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Renovating Our Churches? Quite the Reverse!

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Renovating Our Churches? Quite the Reverse!

Mangaluru: Five years ago, the parish of Bejai celebrated its centenary. To mark the occasion the parish council sanctioned funds for the erection of a thick cemetery wall that in fact badly disfigured the appearance of this beautiful cemetery. The parish of Bejai was quite unique in that its cemetery formed part of the approach to the church – and parishioners on their way to mass, or on their return, would pause along the pathway at the tombstones of their loved ones, with a few words of silent prayer. These tombstones, once directly in the line of sight of the church (as was virtually required by Catholic practice), are now blocked by the ugly wall that is more appropriate for a jail than a place of prayer. And the cemetery as a whole, once very meticulously maintained, is now overgrown with wild plants, and garbage continually accumulates especially on the inner side of the wall. After all, what cannot be seen from the church requires no maintenance.

Five years have elapsed since the centenary – and the church finds itself once again blessed with surplus funds (in this case a grant by the government minorities’ commission). Somebody in the parish council has proposed the wonderful idea of restoring the flooring – and in the process uprooting all the memorial slabs of the distinguished parishioners of the early church. I find this proposal so repugnant that it will not suffice for me to register a protest with the parish priest. It is necessary for me to express my thoughts and share them with the community at large.

Interred within the church are my great-grandfather Joseph Lobo Prabhu, his wife Joanna, their four sons George, Raymond, Paschal and Boniface, and their wives, as well as several members of the next generation – including my own father who died in 1971 shortly before the practice of intra-church burials was discontinued. My great-grandfather Joseph Lobo Prabhu was the donor of the site of a sizeable portion of what the church owns today; his four sons and their wives were also major benefactors to the parish throughout their lifetimes.

It was in the late 19th century that Joseph Lobo Prabhu erected a chapel on his own property, and at his own expense, for the benefit of the Catholic population of the area. This is clearly noted in the “History of the Diocese of Mangaluru”, written by Fr John Moore, S.J., in the early 20th century. The chapel was situated in the front half of the area now occupied by the parish church. When Joseph’s wife Joanna – a sister of Lawrence Lobo, advocate, builder of “Nandigudda House”, one of the few traditional stately homes of Mangaluru that is still in existence – died at the young age of 45 in 1889, she was buried directly beneath the chapel altar. Joseph Lobo lived to be an octogenarian; when he died in 1921, he was buried next to his wife beneath the chapel altar.

In the 1930s, during the tenure of Fr. Antony A.E. Colaco as parish priest, more land was acquired (behind the old chapel) and the church was enlarged, the altar being shifted further back. The tombstones of Joseph and Joanna Lobo were now positioned in the middle of the new church – and members of other prominent families were interred closer to the altar. Much later, in the 1970s, under the tenure of Fr Robert Pinto as parish priest, a decision was taken to move all memorial slabs that were situated in the central aisle of the church – and those of Joseph and Joanna Lobo were relegated under the benches. But they remain intact to this day – and so to do the memorial slabs of nearly a hundred other parishioners, many of whom were benefactors of the church.

And now, the parish council is proposing to eradicate them all at one go. The reason officially put forward is that the 100-year-old flooring is in need of refurbishment.

I would like to draw a parallel here. The flooring of Westminster Abbey, London, is probably over 500 years old, but no Englishman in his right mind would dare to suggest that it be uprooted along with the memorial slabs to the eminent persons buried there. It is only in our home town of Mangaluru– the “Rome of the East” – that our clergy and parish council members get these wonderful ideas.

Just for the record, the flooring of Bejai Church may be nearly a hundred years old, but it is still in pretty good condition as the building materials used in those days were designed to last. Not so today. If the flooring in the church is laid a new, it may glitter for a year or two, but in all probability, after the passage of a decade its condition is likely to be a lot worse than the 100-year-old flooring is today.

