Dear All,

I received the appended response today from one of our fellow Goans living in Goa as additional material to what I wrote this morning at 8.58 am our time.

“Dear oscar
You forgot one more term. "Annexation”

Nehru had to use force immediately because some Goans and the Portuguese were already working out the possibility of an autonomy for Goa. I am told that this meeting took place in now Hotel Mandovi, 3 months before the troops marched in. This explains India's hurry. Even M. Gandhi was against taking Goa by force way back in 1947. We do not require foreigners putting up boards 'Goans not allowed.' Our goans themselves do it. A local (gauntti) going to Souza Lobo's in Calangute or any of the local run beach shacks will get the same treatment of discrimination. This will not happen with South Indians particularly. They will respect their own people.

”We goans are definitely a cursed race roaming in the desert of confusion”

Need I say more!

Mog sodanch assume

Cr. Oscar C. Lobo
Melbourne
Together we can make a difference.



From: Oscar Lobo
Sent: Tuesday, 7 December 2010 8:58 AM

(Without Prejudice)

Senhor Viegas,

Nineteenth December is around the corner and we will be completing 49 years in the bosom of India.

We Goans need to have one thing clear – Goa is a part of India (after 1947) and sooner or later Goa would have been a part and parcel of India. The French left Pondicherry after British and so would the Portuguese.

There are various terms used for the event of 19 December 1961; however the most commonly used words are:

Invasion

Liberation

Conquest


The definition of each word depends on where a Goan has spent most of his/her time. For example:

People living in Mumbai and other parts of India, for them it is a liberation – They had to go outside of Goa i.e. Mumbai to earn their living for reasons best known to them. They fought for Goa to be “liberated” as they thought Goans were in bondage. Some of our Goans in Goa were not happy with the Portuguese regime and they joined the force. Even today many of our people including
some Hindu brothers and sisters are not happy and are migrating from.

People living in Africa, some of whom never lived in India, (however knew about India only through their parents), considers the date as a liberation.

Due to scarcity of jobs in the offices many of our people decided to migrate to British India and Africa. Of course they would come for holidays in Goa with the necessary visas.

Many Goans consider the 19 December 1961 as Invasion – I will not go into the definition of Invasion as we all know it thoroughly well. Although Goa was taken over, India did not get the official handover until the U.N. resolution of 1975/1976. Goa was in a limbo from 1961 to 1975 circa 14 years.

Goa had reached its peak; due to the dictatorial government we were backward in education, electricity and the essentials of life. Goa could not go much further even the people in Portugal realised that and got rid of their dictatorial regime. In the circumstances, it was necessary for Portugal to leave Goa. Many would debate, then when would Portugal leave of their own accord like Britian and France? Well you tell us!

The million dollar question is – Did late Pandit Nehru had to use military force? And was there a need for him to ask Goans what they wanted, apart from the fact that he said “Goa ka logh ajeeb hai”. If Mahatma Gandhi got rid of the British without any violence in 1947 (when the birth of India took place), was there a need of military force to make Goa part of India? Yes, it was time for India to have total control, however, perhaps the way it was done was not the Gandhian way – It was Nehru’s way or the high way.

Like Falkland Island and East Timor, Goans should have been given the opportunity to run their territory/state having known the place for 451 years. Perhaps, Late Pandit Nehru saw too many Bollywood films and was influenced by the role of a Goan in those films. Pandit Nehru did not fully understand what being a Goan was all about! leave aside the fact that his name was plummeting after the India China war and he had to do something quickly to reinstate his name amongst our people.

The best thing that happened to Goans is the promise of “Portuguese identity” if we should want it. This is the greatest thing they have done when we compare it with Britain and France who used and squeezed our country taking away India’s jewels which are embedded in the crown of the Queen of England.

One thing that we all need to also remember is when the British ruled India some of the restaurants/pubs had a notice reading: “INDIANS AND DOGS NOT ALLOWED” this history is apparently now being repeated in Goa with

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