Ever Imagined visiting a village right here in East Midnapur in West Bengal , where a slice of Europe’s Portugal, not only flows down through the Portuguese churches, but also in the DNA of the residents. Well, it is true and Mirpur of Mahishadal in West Bengal’s East Midnapore district has even today held on to their Portuguese descent. They are proud to showcase their football skills like Cristiano Ronaldo or Luis Figo and even after decades of in-mixing, some of the residents have blue eyes like their Portuguese ancestors.
The village has around 140 Christian families , 90 of them Catholic, the rest Protestant.and along with their Hindu
counterparts celebrate Christmas and Easter in a big way. Mirpur bustles with
activity every Christmas and you can also be a part of this Yuletide spirit.
The village has two cathedrals – the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of
North India. They come in all colours and are beautifully decorated every year
before Christmas. Residents also celebrate the birth anniversary of the Blessed
Virgin Mary on September 8 every year. This is again a festival which is very
popular in Portugal.
According to legends, in the 17th-century, a handful of Portuguese soldiers had arrived here to fight the Maratha borgees who plundered villages of Bengal. The residents of Mirpur are thought to be descendants of these Portuguese warriors who defended the villages. The bandits would arrive on ships in bands of 50 to 100 and ransack these villages. It is believed Queen Janaki or the King of Mahishadal requested the Portuguese government to send some soldiers to fight the borgees. Accordingly, Portugal sent 15 convicts and once they defended the locals, the Queen gave them around 35 acres of land to settle and stay in Bengal Having done their job , the Portuguese soldiers unleashed their own reign of terror . They forcibly married local girls and made Mirpur their home.
Though they settled in Mirpur, they forcibly married local girls and thus their descendants are half Bengali and half Portuguese. Needless to say, the prime debate is still on to trace the dual identity of these ‘Portuguese Bengalis.’ Some say, they are children of dangerous pirates, and others claim they are a group of freedom fighters and saviours of the society. Whatever be the story, the vibrant Portuguese Bengalis will welcome you to their villages this Christmas for sure.
How to reach: Rail link or roadway to Mahisadal, East Midnapur and then take a Local conveyance to reach Mirpur.
#Portugese , # Mirpur , # Mahishadal
Nice info.. let's plan a trip.
ReplyDeleteSure.Any Sunday
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DeleteMarathas are NOT bandits . They are just brave warriors who were expanding their Kingdom based on their valoyr and courage . If you are weak and Your culture is weak then be it South indian waala or North indians or Marathas everyone will plunder you your culture and your woman will walk away with them as woman geta attracted to people who are strong Rich and have more intelligence as a combination . Half of Highly educated bengali Girls walk away with Non bengali Guys the readon i mentioned
ReplyDeleteThe Bargees led by Bhaskar Pandit under Raghuji Bhosle had been Marathas and it is historical fact that they plundered Bengal.Bargees were bandits and no culture approves violence
DeleteBeautiful Abhijit
ReplyDeleteCarry on like this
Awaiting for the next one
Thanks.please share it with your friends
DeleteVery informative one,let me share others.
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ReplyDeleteAbhijit....Nice & informative article. having worked and lived in Goa for two years, I have a touch some amount of Portuguese culture and felt that they were only confined in Goa. But, after reading your article, I came to know about settlement of small population of Portuguese in Bengal.
ReplyDeleteKeep it up bro' and hope to enjoy many more such blogs from you.
Tata.
Thank you bro we can plan a trip once you are in India
ReplyDeleteInshallah!!!
ReplyDeleteUnknown fact
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ReplyDeleteThank you for this information
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