Indeed, we should be aware of this from painful experience. At Bendore, Urwa and Valencia, the memorial slabs were uprooted in the process of floor refurbishment, and replaced by a brief inscription of the names of the persons buried. The present condition of the flooring in these churches is such that almost all these inscriptions are fading – some have faded altogether. And but for the fact that I had made a note of all the original memorial slabs back in the 1990’s when I had just commenced this project of genealogical research, it would have been next to impossible for me to identify all the persons buried within the church. This identification is important to me as I am currently in the process of bringing out a book entitled “Catholic Heritage Tombstones of Mangalore”, wherein all the major tombstones in the churches and cemeteries of Mangaluru are being catalogued – with detailed notes on the families and descendants of the deceased persons – so that these descendants will have no trouble in locating the tombstones of their departed ancestors.

But it is not merely the fading inscriptions that are the issue here. The original memorial slabs provided far more details – with carefully thought out words and lines of verse from the family members. I would like to provide one illustration. In the left aisle of Bendore church is an inscription to a child named Winifred Rose, who died at the age of 3 in 1929. No surname is mentioned. It is unlikely that even her own nieces and nephews would recognize the name if they were to see the fading inscription today. But how different would it have been had the original memorial slab been preserved wherein she was entered as the beloved daughter of John and Letitia Rego (with their verse of tribute)?

Yes, each memorial slab in our churches and each monument in our cemeteries forms part of our heritage, each tombstone an important link with our past. The inscription on each tombstone has a story to tell. Time and tide no doubt have a role to play in the degeneration of tombstones exposed to the elements over the course of decades, but deliberate razing of these monuments cannot be ascribed to the ravages of time and tide. The uprooting of slabs in churches for no purpose other than to refurbish the flooring is, in my opinion, tantamount to . . . (the word I have in mind is nine letters in length, begins with a ‘v’ and ends with an ‘m’).

Having said this, I would also like to take this opportunity to congratulate the management of the Codialbail Chapel for their excellent job of redecoration without the slightest damage to any of the historic slabs.

I could pursue this topic endlessly. In conclusion I would like to say that if despite my protests the parish council of Bejai is determined to go ahead with this project of desecration, my only request is that each and every memorial slab be carefully preserved. I would be happy to donate a portion of my ancestral property for a memorial to my great-grandfather Joseph Lobo Prabhu, the donor of the original site of Bejai Church – and, space permitting, would be happy if all the slabs in the church could be transferred intact to the memorial (I would of course have to seek the approval of my sister and brother, who are co-owners of our ancestral property). We live in an era where real estate is valued in terms of crores – but the memorial slabs in the churches cannot be valued in crores or even billions. Each and every one is priceless.

About Author:

Michael Lobo (born 12 September 1953) is an Indian scientist, writer, and genealogist. He is the author of three self-published books on the Catholic community in Mangalore, India. He studied at Montfort High School in Yercaud, Tamil Nadu, and graduated from St. Aloysius College.[3] In 1975, he was one of the “National-A” level chess players in the country, which put him among India’s top 20 chess players. In 1982, he obtained a PhD from IISc Bangalore, with a degree in Applied Mathematics. His doctoral thesis on Transonic Aerodynamics earned him the “Young Scientist Award” from the Indian National Science Academy (INSA). In 1982, he earned a PhD in aerodynamics mathematics from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, receiving the 1983 Young Scientist Award from Indian National Science Academy.

In 1984, Lobo moved to England where he entered the Cranfield Institute of Technology on a Commonwealth Scholarship, eventually becoming a faculty member. He retrurned back to mangaluru in 1993, and from 1994–95, Lobo was involved, on a full-time basis, on a research project on the history and genealogy of the Catholic community of Mangalore. He copied almost every 19th century baptismal, marriage and death record he could locate at Rosario Cathedral and Milagres Church, cataloguing them according to surnames. Lobo initially experienced difficulties in the project since only the baptismal registers were maintained in reasonably good condition, while large sections of the marriage and death registers were missing, and it was not feasible to build the genealogy of any family on the basis of baptismal records alone.

Lobo has self-published three offshoots on the subject: Mangaloreans Worldwide – An International Directory (1999), Distinguished Mangalorean Catholics 1800–2000 – A Historico-Biographical Survey of the Mangalorean Catholic Community (2000), and The Mangalorean Catholic Community – A Professional History / Directory (2002). His encyclopedia covers more than a thousand families and is being continually updated with names and records of new families. He claims that the Mangalorean Catholic community has the distinction of being the only community in the world to possess its own genealogical encyclopedia.

