Thursday 20 October 2022

Born to kill?

Born to kill?


Jeffrey Dahmer from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA was a serial killer preying on gay black men, a sex offender who occasionally indulged in necrophilia and cannibalism. The TV series “Dahmer: Monster - The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” became Netflix’s 2nd biggest series ever a few weeks after its release.

Another notorious serial killer was Ted Bundy who kidnapped, raped and murdered young women. And like Jeff and Ted, there are many other serial killer psychopaths who have plagued society in the past.


What triggers these individuals, the vast majority of whom are male, to become serial killing monsters? Are they born with one or more genetic anomalies or mutations that pre-dispose them to exercise uncontrolled violence against other human beings?


The short answer is YES but more factors are involved than genetic mutations alone; it is a matter of nature viz. genetic pre-disposition regulated by nurture i.e. upbringing that can override the potential psychopath’s genetic pre-disposition to put his urge for violence into action.


James H. "Jim" Fallon is a brilliant American neuroscientist born to an Italian American family, a professor of psychiatry and human behaviour, whose interests include brain imaging, chemical neuroanatomy and circuitry, brain imaging, adult stem cells and more. His best selling book, The Psychopath Inside: A Neuroscientist's Personal Journey into the Dark Side of the Brain, published in October 2013 is highly recommended to anyone interested in the topic of psychopathy. The interested reader can check out Wikipedia for details on his extensive interests, knowledge, scientific contributions and academic brilliance.

Jim Fallon also has English and Irish ancestry some of whom where murderers as he reveals in his book.

After studying the brain scans of numerous psychopaths, Jim Fallon discovered reduced connections between the part of the brain responsible for sentiments such as empathy and guilt and the amygdala, which controls fear and anxiety. To quote Fallon: “ In psychopaths, I saw a loss of activity that extends from the orbital cortex into the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and into a part of the prefrontal cortex called the anterior cingulate. The loss then continues along the cingulate cortex to the back of the brain as a thin strip, then loops down into the lower part of the temporal lobe into the very tip of the temporal lobe and the amygdala.” Psychopaths have a normal dorsal system that thus allows them to plan and execute predatory behaviours without being deterred by emotions such as guilt, empathy, fear or anxiety and this also allows them to be highly manipulative.

The authors of a study Tiihonen et al. in “Neurobiological roots of psychopathy” found that “expression levels of RPL109, ZNF132, CDH5, and OPRD1 genes in neurons explained 30–92% of the severity of psychopathy, and RPL109 expression was significantly associated with degree of psychopathy also in astrocytes. It is remarkable that all the aforementioned genes except OPRD1 have been previously linked to autism and might thus contribute to the emotional callousness and lack of empathy observed in psychopathic violent offenders”. In other words, the anomolous functioning of certain parts of the brain are due to specific genetic mutations. 

Another interesting discovery is related to Monoamine oxidase A, also known as MAO-A, an enzyme that is encoded by the MAOA gene and catalyses the oxidative deamination of amines, such as dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin. Mutations in the MAOA gene results in monoamine oxidase deficiency (Brunner Syndrome) and are associated with other disorders including Alzheimer's disease, aggression, panic disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. The MAOA gene has a promoter that comes in either a short form or a long form. The short promoter has been associated with aggressive behaviour and is called the “warrior gene”. Fallon discovered that psychopaths possess this aggression-related “warrior gene”. 

To summarize, psychopaths are born with mutations that cause an anomolous functioning of the brain as well as mutations that lead to the presence of a “warrior gene”.

When studying the brain scans of psychopaths, Jim Fallon used the brain scans of members of his family himself included as a reference of a normally functioning brain. To his complete astonishment, he was shocked to discover that his own brain scan showed the same patterns as those of the psychopaths that he was studying. After numerous analyses of his own behavioural patterns (neurological analyses, psychoanalysis, detailed discussions with family members and friends), he concluded that he did carry many of the traits of psychopaths e.g. lack of empathy, lack of remorse, willingness to take exaggerated risks without any fear of the consequences, manipulating others into very risky situations without their knowledge and so on but he was by no means a killer or murderer. He attributed this fact to a very stable childhood and an excellent upbringing. Based on his studies and experience, he formulated his three-legged stool explanation for the etiology of psychopathy:

  1. unusually low functioning of the orbital prefrontal cortex and anterior temporal lobe, including the amygdala
  2. the high-risk variants of several genes, the most famous being the warrior gene
  3. early childhood emotional, physical, or sexual abuse.

