More Matata-Love after the Mau Mau

Matata Books

Braz Menezes is a British Commonwealth Scholar who studied Creative Writing at George Brown College and attended the mentorship program at Humber College in Toronto. He started writing after a full career in architecture and urban development. His work has previously appeared in various anthologies including Canadian Voices, Volumes 1&2; Goa Masala; Indian Voices; and Canadian Imprints. His debut novel Just Matata: Sin, Saints and Settlers was released in 2011, followed by More Matata: Love after the Mau Mau. Kenya-born Braz Menezes, now a Canadian lives in Toronto, and is currently working on the third Matata book to complete his trilogy.

Impetus for writing the trilogy

Authors like Indo-Canadian M G Vassanji have brilliantly covered much of the Asian experience in East Africa. But Goa, now a part of the cultural mosaic of Indian Union for over 50 years, has been sadly neglected. During the occupation by Portugal for over 450 years, it imposed its religion and culture on the people creating a distinct blend of Indo-Portuguese.

Early in the 20th century, the rulers of British East Africa were desperate for administrators and accountants; bartenders and bakers; cooks and clerks; musicians and mechanics; engineers and tailors; doctors and doormats.

The people of Goa fit the bill perfectly and they created no matata (trouble). They spoke English, wore western attire and drank Scotch whisky. They played card games and cricket. Although they gyrated to the mando and dulpod, they also danced the lancers, the waltz and the foxtrot. They were Catholics and were considered reliable to handle the public purse strings. They stayed with their faith and never strayed into politics. They did what they were told and were always loyal and docile. Above all, when compared to the cost of British labour, they could be had cheap — very cheap indeed. They flocked to East Africa by the hundreds.

When I sat back to reflect and digest the facts, I decided their story needed to be told: how a small community from Goa, played an inordinately important and quiet role in the administration and the services economy of British East Africa. When it was time to leave Kenya, many went. Others stayed behind in the land they loved. In previous novels by European authors, especially those set in Kenya, the Goans were merely minor “props and shadows” in other people’s stories.

That is how the Matata Trilogy was born.

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