From: rdsg2...@gmail.com
To: 

  
The man who wanted Goa to be a ‘ROLE-MODEL STATE OF INDIA’Apr 20, 2015
 
For Goencho Bapui—'Father of the Opinion Poll', Joao Hugo Eduardo de Sequeira, 
widely known as Jack de Sequeira or JakSiker—politics was a pure calling to 
serve Goa and Goans selflessly and not as an avenue to embezzle public funds, 
the seeming mantra of most present-day politicos.

"For pai (father), offering altruistic service to Goem (Goa) and Goenkars 
(Goans) was his lone mission, and politics was the route to achieve the ideal 
of a chokchokit bhangarachem noketr (illuminating golden star) where good, 
honest, corruption-free governance would be the only credo. Politics was not a 
way of life; he wanted Goa to be developed as an important tourism destination. 
In a nutshell, he wanted Goa to be a role-model state of India," recalls 
Sequeira's daughter, Lillia Sequeira e Sukhija, a paediatrician popularly known 
as Dr Lily.



Mission: Save Goa's identity

After Goa was liberated in 1961, all-out attempts were being made by then 
politicians of neighbouring Maharashtra, including by its then chief minister 
Vasantrao Naik, and ably assisted by the 1963-founded regional outfit in Goa, 
Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party (MGP), led by Dayanand Bandodkar, to merge Goa 
with its larger neighbour in the north.

MGP, which was at the helm of power in Goa from December 1963 to 1979, had a 
large following, particularly among the economically-weaker, non-Brahmin Hindu 
sections that were numerically larger than any other ethnic group in Goa at 
that time.

The sole endeavour of Sequeira was to safeguard Goa's distinct identity by 
keeping its separate territory status within the Indian union.

To fructify his dream of Goa not getting merged with Maharashtra, his 
1962-formed political outfit, Goencho Paksh, and four other political 
parties—Partido Indiano (Alvaro de Loyola Furtado), United Fronts of Goa 
(Melicio Fernandes), Democratic Party (Joao Da Costa Pereira) and Goan National 
Union (J M De Souza)—were united under one banner to form United Goans Party 
(UGP) on September 13, 1963.

Sequeira was helped in his endeavour by close comrades from across Goa and 
hailing from different communities, such as: Margao's Narcinva Naik (father of 
late politician Babu Naik), Abdula Bhai Laljee, Pandurang Silimkhan from 
Taleigao), Alvaro de Loyola Furtado from Chinchinim), Umakant Sarlicar, 
Vasudeva Sarmalkar aka Anna Sarmalkar, Mahambre from Bardez and Cristovao 
Furtado.

Sequeira's cordial relations with central government leaders such as Jawaharlal 
Nehru, Lal Bahadur Shastri, Indira Gandhi, etc helped a great deal in deciding 
Goa's future—to stay separate or be merged with Maharashtra—through an Opinion 
Poll and not the simple vote in the Goa legislative assembly sought by the MGP, 
which enjoyed a majority in the House.

Sequeira's efforts received a further boost through the awareness efforts made 
by Purushottam Kakodkar, president of the then Goa Congress, tiatrists and 
writers like , Manohar Rai Sardesai, , etc.

"In the run-up to the Opinion Poll, Pai addressed Goans in over 1,200 public 
meetings across Goa, Maharashtra, Karnataka, etc," recalls Lily, "His 
phrase—Goa will not become the backyard of Maharashtra—became immortal. Though 
the MGP had a large support base in Goa, by Opinion Poll day, even hardcore MGP 
supporters voted in line with anti-merger-ists. Niz Goenkars (real Goans) voted 
against a merger with Maharashtra. I am sure even Bandodkar would have voted in 
favour of Goa remaining a separate territory as he also knew that his chair of 
CM would go the moment Goa went to Maharashtra."



Lost '1979', quit politics

Apart from Sequeira's son, Erasmo, who served as a UGP leader from the time of 
its inception and went on to serve two terms as Lok Sabha Member of Parliament 
(1967-77) from Mormugao, no other member of the Sequeira clan has stepped into 
politics.