Unlike himself who was brought up by loving and caring parents, practically all the psychopaths he was studying had experienced emotional, physical and/or sexual abuse. Thus, the nurture factor has a major influence on whether or not an individual carrying the mutations prevalent in psychopaths actually becomes one.

The vast majority of psychopaths are men and there is a logical explanation for that. The warrior gene, that has also been linked to changes in brain structure, is located on the X chromosome, one of the two sex determining chromosomes, the other one being a Y chromosome in males and another X chromosome in females. In order to be affected, men need to have the warrior gene in their X sex determining chromosome, whereas women would need to have it in both their X sex determining chromosomes and the probability for that to occur is consequently much smaller.

About 2 percent of individuals in all societies possess psychopathic traits even though only very few of them will turn into murderers or serial killers. As strange as this may seem, this fact indicates that these traits are beneficial to society or else evolution would have eliminated them. Psychopaths show strong leadership qualities; they have been found to make better financial decisions under risk, they face stressful situations without emotions, their narcissism enables them to succeed where others would not even dare to try. Thus, their traits give them specific advantages that can be beneficial for the survival of society. 


Sources:

James Fallon, “The Psychopath Inside”, Portfolio/Penguin, NY

Tiihonen, J., Koskuvi, M., Lähteenvuo, M. et al. Neurobiological roots of psychopathy. Mol Psychiatry 25, 3432–3441 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-019-0488-z)

Wednesday 21 September 2022

Why humans did not become extinct just like their Neanderthal cousins

More than 500’000 years ago, Denisovan, Neanderthal and hominin ancestors not only coexisted but bred common offspring as DNA analyses on bones discovered in the Denisova caves have proven as well as the fact that Neanderthal DNA can be found to this day in humans living outside of Africa, albeit in minuscule amounts. But as evolution progressed, hominins gained an upper edge over the Denisovans and Neanderthals, the latter two became extinct and the hominins continued to survive and ultimately prosper.

Scientists now have an explanation as to why humans acquired a distinct advantage over their extinct cousins: a genetic mutation TKTL1.


In 2014, the sequence of a complete Neanderthal genome was published. Researchers discovered that 96 amino acids differ between modern humans and Neanderthals and initiated studies to investigate if these changes gave humans a definitive edge over the Neanderthals.


Pinson et al. have now reported that that expression of a variant of human transketolase-like protein 1 (TKTL1) increases the number of bRGs in modern humans and thereby the output of upper layer projection neurons. 

Without this mutation, humans would have become extinct just like their Denisovan and Neanderthal cousins.


To quote from an article that has been published in Nature ( https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-02895-2

utm_source=Nature+Briefing&utm_campaign=e25edaf388-briefing-dy-20220909&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c9dfd39373-e25edaf388-47096220):


“The neocortex, the outer region of the cerebral cortex, is an evolutionarily advanced brain structure that is responsible for cognitive abilities. It has expanded in size and function across the mammalian clade (1). The extraordinary cognitive abilities of humans are thought to rely on brain size (and thus the number of neurons) and the intricate cytoarchitecture of the neocortex. The expansion and folding of the neocortex have been partly attributed to the existence of basal radial glial cells (bRGs). These progenitors generate most cortical neurons, and their number increases in gyrencephalic mammals (which have neocortical folds), such as primates and ferrets. On page 1170 of this issue, Pinson et al. (2) report that expression of a variant of human transketolase-like protein 1 (TKTL1) increases the number of bRGs in modern humans and thereby the output of upper layer projection neurons. This genetic change could contribute to differences in cognition with extinct archaic humans”.


Source: Sara Reardon,  Nature | Vol 609 | 22 September 2022 | 665

Thursday 26 May 2022

Gene-edited tomatoes may wipe out $1.6 billion Vitamin D business

 Gene-edited tomatoes could become a source of Vitamin D


Approximately 1 billion persons worldwide suffer from Vitamin D deficiency. Insufficient Vitamin D affects the immune system and inflammation and is connected to several medical conditions such as rickets in children, weak bones, diabetes, high blood pressure, cancer and autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis.
The source of Vitamin D in humans is threefold:

  1. Skin. Humans synthesise Vitamin D from 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC, provitamin D3) after exposure to sunlight, specifically ultraviolet B or UVB radiation emitted by the sun. Over-exposure to sunlight, however, can cause skin cancer for which reason people wear protective clothing and use sunscreens and this in turn can result in Vitamin D insufficiency. Vitamin D synthesis also decreases with age and therefore affects the elderly.
  1. Foods such as fatty fish (e.g., salmon, tuna or mackerel), beef liver, dairy products (cheese, milk), mushrooms and egg yolks. With few exceptions, plants and vegetables are a very poor source of Vitamin D and this puts vegans in particular at risk of suffering from Vitamin D insufficiency.
  1. Supplements. Several companies sell Vitamin D supplements to compensate for its deficiency in humans. Vitamin D sales attained $1.1 billion in 2020 and are expected to reach $1.6 billion in 2025.


