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Journal of Jesuit Studies
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/org/journal/journal-of-jesuit-studies>
Volume 11, Issue 2
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/org/journal/journal-of-jesuit-studies/vol/11/issue/2>,
23 April 2024, Pages 360-363
[image: Journal of Jesuit Studies]
<https://www.sciencedirect.com/org/journal/journal-of-jesuit-studies/vol/11/issue/2>
Book Reviews
*The Jesuits, Goa and the Arts*, *edited by* Rinald D’Souza, S.J. and
Anthony da Silva, S.J.
Author links open overlay panelCharles J. Borges S.J.
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This richly illustrated volume, combining photographed works of visual art
with meticulously researched historical contexts, documents the cultural
heritage of the Society of Jesus in Goa in western India. The volume, the
latest contribution to a series of publications produced by the Xavier
Centre of Historical Research since 1979, is a commendable addition by
Jesuits Rinald D’Souza and Anthony da Silva, an impressive team of writers,
and photographer David de Souza to the study of art—including altars,
paintings, and statues—found within the churches of Goa, as well as on
their exteriors. The art displayed in the book represents the convergence
and collaboration of missionary European and Goan imagination and
creativity that culminated in works of various forms during the sixteenth
to eighteenth centuries.

A series of written articles accompanying the photos provide background on
how members of religious orders (primarily Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian
members of the Franciscan, Jesuit, Dominican, Augustinian, and Theatine
orders) came to project the tenets and practices of Western faith onto an
Indian landscape, while operating in the premier center of the Christian
faith in the east under the *Padroado* system of governance.

They came face to face with a land that had much to commend in the fields
of philosophy and theology, with formidable tracts written in Sanskrit and
with eminent exponents of these, among them Shankaracharya, Madhava, and
Ramanuja. Goa could also boast of its eminent epic composers; the Jesuit
Thomas Stephens was quick to draw from this talent pool in his composition
of *Kristapurana* (Epic of Christ) (*Kristapurana of Father Thomas Stephens
S.J*., translated and edited by Nelson Falcao, S.D.B. [Bengaluru: Kristu
Jyoti Publications, 2012]), set to verse and meter very similar to that
used by the Hindu poets.

Jesuits Roberto de’ Nobili and Francisco Ros studied the original Hindu
Vedas and the accompanying scholarly expositions of the time, showing how
cultural and theological accommodation is possible in the work of
converting individuals to the Christian faith on many levels. Antony
Mecherry, S.J., published an interesting study on Bishop Francisco Ros
in *Testing
Ground for Jesuit Accommodation in Early Modern India: Francisco Ros S.J.
in Malabar (16th–17th Centuries)* (Rome: Institutum Historicum Societatis
Iesu, 2019).

The above-cited luminaries stand out in contrast to the works of other
Portuguese and French missionaries in India who were not admirers of Hindu
culture and ideas. One has only to read Diogo Gonçalves’s *História do
Malavar* (1615) (ed. Joseph Wicki, S.J. [Münster: Aschenforffshe
Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1955]) to discover the disapproval this Jesuit
presents of the Hindu and Muslim religions he describes at considerable
length.

The informative articles included in the volume are those of Rinald
D’Souza, “The Cultural Encounter of the Jesuits in Goa” (inviting one to
make space for the spiritual and to find God in the arts); Délio Mendonça,
S.J., “Ignatius and Xavier as Influencers” (hailing the role of these
Jesuit giants as embracing the new world of their age); Cristina Osswald,
“The Jesuit *Modo Goano*” (describing a then-emerging art form unique to
church building in Goa); Mónica Esteves Reis, “Forgotten Altarpieces in
Goan Churches” (shifting our gaze to altarpiece productions in places
outside Goa); Natasha Fernandes, “Understanding Goa’s Christian Art through
the Jesuit Collection at MoCA” (describing the art collections at the
Museum of Christian Art in Old Goa); and Anthony da Silva, “Art, a Path to
Interiority” (exploring how the art of earlier centuries can speak to us in
new ways today).

The attempts of many academic articles on the artwork of churches in Goa,
other than those mentioned above, have aimed to prove how well the merger
of Western and Eastern forms of architecture and art occurred, when one
studies ecclesiastical history. Laudable as the writings are, one must
study these attempts in the context of how the thrust of evangelization in
Goa and its exterior environs was often of a hostile and less accommodating
nature. Art and actual evangelization did not usually work in a smooth
unison. One recalls research on this subject, such as Antony da Costa,
S.J.’s *The Christianization of the Goa Islands* (Bombay: Heras Institute,
1965), to discover how overt strong-arm evangelizing tactics went
hand-in-hand with architectural building and embellishments, especially in
sixteenth-century Goa when massive structures like the Se Cathedral and the
Basilica of Bom Jesus were built.

Much has been made of a so-called “Goan style” of church architecture, and
although local forms have been employed in some areas of church decorative
motifs, the overarching style of churches and their interiors is foreign to
local sensibilities and certainly European in nature. True, circumstances
made it inevitable that local building materials were used (stone slabs
came from afar as Bassein in the Province of the North), and local
craftsmen were enlisted to embark on the large-scale ecclesiastical
buildings of the period. But nowhere does one find that local craftsmen
were given a free hand or pride of place in the construction of these
structures. The blueprints and layouts were the work of European architects.

St. Francis Xavier and others did arrive in Goa with an overtly European
mindset, as one of the articles rightly suggests, and, excluding the few
priests like the ones mentioned above, whose names are often stated to
clinch the argument, whether in literary forms or in architectural design
followed along the lines envisioned in Europe.

This is not to detract from the commendable work done by the Jesuits and
other religious men in the fields of communication, thanks to the
then-nascent printing press of the time and in the areas of ecclesiastical
construction. But one cannot read too much into thinking that these were
reflective of a strong merger of Western and Eastern forms of production in
these areas.

The thrust of the book is a summons to see things anew with regard to
Jesuits, Goa, and art, as the Society of Jesus celebrates the anniversaries
of the conversion of its founder and the canonizations of St. Ignatius and
St. Francis Xavier, respectively. A more detailed study would certainly be
helpful to put these subjects into the context I have mentioned above.

Evangelizing practices on the one hand and church building and art on the
other impinged on each other, with the former having the more overarching
influence on the latter. One certainly must look at the evidence anew but
with the hope of seeing more clearly the issues that existed at the time
when ecclesiastical art and architecture were produced in Goa.
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© The Author(s), 2024. Published with license by Koninklijke Brill BV

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