Dear friends,

Starting with the column below, I will be writing regularly for
Outlook from Goa. Hope you like. Feedback welcomed.

Warm regards,

VM

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http://www.outlookindia.com/article/Global-Village-Called-Goa/293688

Every weekday morning in Goa, a visibly anxious crowd starts milling
together at the side of Panjim's old, tree-lined Largo Afonso de
Albuquerque, now renamed Azad Maidan. Soon after 9.30 am, twin lines
begin snaking past the colonnaded entrance to the state police
headquarters, towards the Foreigner Regional Registration Office. One
comprises the stream of foreign citizens from every part of the world
who seek visa extensions and permission to stay on longer in the
state. The other line of petitioners is made up of Goans about to
surrender their Indian passports, one of the final steps to migrating
abroad.

The latter phenomenon – emigration – has been an integral part of Goan
history for many generations, gathering momentum after the British
occupied the Estado da India Portuguesa during their war with Napoleon
in the early 19th century. During those years, the native Catholics –
mostly converts from the 16th and 17th centuries when Portugal
exhibited some missionary zeal before lapsing to exhaustion – quickly
became prized for their facility in cooking non-vegetarian foods,
playing western instruments and stitching western styles of clothing,
and especially for their willingness to travel.

>From that point on, Goans in considerable numbers accompanied every
British expansion around the Indian Ocean: they helped build Karachi
and Nairobi, staffed cantonments in Poona and Kanpur, and manned
innumerable orchestras from Singapore to Zanzibar. By the 1930's,
close to 20% of Goa's population had already emigrated.

These intrepid pioneers played an outsized role in the making of
modern India – like Bhau Daji Lad, one of the founding citizens of
Mumbai, or Nehru's confidant Frank Moraes, the first Indian editor of
the Times of India. Karachi-born Anthony de Mello founded the BCCI and
launched the Asian Games, and Lata Mangeshkar and many other Goan
musicians came together to help shape the seminal sounds of Bollywood.

Other Goans fought for the liberation of East Africa – Fitz de Souza
was the lawyer for the Mau Mau and Jomo Kenyatta, and helped draft the
constitution of Kenya, while Aquino de Braganza negotiated FRELIMO's
takeover of Mozambique from the Portuguese – as well as Sri Lanka,
where populist editor Armand de Souza is credited with "the awakening
of the Sinhalese.”"

But the reverse process – migration into Goa – never took place in any
appreciable measure until 1961, after Nehru's troops quickly
dispatched token Portuguese resistance to annex the territory to the
Indian Union. While Goa's population held stable under 600,000 to that
point, open borders with Maharashtra, Karnataka and Kerala immediately
skyrocketed the growth rate over 30%. In 1981, the state population
topped 1 million. Today, native Goans are a decided minority in their
homeland, with official statistics clearly underestimating a
population visibly surging to 2 million. Every tourism season, even
that number doubles.

Lots of Goans have responded to the dramatic shift exactly like
previous generations. They have voted with their feet – either taking
up a Portuguese passport (an option extended to anyone with direct
antecedents who lived in the old Estado da India) and winging abroad,
or shifting to the big Indian cities. But many more are now choosing
to stay home as Goa is remade into a magnet for ambitious
fortune-seekers from around the world. While the influx of unskilled
labour from across the subcontinent continues unstemmed – migrants
from the North East, Nepal, Jharkand and Bihar have become a
significant presence – India's sunshine state now hosts a bewildering
mix of new residents: artists, football players, software developers,
chefs and CEOs who are quietly transforming the state's economy and
culture.

As any local will tell you, there is a substantial seedy element to
the neo-Goan story. The deeply unpopular casinos attract all kinds of
hustlers and touts, and prostitution now flourishes barely concealed.
It is an open secret that every notoriously corrupt politician from
across India has parked money in Goa, with full connivance from
equally bent local authorities. Just last month, Dawood Ibrahim's ace
"shooter" Shyam Garikapatti was arrested in the prosperous North Goa
village of Saligao, where he had been living for several years,
dabbling in real estate. The notorious David Coleman Headley, the
co-founder of Indian Mujahedeen Yasin Bhatkal, and the "most-wanted"
Maoist Shambu Beck have all chilled out under the radar in Goa.

But even if parts of the state coastline do seem outside the writ and
reach of Indian law enforcement, Goa continues to feature a laid-back
and accommodating vibe and a multicultural, polyglot mix of permanent
residents that has made it an attractive destination for entrepreneurs
and a host of ambitious start-ups, as well as an amazing range of
young families from around the world. Many schools in the hinterland
now cater to children from a dozen or more different countries, while
the range of Goa-made ethnic foods available at "village" supermarkets
like Anjuna's Oxford Archade arcade has edged way past Italian
mozzarella and German bread to Ukrainian smoked fish and Japanese
pickled ginger.

Lots has been written about globalisation's effects in Bangalore or
Gurgaon – where giant corporations have established beachheads and
cycle foreign employees in and out – but much more interesting and
meaningful is what is happening in Goa, where hundreds of nominally
"foreign" children are born each year to parents who have no intention
of "going back" or ever relinquishing their place under the coconut
palms. This sizable international community blends into its
surroundings in different ways than happens anywhere else in India, as
the growing number of Goan-Russian couples demonstrates. Some of the
most passionate defenders of the state's environment and traditional
culture are now "outsiders."

Rapid change always breeds anxiety and insecurity, and so there are
chronic rumblings in this fingernail-sized territory about demographic
displacement, and land laws which are perpetually subverted to favour
crooks. But as the celebrated writer and novelist (and part-time Goa
resident) Amitav Ghosh has written, that "narrative of dystopia" tends
to drown out much more that is unique and valuable in the new Goa,
including "a kind of cosmopolitanism that is peculiarly its own. It is
a cosmopolitanism of lived experience; a cosmopolitanism of inner
dialogues, where the outsider becomes a part of an inner voice.
Sometimes embraced and sometimes excoriated, this voice is nonetheless
not ignored as it might be elsewhere." Nothing less than an alternate
idea of India is steadily burgeoning in the country's smallest state.

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