Getting history wrong... 
JD Fernandes is actually the name of the bookshop (and grandfather)
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October 3 is a day when I spend usually on going back down memory lane,
and reminiscing. So is October 10. The first day was when I entered for
a full-time job into a newspaper office, in 1983. The second date was
when the paper which we joined as college kids actually hit the stands.

          We thought Herald would be a big splash when it came out
          (with a dateline error) with its English-avatared first
          issue. Nobody, or almost nobody, noticed it. The Navhind
          refused to carry an advertisement about the birth of a
          'rival' newspaper. To add to the tragi-comic situation, 
          the Herald poster which was put up in a very few parts 
          of Panjim read, "Announcing the birth of a new English
          (language) daily...." or something to that effect. Below it
          there was the photo of two singers with a guitar!

On Monday, the Herald's few ad-packed extra pages reminded it was the
22nd anniversary of Herald's and our entry into journalism. Some
comments on the occasion, mostly in response to what the Herald is
saying (or not saying):

* Editor Robin Abreu's brief front-page piece is titled 'Dev Borem
Korum'. In addition to Rajan Narayan's almost patented phrase, he also
signs off with an additional 'Devan Tumcher Bessaum Galum'. I think
Rajan has added to the Konkani language and localspeak with repeated use
of terms like DBK and Pratapsing *Raoji* Rane...

* Robin is as much a man of few words, as Rajan is loquacious. While we
did learn some positive things from Rajan and he was at first a great
boss (specially in the early days), one of his traits as editor was to
virtually fill the entire paper with his own writing. This has been
commented on elsewhere; I think by RK Nair. Sometimes, this left less
space (in both senses of the word) for his team. Perhaps an editor
should spend his or her energies in getting out the best from others,
rather than dominating the publication himself or herself....

          Robin terms Herald Goa's "largest read paper" and says it
          is "getting stronger and stronger". His contention that
          "the changes over the past one year" have been undertaken "to
          meet the varying demands of our readers" can however be 
          debated. 

Firstly, most changes are advertiser-driven and seem shaped with the
trends being brought in by papers like the Times of India. The ascent of
the marketing sections over editorial is clearly visible in many papers,
including the Herald. This has little or nothing to do with providing a
better product to the reader. (In fact, readability of such papers has
gone down.) 

Instead, it has everything to do with jazzifying and sexing-up the
product, under the (mistaken) belief that everyone wants a glamorous,
colour and snazzy paper in between their hands, one that appeals to
their emotions rather than to their brain, and one which is
advertiser-friendly and conflict-free (it doesn't care about local
concerns and ignores them often).

THE NEXT THING that drew my attention was Uday Bhembre's article on Page
5, titled 'Remembering with gratitude'. It acknowledges "the
contribution of Herald to the success of the language agitation in
1986". 

As someone working there in the heat of the "agitation", I felt then as
I feel now that it was a lot of hot air, misplaced chauvinism and all
that has resulted in frustration and unfulfilled promises. Few might the
details of how the "agitation" was used for selfish purposes by its
leading lights. I know at least one senior who was arguing for a raise
in salary on the basis that the newspaper had "brought 75,000 people to
the Azad Maidan" (or words to that effect).

I couldn't agree more with Bhembre's view that "Herald... should not try
to be a 'national' paper, in the sense that it should not ignor elocal
news and run away from issues of local interest". He has an apt example
when he says, "As a reader, I do not expect any local newspaper to
ignore the controversial VCD product by the Government, and devote its
columns to discuss films like Lagaan or Swades..." Well put.

Bhembre says, "Herald should improve its Sunday magazine". Does the
Sunday magazine still exist? It seems to have been given a quiet burial
some months ago, or at least reduced to a shadow of its former self.

Bhembre also adds that the Sunday magazine should "discuss books
published in Goa especially in Konkani". Why Konkani? Because a lobby
has hijacked a language and turned it into a barely-read one, which has
no takers in its own language? It is quite a comment on the failure of
the language protagonists that they need reviews of Konkani books in an
English-language newspaper.

          Also, Bhembre seems to be contradicting himself when he
          argues that "in the present times, Goa needs newspapers 
          which fearlessly protect the interest of Goans" and
          at the same time says "Herald has the potential; but to
          fit into that category it will have to practice free,
          fair and fearless journalism in the interest of the country
          in general and Goa in particular".

The first statement suggests that the "interest of Goans" are somehow
distinct from those of others. Or that someone who is not a Goan is
impinging on these. The actual fact is that many of our contradictions
lie within *our* society itself. Bhembre goes on to talk about the
"interest of the country". As if Goa is one undifferentiated mass, and
so is India. 

           Bhembre also adds: "There is a perception in a section of
           the Goan population that Herald looks towards a particular
           community as a constituency. This perception needs to
           be dispelled."

This is a debatable proposition. In a Goa where every paper is seen as a
mouthpiece (or largely read by) one community or caste group or lobby
(even the BJP has its own organ now!), the Herald gets consistently
blamed as being a newspaper read mainly by the Catholics. 

Which it is. But what's wrong with that?

