A dash of Goa in PakistanAlexandre Moniz Barbosa, TNN | Sep 5, 2011, 05.41AM
IST

Karachi in Pakistan <http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Pakistan> may
not be on a Goan's list of foreign
cities<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Goan's-list-of-foreign-cities>
to
migrate to. The city, however, has roughly between 12,000 and 15,000
'Goans', a number that has remained fairly constant for the past 190 years,
since the first wave of migrating Goans in dhows washed up on its shores in
1820 and made it their home.

"We are Pakistanis with a Goan ancestry. Being born into Goan families, the
attachment to Goa is obvious; and connection with families in Goa makes it
quite a strong affiliation," says Karachi businessman Menin Rodrigues, who
is currently researching achievements of the Goan community of Pakistan so
as to highlight and preserve this.

When the footprints of the first Goans were imprinted on the sands of
Karachi, the city was yet to be conquered by the British. Over a century
later, Karachi became part of Pakistan, when the British partitioned India
at Independence in 1947. "Karachi was an attractive economic destination
before partition. Goans, first came here as early as the 1820s, for economic
reasons," adds Rodrigues. It is not surprising, therefore, that the Karachi
Goan Association (formerly Goan Portuguese Association) celebrated its 125th
anniversary this year. There are Goans in other Pakistani cities like
Hyderabad, Quetta, Rawalpindi and
Lahore<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Lahore>,
but they are just a sprinkling.

In almost two centuries, Goans have made a mark in the city and also the
country. Some of the big names are those of Joseph Cordeiro, the first
Pakistani cardinal, and Charles Lobo, judge of the Sindh high court and
chairman of the public service commission in Pakistan, who was also
appointed the country's delegate to the United
Nations<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/United-Nations>.
There have been others, but at present there are few who have risen high in
the country.

"The cream of the Goan community-the intellectuals and professionals-have
migrated to Canada <http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Canada>,
Australia, UK and USA over the past 50 years, especially after islamization
was ramped up in the late 1970s. The area where Goans in Pakistan are most
active in, is probably the Church, where four of the seven bishops are Goans
despite being about 2% of the over one million Catholics in the country,"
says electrical engineer and civic and environmental activist Roland de
Souza.

Interestingly, almost all of the Goans in Pakistan are Catholics, those of
other faiths being rare to find. "I do know of a couple of Hindu jewellers
who speak Konkani fluently with their Goan customers. I also have an Ismaili
(Aga Khan) friend who speaks with me in Konkani," says Rodrigues. He further
laments that "Goans are not prominent in mainstream activity anymore".

What keeps Goans in Pakistan together is Konkani, the Goan mai bhas that
remains alive in the country. Of late, this is thanks to the Goenkar's Own
Academy (GOA), an association that is working to boost Goan culture in
Karachi. "GOA was established in 2001 when Goans of Pakistan joined hands
with organizations the world over to celebrate World Goa Day. We not only
promote Goan culture, but keep alive our mai bhas Konkani. The association
also arranges recollection days, weekend trips, picnics, movie nights,
family days, visits to homes, events that bring the community together
socially and spiritually," GOA president Deborah Santamaria says.

Spiritually, the Catholics of Pakistan have not broken ties with Goycho
Saib. Every December, a group of about 100 devotees travel to Goa for the
feast of St Francis Xavier, in a pilgrimage that also brings them to the
home of their ancestors.

As time flies and technology picks up, social contact is now via networking
sites in cyberspace, and though contact is now more, there are those who
feel the Goan community is not as vibrant as it once was. "Our 125-year old
club in Karachi is a mere shadow of the bustling social arena of the
pre-1970s. Families now get together at private parties, weddings and
limited social events on the basis of a shared heritage and culture. This
culture (language, dress, music, values) is at considerable variance from
the majority of Pakistanis. Many Goans still intend to migrate to greener
pastures, but haven't been able to do so yet," says de Souza.

Yet, there remains a flavour of Goa in Karachi, and the KGA and GOA are the
ones ensuring that it doesn't get diluted by other spices.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/goa/A-dash-of-Goa-in-Pakistan/articleshow/9866412.cms
-- 
DEV BOREM KORUM

Gabe Menezes.

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