Dear Frederick,
                      Thank you very much for your overall review of the Book" 
Land of The Sal Tree " and its promotion on saligao-net. I am proud of you
 As I am not keeping well, will you kindly do the needful for me to place short 
news about its launch at Saligao Church  on Thursday 26th April, 2012 around  
6.30 p.m in the Newhind Times, O Heraldo,  Gomantak Express and even other 
marathi  dailies and  TOI  for Wednesday's edition ? Thanks in anticipation You 
may place some matter of what you wrote to make the release interesting. Many 
thanks to you 
I hope you are in contact with people from Toronto, UK,  USA, Australia, Dubai. 
 Please be in contact. Kindly pray for me as I do for you and yours . Everyone 
is dear to me.
Much love, fr. nascimento mascarenhas
 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Frederick FN Noronha फ्रेड्रिक नोरोन्या *فريدريك نورونيا 
  To: saligao-net@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, April 23, 2012 3:56 AM
  Subject: [SALIGAONET] Stories, history, legends and traditions... from a 
village in Goa, India





  Stories, history, legends and traditions... from a village in Goa, India
  This book offers a peek into the wonderful days of a bygone-era in a typical 
village of Goa, India, a land with a rich history and a diverse society.


  FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


  PRLog (Press Release) - Apr 23, 2012 - 
  Goa's heart beats in its charming villages, with their winding pathways and 
ancestral houses -- nested amidst coconut groves and surrounded by greenery.  
So says a new book on Saligao, one of Goa's many colourful and scenic villages, 
that has just been published here.

  'Land of the Sal Tree' is a book promising "stories of the history, legends 
and traditions" of this "typical Goan village".  Saligao is located a short 
distance -- three to four kilometres -- from the North Goa coast.  But unlike 
some of the beach villages which have speedily turned into concrete jungles, 
this one has still retained some charm.

  This book is authored by Fr. Nascimento J. Mascarenhas, a priest from the 
village who has served in diverse parishes across Goa.  Fr.  Mascarenhas has an 
abiding passion for Goa's history -- specially Church history.  So much so that 
he has authored half-a-dozen books so far.

  The book's goal, says the author, is to provide "readers with an enlightening 
snapshot of the history, culture and traiditions of Saligao".  Saligao lies 
somewhere in between the prominent former fishing-village turned 
tourism-hotspot of Calangute, the North Goa commercial capital of Mapusa and 
state-capital of Panjim.

  "Saligao abounds in dustry lanes and naorrow pathways which will take you to 
quaint shrines and half-hidden gardens, old crumbling houses next to brightly 
painted modern structures or well maintained so-called 'Portuguese' houses," 
says a foreword to the book by Yvonne Vaz Ezdani.  Also a villager, Vaz Ezdani 
has authored her own book (on the history of Goans in Burma) some four years 
earlier.

  Offering a good amount of local history, the book keeps its style informal 
and catchy, and intersperses its text with attractive illustrations.  It talks 
about unusual institutions and individuals that make up the village.

  For instance, the village-crier of the yesteryears was called the 'parpoti'.  
Way back in the 1920s, expat villages took the initiative to set up a local 
club that took care of the locals' entertainment and intellectual nourishment.  
Today, in distant regions -- Bombay, London and Toronto -- expat villagers keep 
their flag flying by organising events and cultural get-togethers, as do expats 
from some other villages of Goa.

  Saligao has had its traditional schools, before the Portuguese, early 
colonisers in South Asia, reached Goa in 1510.  Later on, besides parochial and 
Latin/Portuguese schools, this region and its neighbourhood was also one of the 
first to play home to English-medium schools in Goa.  This perhaps explains why 
so many of the people from around here migrated to the English-speaking world, 
earlier in East Africa and more recently to North America, Australia, or the UK.

  For instance, the Mater Dei Institution, a school still actively running, was 
founded in 1909.  Another local school, Lourdes Convent, was started in the 
1940s as were a crop of some other English-language schools in Goa.

  One interesting section looks at the 'house names' used in the village to 
describe local families.  These are in the Konkani language, but translate into 
quaint meanings such as 'the house displaying flags', the home of the 'goat', 
the 'kind villager', the family that blabbers, or those with large bottoms and 
even a broken toe!

  The book looks at the indigenous people of the village, modes of transport of 
the past, the beggars of the yesteryears and how these were dealt with locally, 
or traditional forms of coping with a dark road in times when Goa lacked 
electricity.

