People in Bardez know Parra because of
its sweet, red watermellons. People elsewhere know it by virtue of its
pioneering English institution, the Sacred Heart of Jesus High School.
Though these are Parra's important facets, the fame doesn't end with them,
because the enigmatic Porrikars have shone in various walks of
life.
 Porrikars
get their nickname kallnganche dhodde Though Parra,
Canca and Verla are clubbed together into a single parish, the village has
two separate panchayats and three Comunidades. The typically caju covered
hills hedge the North- West from Assagao, Anjuna and Arpora in an emerald
semi-circle. Otherwise Parra shares borders with Mapusa, Guirim and Nagoa.
The undulating topography dissolves in the vast, fertile sandy plains, and
sprawls over 3.5 square kilometres of picturesque
countryside.
Porrikars got over the problem of traversing long
distances within the village, dotted with as many as 23 wards, with the
help of bullock-carts. The humble bullock-cart played a crucial role in
the agrarian economy before the turn of the last century. Enterprising
Porrikars were heading the boyadas
From Goa the caravans carried salt, dry fish and
bettlenuts. Each Bardez village contributed five carts to the ancient
caravan, which was traditionally headed a cart from Parra. Rigging and
repairing carts and cartwheels too developed into the village as a result,
and this is still being done by the Charis of Parra. Goa's Charis are very
intelligent craftsmen and blacksmiths, capable of assembling carts to
cars, repairing any type of locks, and one Parra family excels in etching
tombstones. Of course, good goldsmiths come from here like the late
Jagannath Chodankar, the best diamond setter's in Bardez once.
Of
course, today Porrikars own plush cars and involve themselves in a variety
of enterprises from catering to construction and from bottling soda to
producing imitation jewellery. Yet carts, which creak and rumble along the
typical palm-lined roads, still form a common scene along the roads
bisecting the fields. Similarly, one watches man, woman and child
ploughing, watering and gathering watermellons, chillies and sweet
potatoes.
"Though we are basically agriculturists, the prosperity
seen around is owing to Gulf remittances," says Claudio Pacheco, owner of
Habitat Furnishers in Parra. He adds, "The paddy, onions and chillies we
grow are meant for home consumption and only the excess is sold. But what
fetches hard cash are the watermellons."
The Pachecos, virtually
50-odd families with over 200 members, claim that they had imported the
art of growing the tastiest water mellons when they left their native
Majorda, the watermellon nursery of Goa. Today the Pachecos have nearly
outnumbered others and converted the Almeida Vaddo into Pacheco Vaddo.
Goa's famous trumpeter Alex Pacheco comes from this stock and
vaddo.
 Entrepreneurship of Porrikars was first witnessed virtually in
the last century when the late Mariano Almeida started Amchi
Agbott Those who migrated to the then Bombay, were helped by the
elementary education obtained at the local Sacred Heart High School set up
by the late Walter D'Souza on 7th January, 1872. It was the second English
school of Goa and its alumni include some very prominent Goans - the
principal of Dempe College Dr SN Lawande, Judicial Commissioner Tito
Menezes, public prosecutor Leo Gama, mining magnate M S Talaulikar, former
editor of Marathi daily Gomantak
The Goan community
of East Africa will remember the distinguished services rendered to
English education by the late Ildefonso D'Souza. And there is a whole lot
of famous Porrikars like the late Willybald Paes, who was the Consul for
Cuba in Bombay, Dr Norman Luis, scientist at the Bhaba Atomic Research
Centre in Bombay, Clifford and Clarence Rebello, scientists at NASA in the
US, Dr Leo D'Souza, head of the Orthopaedics at the University of
Minnesota, Napoleon Almeida, a research scientist in the UK and Dr Angelo
Mario Freitas, Director of the Aga Khan Hospital in Zanzibar.
Even
if the list sets one's head spinning, one need not bother because there is
Dr Cleta Lobo and her daughter with ready psychiatric help. Ivan Rocha,
the popular teacher of St Britto High School in Mapusa could reel out a
litany of local greats.
