Berta de Menezes Bragança

Berta de Menezes Bragança (17 December 1911 – 1993), alternatively spelled as Berta de Menezes Braganza and Bertha Menezes Braganza, was an Indian freedom fighter, teacher, writer and journalist.

Berta de Menezes Bragança
Born(1911-12-17)17 December 1911
Died1993(1993-00-00) (aged 81–82)
Resting placeChandor Church cemetery
Notable workTales of Goa (1990)
Political partyCommunist Party of India
Other political
affiliations
MovementGoa Liberation Movement
Spouse
António Furtado
(m. 1947; died 1988)
FatherLuís de Menezes Bragança
Relatives

Early and personal life

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Berta de Menezes Bragança was born on 17 December 1911 in Cuelim village in Mormugao taluka. She and her sister Beatris were daughters of Luís de Menezes Bragança.[1] She is the niece of T. B. Cunha.[2] She was also a teacher.[3] She married António Furtado, a lawyer, in 1947.[4] He died in 1988.[5]

Goa liberation movement

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Since 1929, Menezes Bragança was part of the Goa committee of the Goa Congress Committee (GCC), briefly affiliated to the Indian National Congress, and actively worked to enroll members. She later joined her uncle T.B. Cunha's Goa Youth League (GYL) and in 1945, she was chosen as the Secretary of its Goa unit.[1] She was often seen at the side of Cunha at protests and speeches in South Goa.[2] Some of their meetings would be held at the Menezes Bragança house in Chandor.[6] She and her sister, Beatris, wore khadi saris[7] and promoted the adoption of khadi fabric.[1]

Between 1940 and 1943, she contributed to the Panjim-based publication, O Académico.[8]

In her capacity as Secretary of the GYL, in response to Ram Manohar Lohia's call to freedom on Goa Revolution Day, she and Cunha attempted to offer satyagraha at Margao on 30 June 1946. However, the Portuguese police stopped them and beat her,[1] following which the police abandoned them on the roadside in Chandor.[2]

Between 1946 and 1950, she continued the distribution of nationalist pamphlets and Indian newspapers in Goa. However, on 16 April 1950, she and her husband, António Furtado, were forced to escape to Belgaum, after she was threatened with deportation to Africa.[1] This was because they both refused to sign an official declaration that condemned then Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru's declaration that Goa was a part of India and must be returned to it.[9]

Menezes Bragança continued her distribution of nationalist propaganda from Belgaum. In 1952, she was chosen as the President of the Belgaum branch of the National Congress (Goa).[1] Later, in 1953, she and Furtado founded the fortnightly left-wing publication, Free Goa. Subtitled as the "Organ of Portuguese India’s Liberation", Furtado was its first editor. With Cunha's escape to Bombay in 1956, she and Furtado moved there, continuing the publication from there. Cunha also contributed to Free Goa. Menezes Bragança then became its editor in 1958, after the death of Cunha.[9] She continued editing it until it stopped publication in 1962.[1]

In 1955, she participated in the mass satyagraha at Patradevi that was organised by Gerald Pereira and the Goa Vimochan Sahayak Samiti (GVSS).[1] While in Bombay, she joined the Goan Peoples Party (GPP).[10]

She was chosen to represent India at the Afro-Asian Women's Conference in Cairo, during which the problem of Goa's freedom was discussed in detail. She was also part of a delegation to Moscow meant to attract attention to the same issue, along with the Goa liberation movement. In 1959, she was a member of the Goa Political Convention at the Afro-Asian Solidarity and All India Peace Council.[1] She was also a regular contributor to the Afro-Asian Bulletin.[11]

In December 1960, the third National Conference for Afro-Asian solidarity took place in Bombay, calling for the immediate freedom of Goa, Daman and Diu and forming a National Campaign Committee for this purpose. In 1961, Menezes Bragança joined this committee, which was led by George Vaz. In this capacity, she travelled across India, participating in conferences in major cities like Bombay, Ahmedabad, Calcutta and Delhi, demanding military action for Goa's freedom.[1]

