The desecration of religious symbols, however, has added to the growing sense of unease among the people, exacerbated by comments like the one made by Sadhvi Saraswati from Madhya Pradesh, who in 2017 during an all India Hindu convention in Goa, who claimed that beef eaters—nearly a third of the state’s population, and comprising of minority communities—should be “hanged in public”. The BJP appears to be exploiting the battle of religious optics. While restoration of temples is one such example, Chief Minister Pramod Sawant unveiled what is being claimed as the country’s biggest statue of Shivaji, at Chicalim near Vasco da Gama. In another speech the same day, Sawant said: “Shivaji Maharaj ruled Goa too. Many have tried to erase this part of history. The Portuguese ruled Goa (only) for 450 years, that too only in a few talukas.” The CM is not entirely off the mark. The Portuguese sway over Goa did not last half-a-millennium as is generally perceived. Quite like the BJP dispensations that ruled Goa over the last two terms, which were packed with turncoat leaders from the Congress.