 And if you miss the Mumbai side of the
story, drop in at Francis da Gama's tastefully set house at Almeida Vaddo.
In this vaddo, noted writer-environmentalist Claude Alvares and his
advocate wife Norma have settled with their kids, who rear snakes and fish
for pets.
Coming back to white-bearded Francis da Gama, he was the
foremost Lusis hockey player. He was selected to captain the Indian side
for the 1948 Olympics but horse-trading was rampant even then and he lost
the privilege. But in horse racing, jockey Joseph Luis, from Parra, won a
baker's dozen in the very year of his apprenticeship. In soccer, mercurial
striker Visitacao Lobo represented India in the USSR, while Bobby Purke,
Jerry Nogueira, Vishwas Gaonkar and proudly donned State
colours.
 The late
Bishop Andre Paulo D'Souza (1889-1979) was the first Indian Bishop of
Pune. The late Conego Jeronimo Freitas was the first Goan DD in Rome and
was the rector of the Rachol seminary and Dean of the Se Cathedral. Bishop
Gilbert Blaise Rego has recently retired as the Bishop of
Simla/Chandigarh.
Quite a few Porrikars plunged into the freedom
struggle and some names which come to mind are Peter Alvares, Laura
D'Souza, Sacarai Shirodkar and Frank Andrade. There were quite a lot of
outstanding social workers and doctors.
Among the non-coastal
villages to have outdoor eateries, Parra boasts about Alvito Santiago's
Alva Mar Restaurant and Alex Saldanha's Emerald Lawns for dances and
weddings. Marie Nogueira figures among the most sought after dress
designer by Bardez brides for their wedding trousseau. Among gourmets,
Francis Fernandes has earned kudos for the tastiest continental cusine and
today ranks among the cream of Goan caterers for special
occasions.
When Francis was young, he enacted female roles
beautifully in Konkani dramas. Talking about tiatrists, one recalls the
role Francis de Parra, played in the development of the Konkani tiatr as
he was one of the finest composers and singers. His brother Sebastian
(S.B. Radio) too excelled in this field. Joaquim has set up Joma Builders
and a row of buildings is already up where Parra meets Mapusa. At the
foothills, Gregory and Nicholas are manufacturing beautiful imitation
jewellery, which is marketted countrywide. Parra is no more a
cart-and-wheel tale of yesteryears. It's evolving constantly and picking
up rudimentary industries.
 One
can't leave the village without visiting its monumental landmark, the
church of St Anne built in 1649. The church has beautiful murals done on
its vast ceiling. Earlier Parra formed a part and parcel of the vast
parish of Nagoa. The church was, however, attacked by the forces of
Sambhaji while the Luso- Maratha war was on in 1683. The villagers have
set up a multi- purpose hall behind the church but the sports stadium
which was started way back in 1992, is still to be completed.
Parra has a couple of lakes which help irrigate the fields during
summer. The one which is called Ganesh tollem at Verla is supposed to have
a tunnel linking it to the dhobi lake. No one has yet verified this claim.
Perhaps one could find traces of the old Hindu heritage, of destroyed
temples and deities. Not much of the past is seen in Parra today though a
few new Hindu temples have been erected recently.
It's time to bid
adieu. In Parra the places for the sundowner ain't among the several
glitzy bar-restaurants which have cropped up all over the place.
Considered locally as the right place is the vintage Moti Bar (Loja de
Vinhos Nativos) established in 1862 at Sales Vaddo and the Simao Bar
nearby. These tavernas have served the feni fraternity for donkey's years
without respite. And despite the fact that feni is a badly watered down
version of the age-old Goan traditional drink, these establishments
somehow manage to serve the better stuff. And like wasps to a flame, the
brotherhood throng at these watering-holes at Anjelus time. And one might
even hear a voice singing, Uddon gelem paruveamchem
birem...
Joel
D'Souza
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