One reaches Angela Govindraj바카라s small flat after a dark climb where every landing has a window to bring in sunlight. The tiny kitchen바카라unsuitable for a single person to even work around바카라cannot defeat her spirit of feeding people. It is said that nobody goes empty stomach from here.
Angela, 59, lives in one of the seven blocks of Bow Barracks바카라a locality in Kolkata that is a small hub of mainly Anglo-Indians who have lived here for generations. She is the secretary of the Bow Barracks Residential Welfare Association (BBRWA). It바카라s a Saturday evening. While preparing brinjal pork, Angela talks about the Anglo-Indians living here.
Bow Barracks is distinctive. The red-bricked, three-storied buildings with green windows and small balconies, the rectangular structures and the inter-connecting lanes, take one to a different world. The cosmopolitan status of Bow Barracks is quite obvious when one comes across a gathering of three바카라a Chinese, a Bengali and a Tamil Christian바카라gossiping at the entry of the locality.
바카라Who are Anglo-Indians here? We are cosmopolitan. I am a Chinese descendant, she is a Bengali바카라we all are part of Bow Barracks,바카라 says Jason in his late 30s whose grandparents came here around the 1940s. 바카라You can find only 2-3 original Anglo-Indian families. The rest don바카라t have authentic roots. People with the surname Gomes have Portuguese ancestry. You can바카라t call them Anglo-Indians,바카라 he adds.
바카라I married a South Indian Christian and spent my whole life here. I am not an Anglo-Indian,바카라 the Bengali woman intervenes. Then, where are the Anglo-Indians in Bow Barracks? Peeping from the balcony, an octogenarian, whom the locals 바카라sarcastically바카라 call 바카라Sri Lankan바카라바카라perhaps for his skin colour바카라says: 바카라There are hardly any left.바카라
However, this perception changes within another hour. Passing through the grotto that holds regular evening prayers for the Christians of Barracks, one reaches the B Block where Angela stays in her one-room flat on the first floor. 바카라More than 50% staying here are Anglo-Indians. Yes, you can say that there are lots of inter-community marriages. I married a Tamil. But still, we are Anglos,바카라 she says. She has spent her whole life in Bow Barracks.
When Barracks Became 바카라Home바카라
바카라My mother used to tell me that the Anglo-Indians in the nearby areas started coming and staying in Bow Barracks when they got to know about it,바카라 says Angela whose family, like others, got the option to choose from single and double-room units.
The Barracks were made by the British during World War I for the American soldiers. But they refused the order and the Barracks laid vacant when it attracted the Anglo-Indian community. Around 132 Anglo-Indian families came to the Barracks and started paying rent to the Calcutta Improvement Trust (CIT) which was set up in 1911 through the Calcutta Improvement Act.
The red-bricked, three-storied buildings with green windows and small balconies take one to a different world. Â
While the age of Bow Barracks is debated, a few people claim it is more than 100 years old and deserves the heritage status. 바카라When I searched for the records of the first baptism in this area, I found that it happened in 1906. The older people claim, prior to that, the place used to be a graveyard!바카라 says Angela.
Her grandmother was a Bengali Christian while her grandfather was an Australian who served in the British Army. But her family has seen several inter-community marriages since then. Her father was Chinese and she herself got married to a Tamil Christian. Angela says one can call her family truly cosmopolitan. During her childhood, besides Anglo-Indians, a Bengali, a Gujarati and a few Chinese families lived here.
Life was vibrant in the Barracks. Every evening one would come across children playing in the lanes, old people sitting on chairs scattered across the streets and groups of people playing music. People were poor, but what they achieved was a community life, says Angela.


