Cunchelim


Cunchelim is a village in Bardez sub-district, North Goa, India.

Geography

It is located at at an elevation of 14 m above MSL.

Location

Cunchelim is 2 km from Mapusa. The village was originally located by the Haran River, but now includes the nearby plateau.

History

Cunchelim as a village has existed for centuries, as an agricultural settlement besides the Haran River that flows toward the Anjuna River. As a result the villagers had close relationships with those of Siolim and Tivim.
Traditions of the villagers of Cunchelim state that they were settled by people from Tivim.
The original Hindu deity of the village of Goa was called Barazann.
The founding of the church and parish of St. Jerome by the Franciscans headed by Fr. Jeronimo de Espirito Santo in 1594 at Mapusa, marks the establishment of Catholicism in the area. This parish church is sometimes known as the Church of Our Lady of the Miracles. The villages of Cunchelim and Corlim were placed under the parish of Mapusa. Those Hindu residents that fled the village during the Portuguese period and established themselves elsewhere are known by the name Kunkolienkar.
Oral tradition states that the at São José Vaddo the original buildings were arranged around a narrow lane for protection against bands of Marathi “dacots” who would attack at night during the seventeenth century. The top of the lane was on high ground were villages would appoint a night guard that could overlook each hamlet.
The Jesuit Province of Malabar owned palm groves at Cunchelim in 1759 from which it earned an income and they continued to own the palm groves at Cunchelim in 1773 The village was within walking distance of Mapusa and was served by a chapel for daily prayer, but all major religious events took place at Mapusa, where in 1779 the church of St. Jerome was rebuilt. A map of Bardez, probably produced by a trainee cartographer in the British army around 1797-1800 clearly shows the chapel at Cunchelim. The village is shown on the sloping higher ground with rice fields on the floodplain. The village was a centre for agriculture, producing rice, coconuts, Cashew nuts, and buffalo milk. People lived on higher ground beside seasonal streams where their wells could access the high water table away from the rice fields and on the less valuable rocky ground that led to a small plateau. The slope was covered in thick forests which the villages harvested for building materials.
In 1842 a local cleric from the DeSouza family, Friar Manoel DeSouza was appointed rector of the Seminary of Rachol and held that post until 1859. Perhaps as a result of his position the chapel of Cunchelim was given a new provision of erection on the 20th December 1847, though it remained filial to the Parish of Mapusa. The plots and palm groves owned by the Jesuit Province of Malabar at Cunchelim remained in their possession until 1862. According to one reference the village had a revenue of £908:00 in 1876 Though this was more than many other villages in Goa, it was still quite low. Among the families that lived at Cunchelim at this time was the Almeida family who married into the Pinto family of Candolim. The later were famous for their part in the Pinto Rebellion. In 1877 the local chapel was dedicated to Our Lady of Flight. Cunchelim became more involved with the outside world in early nineteenth century with the creation of a school with a chair of Latin at Mapusa. This institution was to pave the way for better education and therefore job prospects in British India.
A road connecting Cunchelim with Mapusa and Colvale was built by 1876 and smaller tracks connected the village to Tivim. Young men of the village started to leave for Bombay where they would seek work in the British Indian civil service or with the growing number of steamship companies. Some young men even ventured to British East Africa, finding employment in present-day Kenya and Uganda.
The legacy of non-permanent migration mainly of men to East Africa is in the number of early twentieth century houses in the village built by the returning "Afrikanders" and their income from Africa. By the mid-twentieth century many families moved to other parts of India and to Africa. Many
never returned and their old grand houses fell to ruins.
In the later twentieth century like other Goans many people from Cunchelim emigrated to the Persian Gulf seeking work in Kuwait, Bahrain, Dubai and Oman. Their wealth has helped greatly in the upkeep of the village institutions. The church of Our Lady of Flight was separated from the Mapusa parish in 1977.

Places of interest