Gonsalves, Maj Gen
Eustace D’Souza, Maj Gen Antonio D’Silva, Maj Gen Ian Cardozo, Maj Gen Ivan
D’Cunha, Maj Gen Eustace Fernandez, Maj Gen Anil Raikar, Maj Gen Dinesh
Merchant, Maj Gen Christopher Fernandes and Maj Gen Sumer D’Cunha).



Navy – one Vice Admiral (Vice Adm John DeSilva) and one Rear Admiral (Surg
Rear Adm DRF Pinto).



Air Force – one CAS (Air Chief Mshl H Moolgavkar), two Air
Marshals/AOC-in-C (Air Mshl Terence deSa and Air Mshl Yeshwantrao Rane),
two Air Marshals (Air Mshl Loreto Pereira and Air Mshl Sandesh Wagle) and
two Air Vice Marshals (Air Vice Mshl Erlic Pinto and Air Vice Mshl Giles
Gomez).



Hardly had I finished writing about the Lieutenant Generals when some Goan
Hindu friends asked why I wrote only of Catholics and not of Goan Hindus.
Though there is no such thing as a Hindu Officer or Muslim Officer or Sikh
Officer or Catholic Officer in India’s defence services – all religions are
at par and the only ‘religion’ of the *fauji* is the defence of his
motherland, her honour and her flag – it was true that all eight Generals
written about up to that stage happened to be Goan Catholic without
exception.



In fact, 23 in the above list of 29 top officers are Catholic, only six are
Hindu. The disproportion drastically accentuates (to about 9:1) when one
considers all Commissioned ranks of Goan origin in India’s armed forces. To
write about more Goan Hindu officers in the top three ranks, I would have
to invent them – there are no more than six Goan officers of the Hindu
religious persuasion in those ranks to my knowledge.



Questions arise.



Why were there fewer Goan Hindu officers in India’s armed forces? Why a
preponderance of Catholics? For the answer, one must delve a little into
Goa’s past.



The Portuguese were in definitive possession of Goa’s three talukas of
Tiswadi, Bardez and Salcete (‘Old Conquests’) by the year 1543. By the end
of that century, Old Conquest natives were converted to Christianity. Those
who resisted were persecuted in a variety of ways, their lands confiscated
and themselves eventually banished. The result was that almost cent per
cent inhabitants of the Old Conquests were Christian.



More than 250 years later, in the second half of the 18th century, the
Portuguese acquired the rest of Goa’s talukas – Canacona, Quepem, Sanguem,
Ponda, Bicholim, Satari and Pernem (collectively called the ‘New
Conquests’). Religious zeal of the colonial power had by then died down and
most inhabitants of the New Conquests remained Hindu.



But there was an odd aspect to the Old and New Conquests. The seven New
Conquest talukas accounted for 80% of Goa’s geographical area but housed
only 27% of its population, mostly Hindu. The three Old Conquest talukas
were only 20% of Goa’s landmass but had 62% of the population, mostly
Christian. (Rest of the 11% population was in Daman and Diu.)



The result was that Goa was predominantly Christian (almost 70 per cent) at
the dawn of the 19th century. Bulk of both Christian Goa and Hindu Goa was
poor. The Dutch blockades in the first half of the 17th century had
emasculated the Portuguese in Goa. Goa was left to languish. Subsistence
living was the norm in the predominantly agrarian society. There were
hardly any educational facilities and in any case, hardly any local jobs.



In this bleak scenario, two British gunboats – *Arrogant* and *Suffolk* –
arrived under the command of Cmde. Rainier with troops that occupied the
Cabo and Aguada forts in 1799. It was the era of Napoleonic wars in Europe.
The British told the surprised Portuguese governor that the French in
Pondicherry were conspiring with Tipu Sultan to attack Goa.



On 6 September 1799, Col. William Clarke arrived with three infantry and
artillery battalions (1100 British troops, later shored up to 3,000 troops)
and occupied, besides the forts at Cabo and Aguada, those at Gaspar Dias
(Miramar), Dona Paula, Reis Magos and Mormugao. Col. Clarke told the
Portuguese rulers in Goa that Napoleon had ordered 26 warships and 14
frigates at Brest to sail via the Suez Canal and capture Goa.



The Portuguese said they could deal with French threats themselves. It
hardly mattered. The British stayed on for 14 years, intermittently, until
1813, when the plan of two brothers with the British East India Company –
Richard Wellesley and the future Duke of Wellington, Arthur Wellesley – to
occupy Goa was called off after Lisbon-London talks.



