Colva, a picturesque South Goa village is well
known for the crystal white sands of Colva beach. However much before the
Colva beach became a tourist destination, the village was known far and wide
for the centuries old 'Fama' or the feast of Menino Jesus (Infant Jesus)
celebrated traditionally with pomp and solemnity at the Our Lady of Mercy
Church.
Colva is the only place in Goa where the celebrations on
the feast day are on a smaller scale when compared to the festive atmosphere
on the Fama day - the day meant to announce the start of the novenas that
lead to the feast day and blessing of the symbolic 'maddi' that is erected
in front of the church.
According to local legend, the statue of
Menino Jesus was found off the coast of Mozambique in the 17th century by
some shipwrecked sailors led by Fr. Bento Ferreira, a Jesuit missionary. Fr
Bento was later posted to Colva in 1668. He had a special altar built and
had the statue grandly enthroned on it.
A few years later, the
annual Fama began. The statue was kept for public veneration during the Fama
as huge crowds turned to seek its blessings. However due to political
upheavals in Portugal, the religious orders in Goa were suppressed forcing
the Jesuits to flee to the Rachol Seminary, carrying along with them the
statue.
The Colva villagers tried to get back the statue but to no
avail. Finally they decided to make a replica of the original. Their only
possession a golden ring, believed to have been found after it slipped off
the original statue, was mounted on the new statue. The devotion was thus
restarted.
Today, this statue is securely concealed in a triple
locked vault. Celebrated annually on the second Monday of October, the Colva
Fama has continued to draw crowds from all over the world.
On the
day of the Fama all roads leading to Colva are packed with devotees in all
their traditional finery. They start walking towards the church from as
early as 5 a.m.
There is a concelebrated High Mass at 6 a.m.. The
altar which houses the miraculous statue of the Infant Jesus remains locked
with a shutter, on which an image of the Infant Jesus is nicely painted,
pulled down over it. The crown, flag, shoes and ornaments of the statue are
all made of gold and the robe inlaid with gold and precious stones.
statue
after unlocking the shutter. The statue is then brought down from its silver
pedestal and handed over to the main celebrating Priest who carries it in a
procession around the church.
The statue is then taken to the main
altar and all the finery removed and then cleansed and a white robe is
draped over it. The patiently waiting faithful are then allowed to kiss the
statue.
Donations in the form of cash and kind - even gold -
candles and wax models of different parts of the human anatomy pour in
throughout the day as presented by the devotees. The masses continue through
the day in the Church courtyard.