All this could change after scientists have found a way of boosting the presence of provitamin B3 in tomatoes through gene-editing using CRISPR-Cas9 technology.
Genetically modified crops are made by inserting extraneous genes into the genomes of the plants and thereby make them e.g. resistant to damage or destruction by insects or viruses and so on. Crops thus modified using extraneous genes are submitted to intense scrutiny by government regulators though in recent times the rules have been relaxed somewhat and approval is granted if the editing is relatively simple and the mutations could have occurred naturally as for example in the case of the sweet potato.
Although some plants do produce isoforms of the precursors of Vitamin D, these are subsequently converted to chemicals that regulate the plant’s growth and altering these chemicals make the plants stunted and yields decrease substantially.
7-DHC or provitamin D3 has been identified in tomato leaves but it does not accumulate in the tomato fruit. In an article published recently, scientists working on this project (Li, J., Scarano, A., Gonzalez, N.M. et al. Biofortified tomatoes provide a new route to vitamin D sufficiency) discovered that solanaceous plants such as tomato exhibit a duplicate pathway by which specific isoforms of some enzymes responsible for the biosynthesis of phytosterol and brassinosteroid produce cholesterol for the formation of steroidal glykoalkoloid SGA. A specific form of 7-DHC reductase Sl7-DR2 then converts 7-DHC to cholesterol. The researchers turned off the activity of 
Sl7-DR2 using CRISPR-Cas9 technology, leading to an accumulation of 7-DHC in the tomato fruit. They also found that this procedure does not affect the growth, development or yield of the plant.
The next step will be to obtain regulatory approval to grow the gene-edited tomato plants outside the laboratory and test how they fare in this environment. If they perform well in field studies, they will still have to face the scrutiny of the regulatory authorities before they can be cultivated on a large scale. Keeping in mind that no extraneous genes are introduced into the tomato plant genome in the technique used and the gene-editing performed by the researchers could have occurred naturally, regulatory approvals should in theory be less stringent. But it could be years before the general public can switch from Vitamin D supplements to the gene-edited tomatoes.


Sources:

  • Li, J. et al. Nature Plants https://doi.org/10.1038/s41477-022-01154-6 (2022).
  • doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-022-01443-2
  • https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-01443-2?utm_source=Nature+Briefing&utm_campaign=9784ac12ed-briefing-dy-20220524&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_c9dfd39373-9784ac12ed-47096220

Monday 18 April 2022

Paperback of The Denaming of Goans now available in India

Availability in India of

The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa

in paperback format


I am pleased to inform you that readers in India can now order this book in paperback format from Pothi.com:


https://store.pothi.com/search/?q=The+Denaming+of+Goans&sort_by=relevancy


Thank you for your interest and patience.

Monday 11 April 2022

FOREVER YOUNG

 FOREVER YOUNG


     Alzheimer Dementia (AD), Parkinson, many forms of cancer and cardiovascular diseases are primarily age related; the older we grow, the greater the probability that we will be afflicted by one of these diseases. Even though science has discovered many novel approaches to deal with cancer and have successfully extended the lives of many cancer patients, progress in finding a cure for AD or Parkinson and many forms of cancer has been limited. 

     Scientists have, however, been working on finding ways and means to slow down, or even halt or reverse the ageing process, thereby not only extending life but keeping the diseases attributed to the ageing process at bay and making these additional years of life disease free and therefore enjoyable. If the ageing process could be delayed or even reversed, the age-related diseases would not strike the elderly.


     In a fascinating and very readable book entitled “The Melatonin Miracle, Nature's Age-Reversing, Disease-Fighting, Sex-Enhancing Hormone”, authors Walter Pierpaoli and William Regelson proposed that Melatonin can do precisely that: slow down senescence, extend life and keep people healthy even in old age. The two doctors based their statements on extensive experiments on mice and rats and even claim in their book that by administering melatonin, they could reverse the early onset of Parkinson’s disease in a patient. They further attribute to melatonin the role of the conductor of an orchestra that coordinates the functioning of all other hormones in our bodies.