Lobo has also authored two books on music entitled A Hundred Pages of Classics, Opera and Popular Instrumental Pieces – A Thousand Pages of Songs with Historical Notes and its companion edition Popular Music – A Historical and Thematic Analysis, both of which were released in 2011. Other of his publications are : “Time Marching – A Step-by-step Guide to a Flow Solver”; Mangaloreans world-wide: an international directory of the Mangalorean Catholic community; Distinguished Mangalorean Catholics 1800–2000 – A Historico-Biographical Survey of the Mangalorean Catholic Community; The Mangalorean Catholic Community – A Professional History / Directory; A Hundred Pages of Classics, Opera and Popular Instrumental Pieces – A Thousand Pages of Songs with Historical Notes. 2011; Popular Music – A Historical and Thematic Analysis. 2011.

by Michael Lobo-Mangaluru
Pics by Alfie D’souza- Team Mangalorean


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13 Comments

  1. I too being an ex parishioner of Bejai am against renovation of the floors. Just wasting funds. Instead let them interlock the cemetery and utilize the funds for a better purpose. I find it ridiculous when I heard they gonna redo the flooring. In the Bishops house my great grandfather is buried on the altar and untouched till date. Never mess with the dead. We don’t know how it will hit back.

  2. Government should stop giving funds to religious institutions which otherwise also gets funds from fearful devotees. Instead the government should spend on programs to build youth, rehabilitation, care of elderly, sick. Request the donors to start donate to the causes.

  3. I do agree with u Mr. Michael Lobo. Demolishing a church is easy but same way each and every memorial slab should be carefully preserved. My suggestion is not to demolish such a beautiful church and why spend crores of rupees for renovating the church.

  4. I too agree.. I had been to Australia and I noticed that the churches are so simple.. No special flooring nor do they have big TV’s installed.. It is a mere place of worship and not show off.. It is only in Mangalore churches they constantly keep doing renovation.. We have to do something about it.. We have to restore our old Graves which are burried in our churches. If our priest have more money let them give it to some family or help a child’s in his/her education but NO they will not do that.. They will ask common people for help and charity.

  5. I agree with Dr Michael Lobo. A grant from the State Government is to be used for re-doing flooring of the church building? How about dividing the funds and investing them in good investments so as to pay for poor children’s school fees, poor parishioners’ healthcare, to pay deposits/payments to old age homes for elders who have been abandoned, and such REAL issues? I think each Parish Council member needs to be lobbied to stop this idiotic project. We need a list of all parish council members. A social media blitz on this issue can also be organized. The deadline to register protests with the PP and his council is 20th September, so time is of essence.

  6. Demolishing n rebuilding the churches has become a fashion in recent years, which hurts the sentiments of the then donors n the original old parishioners. The new parishioners don’t know the value of our ansisters’ sweat. The reason is every one has money nowadays n they want to show off their financial strength to the world. More important is the people who suggest n fight for the new construction are highly benefited in the name of God!!!

  7. I am shocked to read this article and totally agree with Michael Lobo. The flooring is definitely not needed. Was that wall necessary? It looks ugly and not practical at all. Looks like the church has surplus funds and do not know what to do with it. It hurts the sentiments of those who have their loved ones buried there. My parents and grandparents have all been buried inside the church. Come November I amdue to visit my home town to pay my due respects to them. Don’t you think they should take the consent from the families who are buried therein? Can’t they find something better to do? What a shame?
    Meera Nazareth, Bejai now Canada

  8. A Poor thinks of Poor but not a poor thinker can think of poor.
    Even in 21st century Mangalore Catholic community has not moved from real estate development to Human welfare and development.

