Vaman Sardesai Explained

Vaman Sardesai
Birth Name:Vaman Balkrishna Naique Prataprao Sardesai[1]
Birth Date:5 May 1923
Death Date:[2]
Birth Place:Vadi, Ponda taluka, Goa, Portuguese India, Portuguese Empire
Awards:Padma Shri (1992)

Vaman Balkrishna Naique Prataprao Sardesai (5 May 1923 – 6 May 1994) was an Indian poet, freedom fighter and diplomat from Goa. Along with Libia Lobo Sardesai, whom he later married, he ran an underground radio station, Voice of Freedom, that transmitted across Portuguese Goa from 1955 to 1961, advocating the cause of the Goan independence movement. Following the Liberation of Goa, he became the second editor of Goa Today magazine, and went on to become an IAS officer, serving as the Indian Ambassador to Angola. In 1992, he was awarded the Padma Shri. He has also been the co-convenor of INTACH.

Life and career

Early life: Education, writing and radio (1923–1954)

Vaman Balkrishna Naique Prataprau Sardesai was born to Bhalchandra Desai on 5 May 1923 in the village of Vadi, Ponda taluka, Goa.[3] Sardesai was a student of medicine at Escola Médica Cirúrgica de Goa when he was arrested in 1947 for distributing "anti-colonial literature".[4] He was sentenced to nine months' imprisonment by the Portuguese Military Tribunal.[5]

Following his release, he moved to Wardha and spent four years at Gandhi's Sevagram ashram. There, he worked with Ravindra Kelekar to publish Konkani language poems in their fortnightly publication Meerg, writing under the pseudonym of "Abhijeet".[6] Sardesai travelled around Nagpur to help in the magazine's success and ensured that copies would be distributed across the country. His writings displayed his strong linguistic skills. He was skilled in Konkani, Marathi, and Portuguese languages. Even though he left his education incomplete, he taught language subjects in important educational institutions in Panaji.

Then Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, respected Goa's freedom fighters and implemented policies that allowed many poets and writers fleeing from Goa to join government service. This led to Sardesai joining the External Services Division at All India Radio, Bombay. As part of this, he created poems and programmes to spread awareness about "the problem of Goa" to other countries.

Voice of Freedom (1955–1961)

See main article: Voice of Freedom (radio station). In 1954–55, the Portuguese attacked and killed several Satyagrahis who had peacefully entered the Goan borders, demanding the end of colonial rule in Goa. Following this, India closed its borders with Goa, imposing an economic blockade, thus reducing free movement and trade. Sardesai, Libia Lobo and Nicolau Menezes, a Goan freedom fighter who had been living in hiding in Bombay, came together to form a team. Using two wireless radio sets, which were confiscated the Portuguese, were converted into a radio transmitter. This grew to be the Voice of Freedom radio station, through which Sardesai, Lobo and Menezes would transmit news and important information to Goans.[7] [8]

They initially lived in the jungles of Amboli Ghat, from Goa, transmitting an hour-long programme. After Menezes and his wife left, Sardesai and Lobo shifted to Castle Rock, Karnataka (from Goa).

In the days preceding Operation Vijay (1961), Sardesai and Lobo were contacted by the Indian defence forces. On December 17, 1961, the station transmitted a direct message from then Defence Minister of India, V. K. Krishna Menon, requesting the Portuguese Governor General to surrender. Following the success of Operation Vijay, Sardesai and Lobo boarded an Indian Air Force plane with a radio and loudspeaker attached to it, flying over Goa and dropping leaflets and announcing the freedom of Goa.

Post Liberation (1961 onwards)

Sardesai and Lobo got married on 19 December 1964, the third anniversary of the Liberation of Goa.

Sardesai was among the first three senior officers from Goa to join the Indian Administrative Service and was given significant responsibilities, serving as director of various departments such as Industries, Information, Sales Tax Commissionerate, and District Collector.

Sardesai became the second editor of Goa Today magazine,[9] after which he went on to serve as the Indian Ambassador to Angola from 1988 to 1991.[10] He was also the co-convenor of INTACH.

Awards

While serving as the Indian Ambassador to Angola, Sardesai was awarded a medal by their Prime Minister for his meritorious service. In 1992, Sardesai was awarded the Padma Shri.

Notes and References

  1. News: 6 May 2023 . Vivek . Menezes . Salute to Vaman Sardesai . 10 July 2024 . oHeraldo.
  2. Web site: Nayak . Raju . 2023-05-07 . मर्मवेध : त्याग! . 2024-07-11 . Goa News on Dainik Gomantak . mr.
  3. Web site: 4 July 2022 . Vaman Balkrishna Naique Prataprau Sardesai . 10 July 2024 . Azadi Ka Amrit Mahotsav - Digital District Repository Detail.
  4. Web site: Vivek . Menezes . 28 April 2024 . LIBBY DE LIBERDADE . 10 July 2024 . oHeraldo.
  5. Web site: Pavneet . Singh Chadha. 18 May 2024 . As a mural comes up in Panaji, the muse, a 99-year-old Goan freedom fighter, looks on from her balcony . 5 July 2024 . The Indian Express . en.
  6. Kamat . Nandkumar . January 2005 . Post Independence Konkani poetry: a mini-review . Golden Jubilee Issue of National Sahitya Akademy . ResearchGate.
  7. Web site: 25 May 2024 . At 100, Libia Lobo's voice still inspires Goans . 5 July 2024 . Goa News in English on Gomantak Times . en.
  8. Web site: Vivek . Menezes . 24 December 2022 . Libia Lobo Sardesai's Voice of Freedom . 5 July 2024 . oHeraldo.
  9. News: de Souza . Teotónio Rosário . Teotónio de Souza . 12 November 2008 . Dishonouring Our Freedom Fighters . 10 July 2024 . The Herald . Goa . 8 . 108 . 317.
  10. Web site: Embassy of India, Luanda, Angola . 10 July 2024 . Embassy Of India, Luanda, Angola.