Mando - Dances of Goa
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 10 ก.พ. 2025
- One of the few Goan dance forms of Christian origin, it was earlier reserved for the elite class and features Portuguese style costumes typical of the old colonial times. As part of the musical accompaniment, the Mando also saw the East-West fusion of "ghumot" (Indian percussion) and violin first making an appearance.
How beautiful and nostalgia at it’s peak !
Thank you for a lovely channel of the dances and music of Goa!
Very appreciated!
Beautiful... thank you for the wonderful information.
Lindo lindo
Thank you for this beautiful informative video
Back few days I had watched many videos about Goa and its people I really admired their Portugese culture and language. Goanese are totally different from north and south Indians. They are more to Portuegese than Indians.
Why India invaded Goa after fifteen years of independence?
Goanese preserve your culture for the next generation,bye.
Wow I totally agree with you !!
People from Goa are know as गोंयकार in Konkani and Goans in English. Goanese is a misnomer.
@@ryanfernandes6652 Thanks for your brief explanation I appreciate it.
India didn't invaded Goa.The Indian land thar was taken by portugal was retrieved back by India.!!
would be nice if someone dropped the links to these or any other genuine mandos/dulpods
working on the tradition of mando in goa.do drop me any usesful info plz
Would love to read your work
Is it published?
would have been nice if u actually had played a mando in the background in the beginning of the video
- goud saraswat bamon
It is a peculiar aspect of all parts of India which stubbornly remain Hindu and speak local languages. Considering that Goa was under direct Portuguese rule for about 450 years, it is still overwhelmingly Hindu and the Portuguese language is non existent. Compare that with other colonies, which are today primarily Catholic and almost in all Iberian languages have replaced the local ones.
This argument also applies to parts of India ruled by other outsiders such as Muslims.
Not really. It's even weaker in former chinese, japanese, indonesian colonies of Portugal. Places you are refering to are only in America because it not only consisted in cultural influence but also in population replacement.
@@dkrbk Angola, Mozambique, Timor etc didn't have population replacements. However are overwhelmingly Catholic and in the African nations Portuguese is widely used.
You are right about Macau, Hong Kong etc, however the Japanese one you mentioned were not committed colonies, rather casual trading posts.
@@हपिएम् you are right about Africa. I actually forgot them.
Goans must speak goas language konkni
Other traditional dances from Goa may also have roots outside the land. Instead of harping on the origins of the mando, the commentator should have spoken about the beauty and gender parity of the dance which is missing from other traditional dances in Goa. This is a big shame.