     Melatonin is a hormone produced and released primarily by the Pineal Gland. The production is connected to time of day, increasing when it is dark and decreasing when it is light. It helps with the timing of our circadian rhythm (24-hour internal clock) and is administered to individuals suffering from sleep disorders or jet lag. It has shown positive results in clinical trials on patients with cancer and is used in chemotherapy for cancer patients; as a powerful antioxidant, the hormone appears to protect the mitochondria of the cells that could be affected during chemotherapy. Many doctors prescribe melatonin to patients afflicted by Parkinson’s disease.

     Melatonin production decreases with age and Pierpaoli and Regelson suggest that it is this decrease that is responsible for senescence and the onset of age-related diseases. The authors were, however,  clearly carried away by their enthusiasm because even though many of the benefits of melatonin are undisputed and its role is greater that only regulating the circadian clock, an overarching role in regulating all the hormones in our body is improbable. Besides, the authors have not taken the role of genetics and gene mutations in the ageing process into consideration. Which brings us to the next topic.


     It is already well established that many diseases such as cancer and Alzheimer’s are the result of undesired genetic mutations. The probability of these mutations grows exponentially as we grow older bringing with them the dreaded age-related diseases mentioned above.

     In a landmark study published in April 2022 by scientists of the UK Dementia Research Institute at Cardiff University in Nature Genetics, 42 previously unknown AD-related genes have been discovered, adding to the 33 which were already known. Through these 75 genes associated with AD, the scientists have found new pathways that lead to Alzheimer, one of them associated interestingly with inflammation that is in turn associated with many other diseases. One protein associated with AD that the authors singled out is tumour necrosis factor alpha or TNF that is also involved in many autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid and psoriatic arthritis, Crohn’s disease and type 1 diabetes. The study seems to suggest, therefore, that neurodegenerative diseases may all have a common cause even though it is well known that there are different pathways that lead to Alzheimer’s because the disease “presents differently and progresses differently in different people” as Dr. Richard Isaacson, director of the Alzheimer’s Prevention Clinic in the Center of Brain Health at Florida Atlantic University’s Schmidt College of Medicine puts it. According to the authors, 60-80% of Alzheimer disease risk is based on our genetics, the remaining 20-40% risks can be attributed to lifestyle habits such as smoking, lack of exercise or a poor diet. The question arises as to what exactly causes one or more of the 75 identified genes to mutate in such a way that they trigger Alzheimer’s, Parkinson or other neurodegenerative diseases attributed to ageing.


    The answer to that question is: Epigenetics. On 27 October 2021, I posted on this blog an article on EPIGENETICS and it would provide a  better understanding of what follows next. Epigenomes are chemical compounds that modify, or mark, the genome in a way that tells it what to do, where to do it, and when to do it. Different cells have different epigenetic marks. In other words, epigenomes turn a gene on or off like a switch.

     In the year 2020, Professor Vittorio Sebastiano and his team from the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA published a breakthrough discovery that could reverse the ageing process by introducing mRNA with instructions to repair mutated epigenomes and thus reverse the undesirable changes that had been caused to the cells. The authors introduce their paper as follows:


“Aging is characterized by a gradual loss of function occurring at the molecular, cellular, tissue and organismal levels. At the chromatin level, aging associates with progressive accumulation of epigenetic errors that eventually lead to aberrant gene regulation, stem cell exhaustion, senescence, and deregulated cell/tissue homeostasis. Nuclear reprogramming to pluripotency can revert both the age and the identity of any cell to that of an embryonic cell. Recent evidence shows that transient reprogramming can ameliorate age-associated hallmarks and extend lifespan in progeroid mice. However, it is unknown how this form of rejuvenation would apply to naturally aged human cells. Here we show that transient expression of nuclear reprogramming factors, mediated by expression of mRNAs, promotes a rapid and broad amelioration of cellular aging, including resetting of epigenetic clock, reduction of the inflammatory profile in chondrocytes, and restoration of youthful regenerative response to aged, human muscle stem cells, in each case without abolishing cellular identity.”

     Sebastiano’s process using mRNA functions not only at the level of the cell but also at that of tissue.


     A spin-off of Stanford University, Turn Biotechnoligies or turn.bio, located in Mountain View, Silicon Valley where professor Vittorio Sebastiano is co-founder and Scientific Advisory Board Chairman is pursuing research in this exciting area. The company describes its brief as follows:


Turn Biotechnologies develops mRNA medicines that induce the body to heal itself by instructing specific cells to fight disease or repair damaged tissue. We are focused on reprogramming the epigenome – a network of chemical compounds and proteins that control cell functions by influencing which genes are active – to restore capabilities that are often lost with age.”