  9. I totally agree with Dr. Lobo… the flooring of the Bejai church was changed not very long ago and now again they want to renovate it… see the state of this church’s cemetery… there is no walkway, grass and weeds do not allow a person to step in.. why can’t they spend at least some of the funds to renovate and maintain the cemetery? Instead, they ask the parishioners to clean up the cemetery during All Souls Day…

  10. Such a disgrace!! When did the decisions of a few people echo the sentiments of an entire parish?! Need I add the parishioners who have been there for generations and not just a few years to make these enormous decisions based on their whims! Why does money give anyone the right to erase the history of OUR church?? When did the ‘tombs’ come in the way of anyone?? If funds are in plentiful, then why is it not spent on the original school? Or are we too tied up in our fame and recognition of ‘donations’ to have our names announced in front of an audience in church?

    We have ALL failed.. Failed to bring about a change… Failed to even notice the state of the playground or the classrooms of the school? Or is it because the children are poor that we conveniently disregard their needs?? Or of the needy of the parish? Where are the priorities?? And why is the cemetry in such a deplorable condition? Why are the funds not allocated towards such maintenance instead? Why bother spending when we can get it cleaned up by parishioners themselves right!? Instead lets blow it up on something completely unwarranted like ripping apart more than a perfectly adequate and significantly historical flooring than polish it up perhaps!!

    Shameful and distasteful decision-making by everyone involved!!

  11. Years back, Mrs Ady Saldanha the parishioner of VALENCIA had filed a CASE in Mangalore Court ( when Fr Alexander D’souza was PP) and my mother also became part of the SUIT against the removal of marbles from the GRAVES during the flooring works done. Mr Placid Saldanha must be knowing the facts.

    The problem with the Church management is just like our MCC and all Parish Council members along with the CLERGY behave like dictators who think that they are the most intelligent people on this earth.

    As to Parish Council rules, The priest has to call a PARISH ASSEMBLY to take the opinion of the parishioners during such situations what they never do – Same like Corporator avoiding the formation of WARD COMMITTEE’S.

    I fully agree with the points mentioned in this ARTICLE.
    I will join my VOICE.

  12. Dearest Michael Lobo, Leila Menezes & Patrick Lobo, Maybe I am mad, but when I was seemingly unconscious for very many months in 2002 – 2003, I was shown the next depression and the very soon end of the world. Don’t go for the past, but see to everyone’s soon & eternal future. I then saw even Donald Trump, and he is trying to destroy the world, to save the name of an ultra broke the USA. There will very soon be a final global depression maybe commencing in September 2017 precluding the most horrible end. I once belonged to Satan, till I was rescued by our Mother The Blessed Virgin MARY. Use the end times for CHRIST. Gerard Bernie Saldanha

  13. Just took notice that nowadays is a genealogist in India who probably could be some sort of cousin of mine.

    I come from Barbalho Family who have two representative in India: Luis Barbalho Bezerra, who went India around 1530 and Fernão Barbalho Bezerra, probably great or grand-nephew of Luis, who went India around 1680.

    Recently a discover a lineage in my family which had the last name Lobo.

    Was an important branch of the most noble Portuguese families. Even descendant of King Pedro I and all the Portuguese kings before him.

    One of these branch was Baltazar Lobo de Souza. He was first married to Joana Barbosa (maybe other name) and had at least 4 children. Three female and a male. The male, Henrique Lobo, was married e had one daughter in Portugal and died.

    So the three sister and a nice went to Brazil, at the old capital Salvador City. Them they were married to people from the most noble Portuguese Families in Brazil and now the are ancestors of a good part of Brazilians.

    Baltazar Logo married a second time and went to India. There we now know he had more 10 children. But we don’t know where they went after around 1567, when Baltazar died in Goa.

    At the time, Baltazar had other brothers living in India too. This is why I think we are related to a good part of people from India today.

    Unfortunately, the problem of not understanding the importance of conservation of historical places is not unique to India. In Brazil the problem is mostly the same. Common people don’t understand that it is a great opportunity to see the links beyond their own circle of life.

    And in case of tourism, it a enormous opportunity to do business.

    My genealogical studies are published in my blog: https://val51mabar.wordpress.com/. Unfortunately for those who don’t know how to read in Portuguese I don’t translated the genealogical texts to English. It is too much for me because I do the research without sponsorship.

    Congratulations to Dr. Michael Lobo to his good work. Sincerely,

    Valquirio de M. Barbalho.

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