While the evening lives are not the same anymore, what they have retained is the sense of solidarity. 바카라Nobody starves in Bow Barracks. If anybody gets to know that her neighbour is starving, she immediately serves her food. This is our tradition,바카라 says Angela.
Why did people leave? Denise O바카라Brien, who is currently the President of the Anglo-Indian Association바카라s Calcutta branch, explains: 바카라They left for better lives. The educated ones started settling down in different parts of the world.바카라
Those who have left still consider Bow Barracks as their home. A few of them call up Angela regularly. They miss Christmas, the celebrations and the joy that the community is habituated to. As a close-knit community, they learned how to help others. Many staying in western countries don바카라t get the sense of 바카라community바카라, and feel like coming back to their homes.
A Celebration of a 바카라Community바카라
Known as 바카라Angela aunty바카라, she has been trying to rebuild the socio-cultural lives and vibrancy of the community that has certainly been lost with the intervention of 바카라social media and excessive usage of mobiles바카라.
The lively experience at her house displayed what she referred to as 바카라community life바카라. Anybody can come here and have food. None needs any formal invitation.
It starts raining. Some kids assemble at the basketball court that 바카라Angela aunty바카라 got made for them in the backyards of the barracks. She wanted the children to have everything within the barracks so that they don바카라t have to go out. The kids play football and basketball.
Bow Barracks has been known for its players for decades.
바카라Our ancestors used to play football and hockey for several big clubs. Now we are taking forward the legacy,바카라 says Milano, 23, who had a brief period of training from Mohun Bagan, a well-known football club in West Bengal.
A few years back, they formed their own team named 바카라Naughty Boys바카라Â which has been winning tournaments across different states.


바카라Recently, we played a football tournament at Jharkhand and we went up to the finals,바카라 says Milano, who works at a call centre.
Is it a lost glory then? Jason, himself a football player, feels nothing is the same anymore.
바카라We don바카라t get much support from the government. We used to produce the best football and hockey players of the country,바카라 he says, lamenting that in recent times nobody could reach such heights.
바카라We Marry Only If We Fall In Love바카라
From the grotto to the one-room flats where one can find the photos of Jesus and Mother Mary, there is an overwhelming presence of Christianity, but marriages in the community are fluid.
바카라We marry only when we fall in love! This is the reason why you find so many inter-community marriages here,바카라 says Angela.
Earlier people only used to marry within the community but nowadays everything is accepted. One just needs to find a partner. People are getting married to Hindus and Muslims as well without any inhibition. One of her own daughters is married to a Hindu and celebrates both religions together.
Fear of Wrongful Depiction
In the barracks people are hardly comfortable speaking about their community lives. 바카라Most don바카라t want to repeat the same history. For 25 years we have been saying the same thing,바카라 says Rodriguez, a resident of Bow Barracks in her late 50s.
바카라There are very poor depictions of our lives. So, why should we speak?바카라 asks the homemaker whose children are well-settled across the globe.
바카라It is just because of the wrong depictions that the community is perceived in bad lights,바카라 says Mark Morass, who was one of the founders of Bow United in 2004. While the rest of the world sees Bow Barracks through the lens of Anjan Dutta바카라s film Bow Barracks Forever, the community is extremely sceptical about it.


바카라We asked him to show the script and he didn바카라t. We couldn바카라t even say much as he was a renowned director,바카라 Morass alleges.
바카라There was another article by a journalist who interviewed Anglo-Indians from other parts of the city and had put it as of Bow Barracks. He showed poverty, talked about cabaret dancers, and so on. But that is not our life,바카라 says another resident.
Despite all this, residents have welcomed people with open hearts.
바카라When football or hockey matches are organised, anybody can go and find a space in the balcony to watch these,바카라 Denise O바카라Brien recalls the warmth she receives whenever she goes to the Barracks.
Around 25 years ago, the residents were told to leave as it was considered risky to stay in these buildings. They submitted a letter saying they would live at their own risk. The Mamata Banerjee government has promised that the flats would be officially handed over to the residents. Many of them are hopeful that they will be paying legal rent soon for their houses. As we were about to leave, Angela starts planning her next day. She would be distributing food among the homeless old people. Yes, nobody starves in Bow Barracks.