Goa Statehood Day Comes Alive at Galgotias University with Cultural Showcase of Music, Theatre, and Heritage
Galgotias University celebrated Goa Statehood Day with a vibrant cultural programme featuring music, dance, theatre, and a documentary on Goa’s history and heritage. Students showcased Goan traditions, Portuguese influences, and artistic narratives through performances, creating an immersive cultural experience that highlighted Goa’s rich identity and historical evolution.
The celebration resonated with the sounds of guitars, Konkani musical rhythms, theatrical presentations, and continuous applause as students recreated diverse fragments of Goan culture. For a few hours, the campus moved away from its routine academic environment and became a cultural platform showcasing Goa’s music, traditions, stories, and artistic heritage.
Recognised for its distinctive blend of Indian and Portuguese influences, Goa was presented as a unique cultural landscape within India. Its folk traditions, music, architecture, cuisine, coastal communities, festivals, artistic legacy, and layered social history were highlighted as elements of a civilisation shaped by centuries of cultural interaction and exchange.
The event was attended by Mr. Sanjay Kumar Srivastava, former Chief Secretary of Goa, along with his wife. The programme began with a traditional Goan ceremonial welcome known as “Khordu,” introducing audiences to a cultural gesture associated with hospitality and community traditions in Goa.
A major highlight of the celebration was a specially curated documentary produced by the School of Media and Communication Studies at Galgotias University. The film traced Goa’s historical journey through centuries, covering early historical references, Kadamba and Vijayanagara influences, temple traditions, architectural evolution, the Portuguese colonial period, Operation Vijay, and Goa’s eventual statehood. Using archival material, narration, music, and visual storytelling, the documentary presented Goa as more than a tourist destination, portraying it as a region shaped by history, resistance, migration, faith, language, and cultural exchange. The screening received strong appreciation from attendees and became one of the most discussed segments of the event.
The auditorium further came alive through multiple performances by students from the Music Club, Dance Club, and Actors Hub. Inspired by Goan and contemporary cultural themes, these performances included musical renditions such as “Maria Pitache” and “Memories,” alongside choreographed dance sequences and theatrical presentations. The performances infused the venue with rhythm, movement, humour, and audience engagement.
The programme also highlighted extensive student participation behind the scenes. Students contributed to scripting, editing, stage coordination, anchoring, costume design, performances, and documentary production, making the celebration a collaborative cultural exercise in live production and creative expression.
Dr. Dhruv Galgotia, Chief Executive Officer of Galgotias University, reflected on Goa’s cultural significance during the event. He stated, “Goa carries a cultural personality unlike any other part of India. Its music, architecture, churches, temples, food traditions, coastal communities, and social life reflect centuries of cultural exchange and historical evolution. Yet many young people encounter Goa only through popular imagery, while its deeper historical and cultural layers often remain unexplored. Through this celebration, we wanted students to engage with Goa’s history, artistic traditions, stories, and lived culture through performances, visuals, music, and storytelling that could make those experiences feel immediate and tangible on campus.”
The Goa Statehood Day celebration concluded with students and attendees carrying back lasting impressions of performances and music, along with a deeper understanding of Goa’s rich historical evolution, cultural diversity, and artistic traditions.

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