<p>As Lorraine Alberto begins her Portuguese class at Goa University, students from the former colony are in short supply.</p>.<p>Across Goa, once administered by Lisbon, there is little appetite for the territory's 450 years of European heritage after a few short generations of Indian rule.</p>.<p>Ramshackle colonial homes and Bollywood's increasing cultural dominance portend the disappearance of local history in a place where speaking Portuguese was once a passport to status and power.</p>.<p>"My children don't speak it at all," Alberto told <em>AFP</em>. "They just don't see the point of learning it."</p>.<p>Those alive in 1961, when Indian troops marched into Goa and incorporated it into the rest of the country, recall an overnight transformation.</p>.<p>India's exit from the British empire in 1947 spurred many Goans to demand an end to Portuguese rule, but few expected so much to change so quickly.</p>.<p>"It was a very strange feeling... The changes came so fast," said Honorato Velho, a retired school principal.</p>.<p>The 78-year-old once lived next to the grandfather of Antonio Costa, Portugal's current prime minister, and he fondly remembers a childhood peppered with European and local influences.</p>.<p>But his enthusiasm has not been inherited by the next generation.</p>.<p>"My wife and I still speak Portuguese out of habit, but never with our children," Velho told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Across the state, homes influenced by old Portuguese design trends are falling into disrepair or being pulled down to make way for apartment blocks.</p>.<p>The gradual disappearance of covered terraces and mother-of-pearl shell windows -- built to diffuse harsh sunlight -- is not just a loss to architecture, said author Heta Pandit.</p>.<p>"These houses are evidence of Goan history, they are capsules of our culture," she said.</p>.<p>Only a handful of traditional homes have been earmarked for protection from development or destruction, Pandit added.</p>.<p>Some Goans have nonetheless found themselves drawn into a relationship with their heritage, even against their own early inclinations.</p>.<p>At a recent outdoor concert in a coastal village, dozens of people gathered to listen to Goan singer Sonia Shirsat, an accomplished performer of traditional Portuguese fado music.</p>.<p>The 40-year-old specialises in the melancholy, guitar-driven genre, which was born at the turn of the 19th century and was in recent years recognised by UNESCO for its "intangible cultural heritage".</p>.<p>Shirsat paused between songs to patiently explain the meaning behind each track, knowing many in the enraptured audience spoke little if any Portuguese.</p>.<p>It's a role she is well-suited to play, tracing her own journey from a teenager who refused to learn Portuguese to a fado evangelist who is now training others to follow in her footsteps.</p>.<p>"My mother tried to teach me the language, but I just wasn't interested," she told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>That changed when Shirsat met a Portuguese guitarist who told her that her rich, velvety voice was ideal for the genre.</p>.<p>She decided to move to Lisbon for training, becoming the first Indian to stage a solo fado concert there in 2008.</p>.<p>Shirsat has since performed all over the world, sometimes incorporating a cross-cultural element with the use of Indian instruments like the sitar.</p>.<p>All fado songs are infused with a sense of yearning for the past, but in Goa, they also serve as a bridge between two eras.</p>.<p>"Fado doesn't just talk about what is lost, it also talks about what is to come," she said.</p>.<p>"It has lived in Goa for over 100 years. If we don't preserve it, it is as if we are killing a part of ourselves."</p>
<p>As Lorraine Alberto begins her Portuguese class at Goa University, students from the former colony are in short supply.</p>.<p>Across Goa, once administered by Lisbon, there is little appetite for the territory's 450 years of European heritage after a few short generations of Indian rule.</p>.<p>Ramshackle colonial homes and Bollywood's increasing cultural dominance portend the disappearance of local history in a place where speaking Portuguese was once a passport to status and power.</p>.<p>"My children don't speak it at all," Alberto told <em>AFP</em>. "They just don't see the point of learning it."</p>.<p>Those alive in 1961, when Indian troops marched into Goa and incorporated it into the rest of the country, recall an overnight transformation.</p>.<p>India's exit from the British empire in 1947 spurred many Goans to demand an end to Portuguese rule, but few expected so much to change so quickly.</p>.<p>"It was a very strange feeling... The changes came so fast," said Honorato Velho, a retired school principal.</p>.<p>The 78-year-old once lived next to the grandfather of Antonio Costa, Portugal's current prime minister, and he fondly remembers a childhood peppered with European and local influences.</p>.<p>But his enthusiasm has not been inherited by the next generation.</p>.<p>"My wife and I still speak Portuguese out of habit, but never with our children," Velho told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>Across the state, homes influenced by old Portuguese design trends are falling into disrepair or being pulled down to make way for apartment blocks.</p>.<p>The gradual disappearance of covered terraces and mother-of-pearl shell windows -- built to diffuse harsh sunlight -- is not just a loss to architecture, said author Heta Pandit.</p>.<p>"These houses are evidence of Goan history, they are capsules of our culture," she said.</p>.<p>Only a handful of traditional homes have been earmarked for protection from development or destruction, Pandit added.</p>.<p>Some Goans have nonetheless found themselves drawn into a relationship with their heritage, even against their own early inclinations.</p>.<p>At a recent outdoor concert in a coastal village, dozens of people gathered to listen to Goan singer Sonia Shirsat, an accomplished performer of traditional Portuguese fado music.</p>.<p>The 40-year-old specialises in the melancholy, guitar-driven genre, which was born at the turn of the 19th century and was in recent years recognised by UNESCO for its "intangible cultural heritage".</p>.<p>Shirsat paused between songs to patiently explain the meaning behind each track, knowing many in the enraptured audience spoke little if any Portuguese.</p>.<p>It's a role she is well-suited to play, tracing her own journey from a teenager who refused to learn Portuguese to a fado evangelist who is now training others to follow in her footsteps.</p>.<p>"My mother tried to teach me the language, but I just wasn't interested," she told <em>AFP</em>.</p>.<p>That changed when Shirsat met a Portuguese guitarist who told her that her rich, velvety voice was ideal for the genre.</p>.<p>She decided to move to Lisbon for training, becoming the first Indian to stage a solo fado concert there in 2008.</p>.<p>Shirsat has since performed all over the world, sometimes incorporating a cross-cultural element with the use of Indian instruments like the sitar.</p>.<p>All fado songs are infused with a sense of yearning for the past, but in Goa, they also serve as a bridge between two eras.</p>.<p>"Fado doesn't just talk about what is lost, it also talks about what is to come," she said.</p>.<p>"It has lived in Goa for over 100 years. If we don't preserve it, it is as if we are killing a part of ourselves."</p>