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About
Goa
The sheer inaccessibility of Goa by land has always
kept it out of the mainstream of Indian History. On the other hand,
its control of the seas and above all the lucrative spice trade
made it a much-coveted prize for rival colonial powers. Until a
century before the arrival of the Portuguese adventure
Vasco Da Gama who landed near Kozhikode in Kerala in 1498, Goa
had belonged for over a thousand years to the kingdom of Kadamba.
In the interim it had been successfully conquered by the Karnatakan
Vijayanagars, the Muslim Bahmanis and Yousuf Adil Shah of Bijapur
but the capture of the fort at Panaji by Alfonso
De Albuquerque in 1510 signaled the start of a Portuguese occupation
that was to last for 450 years.
Meanwhile, conversions to Christianity started by the Franciscans
gathered pace when St.Francis Xavier founded the Jesuit Mission
in 1542. With the advent of the inquisition soon afterwards laws
were introduced censoring literature and banning any faith other
than Catholicism even the long established Syrian Christian community
were branded heretics. Hindu temples were destroyed and converted
Hindus adopted Portuguese names such as DA Silva, Correa and De'Sousa
which remain common in the region. The transitional influence of
the Jesuits eventually alarmed the Portuguese government. The Jesuits
were expelled in 1749 which made it possible for Indian Goans to
take up the priesthood. However, standards of education suffered
and Goa entered a period of decline. The Portuguese were not prepared
to help but neither would they allow native Goans equal rights.
An abortive attempt to establish the Goan Republic was quelled with
the execution of fifteen Goan conspirators.
A spin-off of the British conflict with Tipu Sultan of Mysore (an
ally of the French at the end of the eighteenth century, was the
British occupation of Goa, a little known period of the region's
history, which lasted sixteen years from 1797. The occupation was
solely liberalization such as the restoration of Hindu's rights
to worship, the nineteenth century saw widespread cvivil unrest.
During British occupation many Goans moved to Mumbai and elsewhere
in British India to find work.
The success of the post independence Goans struggle for freedom
from Portugal owed as much to the efforts of the
Indian Government who cut off diplomatic ties with Portugal as to
the work of freedom fighters such as Menezes Braganza and Dr.Cunha.
After a "liberation march" in 1955 resulted in a number
of deaths and the state was blockaded. Trade with Mumbai ceased
and the railway was cut off so Goa set out to forge international
links particularly with Pakistan and Sri Lanka. That led to the
building of Dabolim airport and a determination
to improve local agricultural output. In 1961 Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru finally ran out of patience with his opposite number in Lisbon
the right wing director Salazar and send in the armed forces. Mounted
in defiance of a United Nations resolution "Operation Vijay"
met with only token resistance and the Indian army overran
Goa in two days. Thereafter Goa (along with Portugal's
other two enclaves Daman and Diu) became part of India as a self
governing Union Territory with minimum interference from Delhi.
Since Independence Goa has continued to prosper
bolstered by receipts from iron-ore exports and a booming tourist
industry, but it is struggling to hold its own against a tidal wave
of immigration from other Indian States. Its inhabitants voted overwhelmingly
to resist merger with neighboring Maharashtra in 1980's and successfully
lobbied for Konkani to be granted official language status in 1987
when Goa was finally declared a full-fledged state of the Indian
Union.
Some details of the general temperature and rainfall in Goa:
Monsoon: July to End September (26 inches).
Winter: Late November to Mid-February (Min. 3° C - Max. 11°
C).
Summer: Mid-March to End of June (Min. 25° C - Max. 45°
C). |
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