     The start-up has already succeeded in repairing and rejuvenating human skin, muscle and blood cells in the laboratory. Clinical studies with volunteers are expected to initiate within the next two years. The interest is so great that the company has had to place people on waiting lists.

     There are, however, justified concerns regarding this therapeutic approach. A study conducted on mice in 2013 showed that if this therapy is prolonged for too long or is too intensive, it can lead to cancer. This is not surprising since cancer is an uncontrolled multiplication of cells that invades the whole body and turning on a gene without it being subsequently turned off will make cell multiplication uncontrollable. The challenge for turn.bio is thus to ensure that this does not occur by finding the correct dosage.

     The start-up is working at the present time on a more modest project: skin therapy that would rejuvenate the skin, accelerate healing of wounds in the elderly and restore the original colour of grey hair. The choice of skin as the first organ on which to focus epigenetic clinical trials is deliberate because it can be easily minutely observed and scrutinised unlike internal organs such as a liver or a heart.


     Yet another approach that is being tried out is blood plasma therapy. Alkahest, another Stanford spin-off, has been administering blood plasma infusions of young and healthy donors to patients inflicted with Alzheimer’s disease and the results are promising.


     The rejuvenation of human cells and tissues will not make humans eternal but it could extend life to 120 or 150 years and above all, make these additional years free of dreaded diseases such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson, cancer or other neurodegenerative diseases and therefore make the additional years worth living.


Sources:

  1. Walter Pierpaoli & William Regelson, The Melatonin Miracle, Pocket Books 1996, ISBN 978-1-4516-1312-4
  2. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-022-01024-z
  3. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-15174-3
  4. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15174-3
  5. https://www.turn.bio/about
  6. Gioa da Silva, Neue ZĂĽrcher Zeitung, “Im Silikon Valley arbeiten Forschende daran, das Altern rĂĽckgängig zu machen.Bei Mäusen funktioniert das schon. Nun werden Studien mit Menschen durchgefĂĽhrt”. NZZ, 02.04.2022, https://www.nzz.ch/wissenschaft/im-silicon-valley-arbeiten-forschende-daran-das-altern-rueckgaengig-zu-machen-bei-maeusen-funktioniert-das-schon-nun-werden-studien-mit-menschen-durchgefuehrt-ld.1665387?mktcid=smsh&mktcval=E-mail

Wednesday 23 March 2022

Autopsy Report on the body of St. Francis Xavier performed in June 1951

This report can be found in ANNEX II of "The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa".
The autopsy was performed by Dr. Antonio Luis de Sousa Sobrinho, Director of the Services of Health and Hygiene and Professor Dr. JoĂŁo Manuel Pacheco de Figueiredo, Director of the Medical and Surgical School of Goa.

ANNEX 2: Autopsy report

Document of the Exam of the Venerable Body of St. Francis Xavier. (Confidential). On the 23rd of June 1951, at 8:30, upon the invitation of His Excellency Reverend Patriarch of the Indies, D. José da Costa Nunes, in the Sacristy of the Basilica of the Bom Jesus, the doctors Antonio Luis de Sousa Sobrinho, Director of the Services of Health and Hygiene of the Estado da Índia, and João Manuel Pacheco de Figueiredo, Director of the Medical and Surgical School of Goa, met in order to proceed to examine the venerable Body of St. Francis Xavier that was closed inside the coffin of wood arranged on a table. The seals were broken and the coffin was opened by His Excellency Reverend the Patriarch, His Excellency in Charge of General Government, Dr. Manuel Marques de Abrantes Amaral and His Excellency the Reverend Archbishop Coadjutor (Assistant) D. José Vieira Alvernaz, Archbishop of Anazartha, being present also the Reverend Canon Aires Franklin de Sa, Administrator of the Basilica, who observed that the Body of the Saint was found dressed in his sacerdotal vestments with the head flexed towards the thorax and the left forearm and hand with its fingers half flexed, resting transversally across the chest. The objective of the exam was directed in first place to those accessible regions, that is, those not covered by the vestments, like the head, left hand, and the feet.


HEAD: The occipital and parietal left sides are denuded [bare] but
perfectly conserved. The parietal and frontal sides present themselves dressed in dry withered skin with some signs of destruction on them and there are seen a few rare hairs attached to the body by skin, where they appear to be encrusted. The side presents a perforation underneath the right arch. The prominence of the molar regions and that of the ocular globes is conserved, being able to distinguish the eyelids of the right eye. The small nose is well conserved, being the right nasal bone dislocated backwards and the earlobe of the same side a little worn out. The orifices of the nasal passages are visible. The relief of the mouth is conserved, the lips half open, with the musculature and skin in the direction of destruction, leaving to see the distinctiveness of the inferior incisors, small and regular, being the second left one dislocated backwards. Rare hairs of the beard on the left side being, like on the head, attached with skin to the body. The right ear is conserved. The outer lobe of the right ear doesn’t exist, noting in the temporal maxillary region, of the same side, in consequence of the destruction of skin, three large orifices, one of which the major one, corresponds to the location of the implantation of the outer lobe. Across these orifices are clearly visible the bones.