  One section looks at the games played by local youth. These were simple times 
when tiny marbles, cashew seeds, cracked tiles, stones or bamboo slats could 
entertain local kids for hours on end.  One game called the 'atto sori' 
comprised simply of a use tyre metal rim, which was pushed across the roads by 
boys between the age of seven to ten years!

  Saligao, though just one of the small villages in the State, has a number of 
prominent names linked to it.  These include the prominent ophthalmologist in 
Portugal Dr Claudio da Gama Pinto, educationist Anacleto Lobo, the doyen of 
Indian cricket Anthony de Mello, the Goan pioneer in Karachi Cincinatus F.  
D'Abreo, noted musicians like the Goan nightingale Lorna and folklorist 
Oslando, religious leaders like bishops and the Karachi-based Mother Bridget 
Sequeira, a number of military men, and prominent writers and professors. 

  Its author has had space for a number of sections to the book myth and 
earlier history of the area, the etymology and religious evolution of Saligao, 
the village in its earlier years, individuals the author himself admired, local 
temples, chapels and the church; wards of Saligao; trivia about the village; 
its folklore, superstititions, traditions and customs. 

  Prior to Saligao's inhabitants converting to Catholicism, its denizens were 
Hindus.  Fr Mascarenhas tracks the "trail of the Hindus of Sal village", the 
post-conversion name changes, and current temples in the village.  A separate 
section looks at the Mae de Deus church, perhaps Goa's only Gothic-style 
shrine, and details of who built it and at what cost. 

  Like other Goan villages, this one too is divided into various wards (or 
'vaddos').  These are described -- starting with Salmona, where the Sal trees 
grew, Arrarim, Sonarbhat which gets its name from the goldsmiths, Morodd or the 
home of the aboriginal  population, the administrative and commercial centre of 
Cotula, and Mollembhat named after its flower gardens.  There's also 
Tabravaddo, whose denizens changed their names away from Tavora for an unusual 
reason, Donvaddo, and the hamlet on the knoll called Mudd'davaddi.

  Aiming to inform and enterain too, this book does contain some quaint stories 
from the village of the past.  Buffaloes, village boundaries, old-style coconut 
shell lamps, are among the subjects featured.

  No story on Saligao would be complete without referring to the foxy-legend 
which rubs off onto the villagers too.  Likewise, a supposedly haunted tree on 
the village hilltop linked to a pretty female spirit has been the source for 
many stories here.

  The author calls Saligao a "benevolent village" and focuses on its homes for 
the aged.  He devotes a chapter to pay tribute to some of the humble folk who 
made up the village in their times.  The book also looks at the changing 
structure of the village, as more old timers migrate the globe, and new 
residents enter.

  Today, Saligao is the home for other prominent names too, such as 'The Idea 
of India' author Sunil Khilnani and Pulitzer prizewinning journalist Katherine 
Boo (author of 'Behind the Beautiful Forevers'), artist Subodh Kerkar, top 
photographer Dayanita Singh, painter Francis Souza and sculptor Verodiana 
Ferrao, among others.

  Fr Nascimento's earlier books deal with Goan priests who served in Portugal, 
a pioneering ophthalmologist who traced his roots to the village, the port area 
of Mormugao, and three books on the parishes and priests of Bardez, Ilhas and 
Salcete, all regions within Goa.

  Illustrations for this book are from the Canada-based villager from Saligao, 
Mel D'Souza, who went to the same school (Mater Dei) as the author.  His 
charming illustrations, over 85 in number, add depth and insight.  "His 
drawings [specially of past times] are as culturally accurate as one could 
get," says the author.

  --
  Land of the Sal Tree
  Stories of the history, legends and traditions of Saligao, a
  typical Goan village
  Fr Nascimento J. Mascarenhas najo...@gmail.com 
  Illustrated by Mel D'Souza mel.dso...@sympatico.ca
  Goa: Goa,1556
  Pp 312, Pb. Rs 350 in Goa.
  Order via mail from goa1...@gmail.com
  
http://www.prlog.org/11855841-stories-history-legends-and-traditions-from-village-in-goa-india.html
  --
  FN +91-832-2409490 or +91-9822122436 f...@goa-india.org
  Books from Goa,1556 http://scr.bi/Goa1556Books
  Audio recordings (mostly from Goa): http://bit.ly/GoaRecordings  
   


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  • ... Frederick FN Noronha फ्रेड्रिक नोरोन्या *فريدريك نورونيا
    • ... Fr. Nascimento
      • ... Fr. Nascimento
        • ... yvonne . goa
          • ... Fr. Nascimento

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