Was the Devi of Ganjem in Goa inspired by
Tara-Tarini of Ganjam, Odisha?
A professor in Goa University's history department, Pratima
Kamat has posed this question after her ethnoarchaeological research into the
'Boat Deities' of the Mhadei River Valley of the Satari and Sanguem talukas of
Goa (Tarini and Tar-Vir: The Unique Boat Deities of Goa, 2008) revealed what
she terms as exciting new linkages between Goa and Odisha.
Kamat points out that scholars have written about Goa's
cultural links with Bengal, especially about the migration of the Gaud Saraswat
Brahmins to Goa, but not much about the maritime traditions and heritage with
the state's links to Odisha. "Certain cultural similarities are visible in the
ethnographical heritage of the two maritime societies, Goan and Odia, located
on opposite coasts of the Indian peninsula etched in the early medieval times
that are worthy of more intensive research," Kamat states in her study.
Ganjem was a last port of call along the River Mandovi for
centuries, but its past is fading with time.
"Unique votive as well as abandoned sculptures of the Devi-in-a-boat
are located in the Satari and Sanguem talukas of Goa. These may be compared
with a similar Devi-in-a-boat found in some parts of coastal Odisha," says
Kamat.
In addition to iconographical evidence, she points to
ethnographical comparisons between the worship of Tara-Tarini/Tara in places
like Ganjam, Ghatgaon and Ratnagiri in Odisha, and the votive traditions
associated with the Devi-in-a-boat as 'Tarini' in the Satari and Sanguem
talukas of Goa.
Kamat draws similarities between the boat festival of
Sanquelim, another riverine port like Ganjem, with the Boita Bandana and Bali
Yatra of Cuttack, Odisha.
The Goan river, Mhadei and its tributaries are hosts to the
Devi-in-a-boat and shaped the region's cultural history as much as River
Mahanadi influenced Odisha.
Both states also witnessed the influence of Buddhism and
Jainism; have a votive tradition of supplicating the Saptamatrika; enjoy a
Shaktipitha status; possess similar maritime traditions, Kamat states in her
study.
Referring to the culinary aspect, the Goan patoli and its
Oriya country cousin, the endura pitha, Kamat says they suggest another reason
to support her research. Source: ToI
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