"We do not have any regrets about not entering politics. Pai wanted his 
daughters to concentrate on their families, he was against us entering 
politics," says Lily, the fourth of nine children born to Sequeira and his 
wife, Lilia Margarida de Gouveia Pinto e Sequeira. The other eight children, in 
ascending order, are Erasmo (died in 1997), Julia (2010), Margarida, Teresa, 
Jack (1959), Joana, Jose Manuel (2009) and Manuela.

Sequeira, a three-term MLA (1963, 1967 and 1973) from Santa Cruz, and the first 
leader of opposition in the Goa assembly, never contested again after losing 
the assembly election in 1979. "People have rejected me and I will accept the 
verdict with full humility," Lily remembers her then 64-year-old father's 
candid admission, "I will have nothing to do with politics anymore."

The children, who were Sequeira's election agents, saw their father personally 
congratulate the victor after the election results were announced at the 
Institute Menezes Braganza hall, Panaji, and walk away.

That "poignant moment" was as much testament to Sequeira's towering personality 
as the guests that thronged the Sequeira household at Campal in Panaji. "Along 
with ordinary folk our house also paid host to Shastri, Karan Singh, Mother 
Teresa, etc," recalls Lily.



Only 'amchi maim bhas'

Ruing the slow death of Konkani as a medium of communication in Goa today, Lily 
remembers how using the language was among the most important factors to keep 
Goa's identity distinct as it sought its separate territory status during the 
Opinion Poll.

"For Pai, amchi maim bhas Konkani was his lingua franca as it was the language 
freely conversed both in office and at home. He was also well versed in 
Portuguese, Hindi and to some extent Spanish. But we nine siblings and even our 
14 children choose to converse in Konkani," says Lily.

She gets emotional recalling how her father was both a disciplinarian and 
large-hearted. "As a doting father he would correct us whenever we faltered, 
and yet we could approach him anytime and discuss any problem. On Sundays and 
holidays, he would take us in his station wagon on picnics or to our ancestral 
house in Carambolim. Because of his liberal attitude, we three sisters faced no 
objections from our parents to marry outside the community."

While Julia married colonel Gurdeep Singh Gill, Teresa wed admiral (retd) 
Sureesh Mehta who was Navy chief from October 31, 2006 to August 31, 2009, and 
Lily married hotelier Ajit Sukhija.



An honest businessman

Sequeira was also a reputed businessman, at one time owning almost all the 
Bharat Petroleum pumps in the state. He was also a dealer for Wimco matches.

Integrity and honesty were so integral to his character that during World War 
II, when black-marketing and hoarding were rampant, he would travel in his own 
car to villages across Goa to ensure kerosene and matches were being sold at 
fair price, recalls Lily.

Sequeira, who was born in Burma (present-day Myanmar), completed his school 
education from the Portuguese-medium Lyceum in Goa, completed medical school at 
age 21, and then gave up his specialization in blood research to take over the 
family business as his father, Erasmo de Sequeira, had passed away. Sequeira 
himself breathed his last around 11.30pm on October 17, 1989, aged 74, after a 
heart attack.

He loved to read—books and newspapers, especially Konkani-weekly Vauraddeancho 
Ixtt and Time magazine—and during his younger days he played tennis with his 
brother Frank at various clubs in Goa, including Gasper Dias, Miramar, BPS, 
Margao, etc.

Ask Lily what she thinks her father would feel about Goa today and pat comes 
the reply, "Despondent and downhearted... looking at the way Goa is being 
turned into a concrete jungle with high-rise buildings and ecological norms 
taking a backseat. Pai would have been completely depressed to see fellow Goans 
not getting priority in employment opportunities in their own land."

Despite his priceless role in galvanizing Goans to vote by 54.20% against the 
merger with Maharashtra in the historic Opinion Poll of January 16, 1967, there 
has been almost no concerted political will from past and present governments 
to commemorate Sequeira. As one political commentator points out, had Goa 
merged with Maharashtra, only two MLAs, one MP and one collector would have 
been designated to Goa, which would have been just another district of that 
state.

To the unsung 'Father of Goa', a small thank you!

                                          

Reply via email to