LEFT HAND: Resting with palm side on the chest, with the fingers half-flexed, muscular substances and conserved skin. Dorsal side: some flexible tendons are distinguishable, being most clear and prominent at the extension of the index finger. Only the thumb finger has a nail.


Palm Side: some flexible tendons are clearly distinguishable, with little flexibility of the veins.


LEFT FOOT: Dorsal side. Conserved masses of muscles, the tendons distinctive and the skin withered. The first and fifth toes are complete and with nails; absent are the digital bones on the second toe; the third toe is reduced to a plain morsel of cutaneous (pertaining to the skin) place; it is missing the bones and the fourth toe doesn’t have skin on the dorsal side. The sole of the foot is very well conserved, as well as the muscular masses that cover the heel that is on the path of destruction.


RIGHT FOOT: Of reformed aspect and in forced extension . The heel is dislocated inside. It does not have the last four toes. By the opening, the result is that they don’t exist, the insteps are visible, the muscle masses conserved, minus the posterior part which is destroyed in part and with faded skin. Some tendons are distinguishable, the big toe is prominent and without a nail. The major part of the skin of the sole is conserved.


Accordingly, by determination of His Excellency, the Reverend Patriarch, the vestments that covered the anterior part of the body were removed and he observed:

  1. The head was disarticulated, completely free resting on a pillow cushion and the cranial cavity empty.
  2. The left hand is articulated (joined) with the two bones of the forearm, maintaining the wholeness and articulation of the wrist. The bones of the forearm are losing their covered skin, of which was noted the third inferior, with small pieces of destruction.
  3. Maintained whole is the tibia joint of both sides of the inferior members, like on the forearm, the bones — tibia and fibula — on both sides, are covered in skin, with zones of destruction, only on the third inferior.
  4. The left tibia and fibula, in the superior extremity, are still conserved.
  5. The two femurs, have regressed to some small pieces of skin, and the kneecaps are jointed with the bones of the leg for half the length.
  6. Deposited in the central part of the coffin we found the following bones: a bone of the sternum, two clavicle bones, the left omoplate, the humer, 2 fragments of the ribs, 21 vertebrae (4 cervical, 12 dorsal, and 5 lombar) the sacrum, and the two ilialic bones with only 5 lumbar vertebra and the last dorsal jointed.
  7. Various discoloured pieces of skin, of which 5 were large, seeing clearly that the major was of the buttocks region. In order to reconstitute the skeleton, all the existing portions and those already mentioned were collected in order on a table, being for this end to arrange a wire in the vertebrae cavities to connect them. Reconstituting the skeleton by juxtaposing the bones, it was observed that the Body of the Saint, measured from the extremity of the first toe of the left foot to the top of the head, was 171 centimetres in length, and 162 centimetres when measured from head to the heel. Finally, all the parts of the Body, in appropriate order, but not jointed, and the 5 pieces of skin, were placed in the coffin and covered by the vestments that had been removed by reason of the exam. We declare that the Body doesn’t present any sign of putrefaction, nor of a bad smell. In the duration of the exam, several photographs were taken by J.P. Guerra.


From this exam, the minutes of this present act are drawn that is signed by us. Old Goa, Basilica of Bom Jesus, on the 23rd of June 1951. Signed: Antonio Luis de Souza Sobrinho, João Manuel Pacheco de Figueiredo and José Vieira Alvernaz, Archbishop of Anarta



Thursday 17 March 2022

The Last Prabhu reviewed in The Navhind Times

The last Prabhu: A story from Aldona

https://www.navhindtimes.in/2020/04/21/magazines/buzz/the-last-prabhu-a-story-from-aldona/

Monday 31 January 2022

Pdf file of Frederick Noronha's review of The Denaming of Goans

Some readers have requested me to post the extensive review rather than just the link. I have copy/pasted the document and generated a pdf file that is posted below:


So, what were conversions all about?

By NT Desk - 2022-01-30 0 82


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Frederick Noronha

Religious conversions have become a hot issue of discussion in today’s political discourse. This is because different religions take diverse approaches to it (from open conversions to embrace-and-extend kind of conversions). Besides, proselytising of some kinds are seen as unacceptable in South Asia.