Post-Liberation of Goa

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Menezes Bragança and other Goan Communists, like Gerald Pereira and George Vaz, began working with the Goan peasants soon after the Liberation of Goa, forming the Shetkari Paksh (Farmers' Party). In the 1963 Goa, Daman and Diu Legislative Assembly election, they did not contest with their Communist symbols but instead contested as a political front, the Frente Popular. This was done in an attempt to mislead religious Goans into voting for them. Menezes Bragança contested from the Cortalim Assembly constituency but neither her nor the seven others were able to win any seats.[12]

Menezes Bragança later became the President of the Communist Party of India in Goa.[7] She was also a part of the Institute Menezes Braganza, named after her father.[13]

In 1990, she published a book of fiction, Tales of Goa, collecting 15 short stories that she had previously published in the 1930s in The Bombay Chronicle and Blitz newspapers.[3]

She donated 1,000 square metres (0.25 acres) of land to the Chandor Sports Club, which built the village's Community Hall on this land.[14]

Death

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Menezes Bragança died in 1993.[3] While she was cremated, her ashes are buried in the Chandor cemetery.[15]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Shirodkar, Pandurang Purushottam (1986). Who's Who of Freedom Fighters, Goa, Daman, and Diu. Vol. 1. Goa Gazetteer Department, Government of the Union Territory of Goa, Daman, and Diu. pp. 34–35.
  2. ^ a b c Barreto, Mackelroy (28 June 2018). "Bold and inspired: Goa's women freedom fighters". The Times of India. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 16 September 2024.
  3. ^ a b c Williams, C. (2019). "'Vivências partilhadas': Finding common ground in the short stories of three Goan women writers". Journal of Romance Studies. 19 (3). doi:10.3828/jrs.2019.23. ISSN 1473-3536.
  4. ^ Lobo, Sandra Ataíde (2 July 2018). "Educating Opinion, Invigorating Intellectual Links, Promoting International Solidarity: T. B. Cunha's Anticolonial Nationalism". InterDISCIPLINARY Journal of Portuguese Diaspora Studies. 7: 137–167. ISSN 2165-2694.
  5. ^ Boletim Do Instituto Menezes Bragança. O Instituto. 1988. p. 89.
  6. ^ Hiddleston, Sarah (5 April 2007). "House of Chandor". Frontline. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  7. ^ a b Sawant Mendes, Sushila (24 February 2024). "CELEBRATING THE THREE SISTERS…". Herald Goa. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  8. ^ Madeira, Viviane Souza (28 November 2019). "Women writing and writings on women in the goan magazine o acadêmico (1940 – 1943)". Via Atlântica (36): 142–166. doi:10.11606/va.v0i36.160336.
  9. ^ a b Festino, Cielo G. (March 2021). "Goa's freedom struggle". Journal of Romance Studies. 21 (1): 31–48. doi:10.3828/jrs.2021.2. ISSN 1473-3536.
  10. ^ Faleiro, Valmiki (24 July 2023). Goa, 1961: The Complete Story of Nationalism and Integration. Penguin Random House India Private Limited. p. 368. ISBN 978-93-5708-175-7. Retrieved 21 August 2024.
  11. ^ Sunderason, Sanjukta; Hoek, Lotte (16 December 2021). Forms of the Left in Postcolonial South Asia: Aesthetics, Networks and Connected Histories. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 145. ISBN 978-1-350-17918-9.
  12. ^ Prabhudesai, Sandesh (April 2023). Ajeeb Goa's Gajab Politics. Qurate Books Private Limited. p. 253. ISBN 978-93-94600-690.
  13. ^ "Back Matter". Journal of South Asian Literature. 18 (1). 1983. ISSN 0091-5637. JSTOR 40872603.
  14. ^ Mascarenhas, Clive (28 July 2016). "Chandor SC goes beyond football to keep the youth healthy". The Navhind Times. Retrieved 17 September 2024.
  15. ^ Sawant Mendes, Sushila (16 June 2024). "18th June was born in a cradle of free thought". Herald Goa. Retrieved 17 September 2024.