In my view, the Herald (or any other paper in a similar position) need
not be apologetic about this. Worldwide, papers have a preferred
readership, when tends to be a group whose views are reflected and
re-echoed in the newspaper they read. Sometimes the group might be based
on politics (liberal, conservative, radical), or religion (Urdu papers,
Marathi papers in Goa, former Portuguese papers here, etc).

This is not a crime! Anyone running a paper will try to echo the views
and concerns of his basic readership constituency.

Unfortunately, the Herald gets put on the defensive, even while nobody
even seems to notice that papers like the GT also show signs of wanting
to cut into the "Catholic readership" market. 

What *is* wrong, I think, is to polarise readers of one community
against the other, and to lead readers into believing that the 'other'
are evil enemies out to destroy you. Many papers in Goa -- sometimes
Herald too in the past -- have adopted such an approach, which is not
just very unfortunate but also dangerous to the future of Goa.

        Herald needs to be more honest about where it stands,
        and try to adequately serve the Catholic readership -- which 
        otherwise gets very little media space in Goa. It also
        needs to give a honest, liberal and secular leadership
        to the community. It needs to question corrupt 
        politicians, specially those of a Catholic background,
        who are otherwise adept at throwing dust over the
        eyes of the common(wo)man without ever being challenged
        on the basis of the support they draw from the cornered
        minority community, which is itself a significantly
        large minority.

At the same time, papers like the Herald have a crucial role in building
understanding between different sections of the Goan population, both
communities and castes, locals and migrants, etc. Just highlighting a
few reports about Hindu religious festivals isn't going to fool anyone
or ever be sufficient.

JOE D'SOUZA, one of the preferred columnist of the Herald currently, has
another piece titled 'A tribute to the voice of Goa'.

          He calls the Herald (actually O Heraldo, the shrunken O's at
          either end were a typographical trick intended to continue
          getting newsprint quotas in the days of the license-permit
          raj) a "predominantly Portuguese daily" started in 1900.

Predominantly? I thought it was wholly Portuguese ... Those weren't days
days of multiculturalism anyway. Or am I wrong?

But the bloomer in Joe's piece is that he mistakes A.C.Fernandes, the
man who went in for the shifting of Herald from being a
Portuguese-language daily to an English-language one, with AC's father,
J.D.Fernandes. 

Actually, the latter is also the name of the far-older stationery shop
(named after A C Fernandes' father, and Raul-John-Oswald Fernandeses'
granddad, so others tend to get confused too).

For Dr Joe to get it wrong, not once but twice, is understandable. For a
newspaper to forget its own history is -- and that too, going just 22
years back -- is surprising. This is the problem with a lack of
'insider' understanding of issues, an issue we have been debating on the
Goajourno mailing list recently. See
http://puggy.symonds.net/pipermail/goajourno/2005-October/002367.html

What is also more noteworthy is the piece also erases the role played by
Rajan Narayan in the Herald. There's no mention of this name. It's like
the case of Leon Trotsky, who was wiped out of photographs when he fell
out of favour with revolutionaries in Russia. 

On a related point, in the early days of the Herald (maybe the first
year or two), Rajan Narayan actually named the entire team that brought
out the paper in his anniversary edit. Right down to proof-readers and
peons! But over the years, this was forgotten as the then-editor took on
a larger-than-life image himself, and the Herald-is-Rajan,
Rajan-is-Herald era began.

          Dr Joe claims that "Herald alone was the voice, which
          proclaimed (sic) about the extensive damage done 
          by unscientific mining and haphazard urbanisation 
          taking place in Goa".

          Actually, a closer look at the issues of the time
          shows that the paper was largely silent at the peak
          of what it later described as the rule by the
          Gang of Four (four of the controversial Congress
          politicians) and actually lionised politicians like
          Ravi Naik when they were in power, and unleashed
          the land conversions of the early 'nineties. (Ravi
          was heroised as the man who had the guts to jail
          Churchill Alemao; later on, Alemao himself came
          in for praise, after becoming, at one stage, the
          Godfather General of Goons!

Joe would also like to believe that it was his and Norman Dantas' work
in the Herald (I have great respect for Norman's work generally) that
resulted in a House Committee to look into the Nylon 6,6 DuPont issue.
Actually, a high level of industrial rivalry (don't forget the Nylon 6
link to the Ambanis and others) was more responsible in one of the few
successful environmental protests in Goa. Believing otherwise would be
an exercise in self-delusion.

Joe also credits the Herald with standing up to the BJP when it was in
power and Goa was facing the "manipulation of the press". I think the GT
played a much more significant role. That too, even when the Parrikar
regime seemed almost-invincible, not only in early-2005, by which time
its fall was imminent.

It is also questionable to portray the BJP as the only "arm-twisting"
force affecting the Goan press. What about other politicians, including
the Congress during its long years in power, and other smaller players
too? 

Just a few thoughts. Your comments are welcome. FN
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Frederick 'FN' Noronha  | [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Independent Journalist  | http://fn.swiki.net
Goa, India              | +91(832)2409490 Cell 9822122436
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