In this context, a just-released book called ‘The Denaming of Goans: Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa’ that discusses contentious topics, comes at a critical juncture and is likely to rustle more than a few feathers.

Its author, Bernardo Elvino de Sousa (77), traces his roots to the village of Aldona but is based in Switzerland. His training is in Chemistry but he writes with passion about History. This is like another expat Goan, the US-based Themistocles D’Silva, who has written a couple of books on the history of the tiny yet colourful village of Arossim in the Mormugao taluka. (Sousa has a PhD in organic photochemistry and spent a lifetime working for giants like Ciba-Geigy.)

Like the proverbial glass which is half-full or half-empty, one can read this book any which way. Depending on our own biases, it is possible to come to very conflicting conclusions about its contents.

‘The Denaming of Goans: Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa’ consists of fifteen chapters. All, except Chapters 1, 13, 14, and 15 are case studies of different experiences in changing one’s religion or having it changed. Sousa goes in depth into the issue, sometimes basing his conclusions on the writings of other authors.

It is interesting how simply emphasising another set of writers can totally alter one’s perspective. It has been said: What you see depends on where you stand.

Unlike many scholars who have focussed on this topic earlier, Sousa chooses a wider range of authors, and his location in Western Europe obviously makes this easier for him to do. Unlike some books which shaped and heated the Goa debate intensely (Priolkar’s ‘Goa Inquisition’, Gomes Pereira’s ‘The Hindu Temples of Goa’), this one might be a bit more complex to use to score political points and build campaigns over. Simply because it reminds us that life is far more complex than we’d like to believe.

One gets a hint of what is to come from the introduction of the book itself.

Sousa notes that religious conversions in those times meant complete and all-encompassing change. It changed identities, names, culture, deities, rituals, places of worship, eating habits, restrictions and taboos, the musical instruments one used, clothing, and “even hairstyles”.

Yet, he hints, nobody “except a wet baby” likes change. The clue to why this nonetheless happened perhaps lies in understanding the WIIFM (or, the What’s In It For Me) question.

Sousa writes: “Why did the son of my ancestor Ramu Prabhu belonging to the fourth vangad of Aldona’s comunidade convert and take the name of Agostinho Sousa? Why did the Hindus generally speaking accept to convert: was it due to bribery, threats or torture as Priolkar suggests, or other forms of duress? Or, for the poorer sections of society, was it a means of escape from brahmanical subservience? And why did people belonging to the higher castes of Brahmins and Chardos convert? Were there win-win situations where the converts stood to benefit from a change in religion? Or for all these reasons and more? In short, what was in it for them?”

He elaborates the stories from those times through case studies.

But he also cautions the reader to consider each case on its own merit. Sousa clearly mentions: “No claim is made that these cases cover all possible causes but I am confident that they should encompass those that led to at least a majority of the conversions.”

From there, Sousa looks at the diverse stories of changes of faiths. The first converts of Goa, he points out, were the Muslim widows forcibly married to Portuguese men in the early stages of their rule here. He calls this “Albuquerque’s failed experiment with interracial marriages”.

Interesting, this side of the story seldom if ever features in the current discourse. Obviously, this is mainly because it doesn’t fit into the political narrative sought to be built on the back of a selective reading of history.

From there, Sousa studies the conversion of a prominent local leader in Chorao. He presents a story of how alien rule offered him opportunity in times of adversity. Financial pressures in the life of Loco Sinai (who became Lucas de Sa) coming from entirely different quarters were warded off through a strategic switch of religion.

A case of a group’s return to Aldona and the conversion of a rajah of the Malabar Coast are also focused on. Sousa calls the conversions of the gaunkars of Carambolim “a pragmatic decision of convenience”. In another case, he sees it as stories of “espionage and betrayal” or even slaves paying the price for the freedom. The exploitation of children, racism of the European clergy, and betrayals are among the other issues tackled.

Goa has been rather polarised in its approaches towards its past. In the pre-1961 era, everything (or almost) was written from a pro-Portuguese perspective. Today, the boot is on the other foot. If one reads the works influenced by colonial, anti-monarchial, religious, anti-clerical, Free Masonic, and radical perspectives, you would almost feel as if you’re reading perspectives on many different places. Not the same region.

Rowena Robinson, an earlier researcher in the field, has quoted the many reasons for which people opted to change their religion, as given by different authors. These range from the voluntary (Heras, D’Costa), to material rewards combined with threats of violence and torture (Priolkar, RP Rao, Rui Gomes Pereira), the Inquisition (Priolkar), and a choice between “the cross and the sword” (BG D’Souza).