During this time, the British noticed that Goan Christian natives had dress
and diet like their own and – like their Goan Hindu counterparts – were
hardworking and honest. The British also noticed that coastal Goans were
given to sailing in country craft (all three Old Conquest talukas were
coastal whereas, save Pernem, Canacona and a very tiny part of Quepem, all
New Conquest talukas were hinterland). The British hired 3,300 Goans for
the Royal Navy and more from the celebrated ‘Goan ABC’ – ayahs, butlers and
cooks. Almost all were Goan Christian.



Directors of the British shipping company, Mackinnon Mackenzie, soon
followed. The company would recruit thousands of Goans for its ships,
heralding the institution called the Goan *tarvotti* (seamen). Bulk of the
recruitment was of Christians from the Old Conquests.



The great Goan emigration had begun. This was not restricted only to the
depressed classes. Middle class families began migrating to British India
for jobs for themselves and a better education for their children.



Despite initial migration in the first half of the 19th century, Goa still
was 64% Christian and 36% Hindu in 1850. Between 1880 and 1910 – in just 30
years – 3.21 lakh Goans emigrated, according to a study by Dr. Remy Dias,
Professor of History, researcher and Deputy Director, Higher Education,
Government of Goa. More than half of Goa was outside Goa – in British
India, British Africa, British Middle East and of course in ships across
the seven seas. Bombay alone housed one-and-half lakh Goans by 1950.



Most of those who emigrated before 1961 were Catholics from the Old
Conquests. Indo-Aryan Hindus were considered polluted if they crossed three
hilltops in ancient times or the sea in medieval times. According to a
joint study of Paulo de Matos of the ISCTE-Instituto Universitario de
Lisboa and Jan Lucassen of Amsterdam, 90% of Goan emigrants were Christian,
only 7% were Hindu.



Thanks to emigration, Goan Catholics dwindled to 38% while Hindus were 60%
of Goa’s 5.90 lakh population in 1960. (Catholics were 25% in 2011 and are
estimated at 20% today.)



Goan Catholic émigrés settled in places like Agra, Ahmedabad, Ahmednagar,
Ajmer, Amravati, Bangalore, Baroda, Belgaum (city and district), Bellary,
Bhopal, Bhusaval, Bombay, Calcutta, Delhi, Hyderabad, Jabalpur, Kanpur,
Karachi, Kolhapur (city and district), Lonavala, Madras, Mysore, Nagpur,
Poona and Sholapur – even Burma.



It is from such places that intelligent, young and educated Goans joined
the defence services of India. They could not do that from Goa: they could
only join the Portuguese military (and dream of rising to *Tenente Coronel*
or Lieutenant Colonel – all higher ranks were held by whites).



Goans being admitted as Commissioned Officers in the British Indian forces
itself is a story. Indians in general were not allowed in the executive
commissioned ranks of the armed forces. They could be officers only in
medical, dental, nursing and such support services. Then came the
prestigious Aga Khan Hockey Tournament edition of 1913. Colonel Thomas
Cadell, Commander of the Auxiliary Force of India (AFI), was chief guest at
the finals. The Bombay-based Goan sports club, the Lusitanians, had reached
the finals. The Goan lads, playing with their back to the wall, lifted the
trophy.



Cadell was so impressed with the Goan lads that he invited the Lusitanians
to join the AFI saying that a champion team would also make good soldiers.
Twenty-five enlisted and a special Lusitanian Section was formed in the
AFI. They indeed made exemplary officers. From the AFI they were absorbed
under regular commission into the British India armed forces. Entry rules
were relaxed, and Goans living in British India thereafter joined the
services in droves, both sides of 1947.



Ninety percent of Goan emigration to India was Catholic. Barely ten percent
was Hindu. That explains the preponderance of Goan Catholics in the
Commissioned Officer ranks of India’s armed forces – and in about the same
ratio, 9:1, of about a thousand Goan-origin Officers that this writer will
identify in the revised edition of his 2010 book.



But one thing is clear: the Goan Officer, whether Hindu or Christian,
proved he was second to none. Stay tuned over the next three Sundays for
true stories of courage and bravery among other officer ranks of Goan Hindu
origin. The column will continue thereafter in the Marathi language in
Goa’s daily, *Gomantak,* but those who don’t read or access the Sunday
edition of *Gomantak,* will have to await publication of the revised
edition of the 2010 book, hopefully during calendar 2023.



(This first appeared in the Marathi language in Goa’s daily, *Gomantak,* 20
November 2022, and is excerpted from revised text of the book, *Patriotism
In Action: Goans in India’s Defence Services* by Valmiki Faleiro, first
published in 2010 by ‘Goa,1556', ISBN: 978-93-80739-06-9. Revised edition
awaits publication.)

-- 
*** Please be polite and on-topic in your posts. ***
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "The 
Goa Book Club" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web, visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/goa-book-club/CAGoMsACcHE7cxSwvgg28z1HfqP-JLKA-kGcSsZM77-E7xqs-Tg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to