Batcara

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Characters
  • Casiano Rodrigues
  • Roza Maria Luiza Vaz
  • Casmiro Rodrigues
  • Cecilia Miranda
  • João Pinto
  • Mariano Fonseca
  • Johnson Scotland
Date premiered22 November 1904
Batcara
The original handbill of the play, 1904
Written byJoão Agostinho Fernandes
Characters
  • Casiano Rodrigues
  • Roza Maria Luiza Vaz
  • Casmiro Rodrigues
  • Cecilia Miranda
  • João Pinto
  • Mariano Fonseca
  • Johnson Scotland
Date premiered22 November 1904
Place premieredGaiety Theatre, Bombay, British India
Original languageKonkani
SubjectCasteism in Goa, and atrocities by landlords on kunbis (farmers)
GenreTiatr, comedy drama
SettingAncestral home in Goa, lodging and restaurant in Bombay

Batcara (transl.The Landlord) is a two-act Konkani play written by the Goan playwright João Agostinho Fernandes. First performed at the Gaiety Theatre in Bombay on 22 November 1904, during the inauguration of the Goan Union Dramatic Club, the work is considered a musical comedy. The play was subsequently published on 1 January 1909, marking Fernandes's first play to be printed. It draws inspiration from the author's experiences during the 1896 Bombay plague epidemic and his return to Portuguese Goa. Set in Goa, the play depicts the prevailing caste system and the atrocities committed by landlords against tenant farmers. It also explores themes of Christianity and the concept of equality among people.

The creation of this play by Fernandes was shaped by his observations during the 1896 Bombay plague epidemic. It represented the inaugural publication among Fernandes' body of works. During the period of the plague outbreak, he voluntarily resigned from his occupation and journeyed back to his native region of Goa. Accompanied by fellow Goans, via a ship he embarked on his fourth voyage to Goa following an extended period away. Spending a period of ten months in Goa, he explored several villages that were under the authority of prominent Goan landholders, which included Margão, Curtorim, Raia, Loutolim, Verna, Navelim, and Chinchinim. Fernandes' composition of the play drew parallels to Joseph Conrad's 1899 novella Heart of Darkness, which was influenced by Conrad's own experiences visiting the Congo Free State in 1890. Both works reflected the authors' personal encounters with colonial settings and dynamics.[1]

During his travels through Goan villages, Fernandes expressed dismay at the prevalence of caste divisions, even in areas that claimed to be civilized and pious. He observed that the predominant attitude among the villagers was one of self-interest and in-group favoritism, rather than universal love and charity as espoused by Christian teachings. Fernandes was troubled to find that these villages, which purported to be bastions of religious devotion, were actually deeply entrenched in caste-based social hierarchies. He noted a common catechism among the villagers: "I for myself and my caste, God for others and people in general." This mentality led Fernandes to question how true Goan unity and Christian charity could ever be achieved as long as the caste system remained deeply rooted. His experiences during this period raised questions for him about the gap between Christian ideals and the realities of social dynamics in Goan communities. He wrestled with the apparent contradiction between the villagers' professed religiosity and their failure to live up to the principles of compassion and inclusivity taught by Jesus Christ.[1]

Characters

Casiano Rodrigues, better known as Batcara de Panzarim, is a wealthy Goan landlord from Panzarim, Goa.

Roza Maria Luiza Vaz is Casiano's wife.

Casmiro Rodrigues is Casiano and Roza's only son and heir to their ancestral properties.

Cecilia Miranda is Casmiro's fiancée.

João Pinto is an illiterate sorcerer and a kunbi.

Anton Abrão is a tenant farmer and a kunbi.

Manel Gauns is the third kunbi among the lot.

Shiva Morgancar is the goldsmith.

Joe Vaz, Joaquim Nunes, and John Moniz are the Goan dandies.

Mariano Fonesca is the boarding housekeeper and proprietor of the lodging in Bombay. He also owns a restaurant.

Johnson Scotland, an Englishman, is the habitual drunkard who is witnessed in a quarrel at Fonseca's restaurant.

Ernesto Lobato is the barrister.

Carlos Cotta is the engineer.

David Boniface is the newspaper editor.

Synopsis

History of the play

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI