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Among
the various colourful feasts and festivals feasts and festivals
that Goa celebrates -with great eclat, Carnaval and Shigmo are the
most rumbustious, awaited by the population with intense enthusiasm.
Unlike 'Shigmo' which is also celebrated in some oilier parts of
India, although under different appellations, 'Carnaval Goa's own,
unique, and the Union Territorys contribution to India's other expressions
at untrammelled revelry.
Although introduced by the Portuguese who ruled this territory for
over 50 years, from 1510 to 1961, the three-day festival primarily
celebrated by Christians, has absorbed Hindu tradition-bound revelry
and western dance forms, and stimulated by the artistry of the Goan
genius turned into a pageantry of singular effervescence.
If down the centuries Carnaval was enjoyed only by the local population,
today its fame has crossed the frontiers attracting thousands of
people from all over India to whom this type of extravaganza is
at once riotous and different.
The participation of the Goa Government and the Municipal Councils
in it and the post-liberation introduction of the King Memo and
his colourful procession have endowed Carnaval with a new dimenion
and it is bound to attract more people every year to this territory
whose scenic beauty and white-sanded benches have already earned
Goa high praise.
It
was in the fitness of things that the Goa Government, through its
Department of Tourism, should have given a boost to the celebration
of the three-day Carnival festival as a major tourist attraction.
Distinctly Latin in character, a legacy of Portuguese cultural tradition,
the Carnival is not celebrated elsewhere in hidhi, and it wan in
decline even in Goa in the last years of Portuguese rule. Its revival
and celebration with an added zest was, therefore, on the cards
as, after Goa's Liberation, tourism was being developed as a regular
industry. This festival of three days of gay abandon, riotous revelry
and merry-making now attracts to Goa thousands of tourists from
all over India.
The word Carnival (Carnaval in Portuguese) is supposed to be derived
from flu- Latin Carnelevarium or rarnem levarem, meaning "to
take away meat", which actually happens at the commencement
of the 40-day penitential period of fasting in commemoration of
Jesus Christ's fasting in the wilderness, known among the Christians
as Lent, during which abstinence from meat is a rule. The Konknni
world venture, by which it is known among the illiterate masses,
comes from the Portuguese intrude, in turn coming from the Latin
Latin Introitum, meaning entry into the Lenten period.
Celebrated particularly in the Latin Catholic countries of Southern
Europe, it appears to have originated in Italy as a substitute for
the Roman pagan festival known as Saturnalia in honour of Saturn,
the god of Agriculture, observed in the month of December as a period
of unrestrained merry-making, as it signaled the rebirth of Mother-Nature
and the beginning of a New Year. From Italy, in which country it
was celebrated with éclat mainly in Rome, Venice, Florence,
Naples and Turin, it spread out to other Latin countries such as
France, Spain and Portugal and also to Germany and Austria. The
Portuguese brought it to Goa as they also took it to Brazil. Where
it is celebrated with undiminished gusto even to this day, as it
is in Argentina
and other Latin-American countries, where it was imported by the
Spaniards, while it almost died away in Europe, except for a few
places, like Nice, among others.
Brutal and city in days gone by, in Goa as in Portugal, with real
street battles fought by groups of masked people armed with baskets
of rotten eggs and saw-dust or wheat flour packets known as cartuchos
and cocotex and syringes filled with coloured water, so much so
that that there were from time to time ediets in order to curb its
excesses, the Carnival festival gradually became more moderate,
being of late confined to the halls of clubs and other recreation
centres with balls, fancy dress parades and such other innocent
passtimes.
Just as in Europe Carnival played a significant role in the development
of popular theatre and folk songs and dances, so also in Goa it
gave birth to the khell or fell, the typically Goan ambulatory the
arterial performance, satirical in nature, very much in vogue even
some twenty or thirty years ago in our villages, holding to ridicule
the vices, the foibles or the follies of the local grandees, the
Pad Vigar or parish priest, the regedor or village patel or the
batkar or landlord to the amusement of the people. This, in my view,
is one more aspect on which emphasis should be laid in order to
develop the creative power of the common man.