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...nowhere is this attitude more apparent than in Balk’s photographs of the women themselves. Balk completed the series on a trip to the village of Kot Goan in the district of Gorkha. Done in black and white prints, the photographs are intimate and gripping, with a distinctly documentary feel that manages not to alienate the viewer or the subject...

Author: By Stephanie L. Lim, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Art as Witness to Nepalese Tragedy | 3/15/2002 | See Source »

...issue at hand was whether Goa, after 451 years of Portuguese rule and five years as a semiautonomous "union territory" of India, should give up its separate identity and become part of teeming Maharashtra state (pop. 39.5 million). The decision was to be made by Goan voters in an "opinion poll" conducted by the Indian government, and the two goddesses did not have the field entirely to themselves. Opposing the merger were the leaders of Goa's 250,000 Roman Catholics, a powerful force in themselves. "Think Goan," pleaded priests from their pulpits, while Catholic politicians of the United...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Goa: But Not Gone | 1/27/1967 | See Source »

...handed goddess considered to be the source of all power in the neighboring Indian state of Maharashtra. Last week Bhaväni and Shanta Durgá tried to join hands. Carried by Hindu nationalists, images of the two goddesses were paraded through the streets of scores of Goan villages, together with posters proclaiming: "After 450 years, Bhaväni wills to be reunited with Shanta Durga. Vote for merger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Goa: But Not Gone | 1/27/1967 | See Source »

Behind the purely religious battle lay factors less obvious but no less persuasive. Goan Catholics were fighting to hold on to the preferential status accorded them by the Portuguese and continued by the Indian government after "union." Many Goan Hindus, on the other hand, have relatives in Maharashtra, and most speak a dialect of the Marathi language. But the determining question was whether Goa should cease to exist. In exchange for the territory's own legislature, established three years ago by New Delhi, all the promerger forces could offer were four seats in the Maharashtra state assembly, a pitiful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Goa: But Not Gone | 1/27/1967 | See Source »

...morale is low. Grumbled one Goan bitterly: "Under the Portuguese we were considered a province. Under India, to our surprise, we find we are treated like a colony...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Province to Colony | 2/1/1963 | See Source »

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