Every elections some of us predict the death of Goa in the same way some 
pessimists predict the death of India as a democracy. For such people Indian 
elections are a tamasha or a that makes its round every five years.  In more 
than one way, Indian elections are a theatrical exercise. Many have described 
it as aya ram, gaya ram syndrome.
Even as it looks like a farce for western observers and political pundits, the 
elections are the strength of Indian democracy. No doubt many will agree that 
Indian democracy is indeed mobocracy. The shouting, the hate speeches, the 
vilification of rivals, the horse-trading, the jumping jacks from one party to 
another and, lastly, the collection of fronts by whatever name they can conjure 
up, just like a magician.
Since the first elections in Goa, many things have changed yet they appear to 
be the same. The voting class is perhaps more educated. It may not be 
responsible in selecting who to vote. But given the slate of candidates from 
each party, the voter is faced with a Hobson's Choice. 
If you see the TV commercials, one with the filmstar Amir Khan, pleading with 
voters to cast their vote, it makes one wonder whether such TV messages go to 
the minds -- and hearts -- of the voters.
One commercial says that if a voter does not vote, then the voter must be 
asleep. So, Tata tea is the remedy to keep awake -- and vote. The elections 
make for good TV images, as the great Canadian media guru Marshall McLuhan 
said, The Medium is the Message. In Indian elections, the messages gets complex 
because of the variety of parties and their manifestoes on which the ink dries 
up immediately after the elections, particularly of the winning party or 
parties. A coalition further confuses and confounds the message.
The national parties in Goa are also promising the moon and the waters of the 
Mandovi in every home. Some of them want to do away with SEZ and some, on 
winning, would do away with your daily pez. Some of them may want to preserve 
Goan identity but perhaps do not know the formula for it. A few wish guys on 
the forum think they have the formula, which is unworkable in the current 
circumstances in Goa. Goan identity to be saved and preserved remains in the 
hands of Goans themselves. How best they do if another matter.
Those who have predicted Goa's death, let me remind them it would not come with 
this elections or with future elections. If one believes that the slow death 
Goan identity is undergoing, in fact, means that the death of Goa is nearing, 
it is then in the realm of the posibility. Give or take another 50 years for it 
to become a reality. It would be an emotional death, not physical.
Why are some of us going to great lengths to make such gloomy forecast? Why 
can't they concentrate on the political realities of the day? To say that no 
matter who or which party is elected to power, it would still mean the death of 
Goa is to write our own obituary. I know that the whole Goan environment 
appears hopeless. Could we still retain hope under the shadow of death?
Having written this, I lay exposed to those who may choose to hit back at me 
saying that, I as a non-resident Goan, would care less if Goa dies or is in the 
throes of death. I care and many of us living abroad do and we are aware that 
we can make no or little difference. Some of us here have said that Goan NRIs 
could have a big voice in Goan politics. I do hope it happens some day, though 
Goa-based NRI critics would tell us to come to Goa and make the difference. Or, 
they would tell us to put our money where our mouths are. Such criticism is 
easy to hurl those who are having foreign citizenships, even though some of us 
may have dual citizenship. In a way, Goan NRIs working in foreign lands, 
particularly in the Middle East, can escape such criticism, even though some of 
them are living in such places for more than two decades. In the past, Goan 
NRIs have fallen for the dangling carrot by politicians who promise to look 
after the woes, such as losing
 illegally their homes and landsto relatives and tenants. These promises are 
nothing more than "differential politics". Goan NRIs do not constitute a "bloc" 
of voters. Patronising Goan NRIs is part of the larger scheme of getting 
monetary support for campaign funds of individual politicians or the party.
As I have said before on this forum, there is no politician worth his salt to 
deserve a vote. As some have pointed out in the case of the South Goa 
parliamentary election that Mathany Saldanha is the best bet while at least one 
former goanetter has called to support the lone lady candidate, an unknown 
quantity, on other forums. If "strategic voting" is considered then Mathany 
could be the man to elect. The voters would have to ignore his political 
sommersaults or his "deafening silence" in the assembly when he was a minister. 
Even in the circling gloom of the financial crisis, there is a ray of hope that 
things will look better in a few months' time. I think in the cries of Goa's 
immiment death, there is hope that Goa will survive from political mayhem. We 
talk of Goenkarponn, that unique trait that defines us, which, for me, is the 
fortitude and the resilent of the Goan spirit that rises above the prevailing 
chaos. I wish the goanetter who started this thread had put a question mark to 
read, RIP Goa?
Goa will survive, Goa will live for my generation, the next and the next...

Eugene



      

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