Boxer pointed to the “carrot and stick”, Pearson suggested that Portuguese rules were tempered by political realities (religious intolerance in Diu was reduced as the Portuguese feared the influential trading caste of the vanias or banias would leave, bringing commerce to a standstill). Diffie and Winius argue that the goal was military rather than commercial.

Late historian Teotonio R de Souza has contended meanwhile that village-life centred around the temple and “every activity was initiated and concluded with offerings to family and village deities” thus “conversions altered social life in significant ways”.

This book, for some time available on Amazon only as an ebook in our parts of the globe, makes the debate more accessible. It opens up more inaccessible earlier studies and connects the same in interesting ways. In doing so, it carries with it the risk of repeating some of the biases of the past. Or even some coming up from us ourselves.

For instance, writers from Goa and beyond seem outraged by the attitudes of figures from the past (including Francis Xavier) whether on race or their faith. But, as this book’s subtitle reminds us, if some such attitudes seemed Medieval… it’s because they were Medieval!

What’s nice about this brief book is its ability to weave history into a story. But how our politics and academia will see and interpret this is anyone’s guess.

Sunday 30 January 2022

Frederick Noronha's review of The Denaming of Goans in The Navhind Times of 30.01.2022

 Here is the link to Frederick Noronha's review in The Navhind Times of 30th January 2022  of my book "The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa":

https://epaper.navhindtimes.in/NewsDetail.aspx?storyid=73052&date=2022-01-30&pageid=1

Wednesday 26 January 2022

Paperback format of THE DENAMING OF GOANS, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa

I am happy to announce to readers in India that paperback copies of The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa will be available from the Book Depository bookstore in about six weeks from today and can be ordered online:

https://www.bookdepository.com/

Book Depository distributes books worldwide including to India and delivery is free.

Paperbacks of my title THE LAST PRABHU, A Hunt for Roots: DNA, Ancient Documents and Migration in Goa can be ordered by readers in India as of now from Book Depository also with free delivery.

Both the books are available on amazon.com in paperback and Kindle eBook formats but please keep in mind that Amazon does not supply paperbacks to India, only Kindle eBooks. 

THE LAST PRABHU in paperback format can also be ordered by readers in India from pothi.com

Friday 21 January 2022

Prof. Dr. Sandra Fonseca on The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa

Bernardo Elvino de Sousa’s book, “The denaming of Goans: Case studies of conversions in medieval Goa” is a fascinating, masterful, factual rendering of historical events that unfolded as a result of the Portuguese colonization, conversion and conquest of the island of Goa. Using case studies of key individuals and tipping points, de Sousa provides a window into the lives and identities of the people of Goa, which were significantly disrupted and altered forever. Faced with conversions, the book presents the complexity and paradox of resistance and relenting, loss and gain, and the gut-wrenching choices that people made to protect lives and livelihoods. It is an in-depth analysis that lays out differing perceptions and bare facts that makes the reader think. An eye-opening account that is a must read for anyone interested in history, sociology, religious and political studies.

Friday 14 January 2022

The Denaming of Goans. Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa.

It gives me great pleasure to inform you that my book The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa has now been published and can be ordered in both Kindle eBook as well as paperback formats from the Amazon.com store (ISBN: 9798783449109). Only the Kindle eBook is available in India. I am working on a solution to also make the paperback format available in India.

The Denaming of Goans, Case Studies of Conversions in Medieval Goa discusses how and why Hindus of Medieval Goa converted to Christianity and lost their Hindu names in the process. You will learn if it was bribery, threats, torture, the Inquisition or other forms of duress that led to their conversion. Or if there were situations where the converted stood to benefit as much as the converters.

The role of the co-founder of the Jesuits and Patron saint of Goa, Francis Xavier, as well as the incorruptibility of his body and the autopsy report are analysed.

Using case studies, the book presents the varied approaches, strategies and stratagems adopted by the Ecclesiastical fraternity, the Jesuits foremost among them, to further their proselytising mission. The case studies describe how individual villages, royalty, heads of guilds (muqqadams), orphans and slaves as well as people in general were converted. And how once converted, the new Christians were discouraged and prevented from reverting to the Hindu religion.

The reader will also discover how Goans betrayed fellow Goans thereby aiding the Christian Ecclesiastics in their conversion drive.

The reader will learn about the role that the Konkani language played in the conversion of Hindus of medieval Goa.


Questions or comments may be addressed to me on this blog: thelastprabhu.blogspot.com



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