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Goa Mourns Death Of Hippie Godfather 'Eight Finger Eddie'

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  • Goa Mourns Death Of Hippie Godfather 'Eight Finger Eddie'

    GOA MOURNS DEATH OF HIPPIE GODFATHER 'EIGHT FINGER EDDIE'

    Agence France Presse
    October 26, 2010 Tuesday 2:55 PM GMT

    An ageing American hippie known as "Eight Finger Eddie" who was famous
    across India's resort state of Goa as a relic of its drug-fuelled,
    drop-out culture of the 1960s has died.

    The 85-year-old, whose real name was Yertward Mazamanian, died in
    the former Portuguese colony after a long illness on October 18,
    according to online tribute web sites.

    His cremation was streamed live on the user-generated content site
    www.blogtv.com. The video showed his body covered in flowers and
    burning incense sticks, next to a black and white photograph of him
    from the early 1970s.

    One post on a Facebook site tribute page read: "He more than anyone
    put Goa on the Map". Others called him "the original freak".

    "Anjuna Beach has lost its Goa Hippy Tribe father!" said another. "All
    of us over the decades who have shared precious moments with Eddie
    will miss his smile, his energy, his love for Life and Dance."

    "Eight Finger Eddie" was a US expat of Armenian heritage who came to
    Anjuna Beach in 1965 at the age of 40 and never left.

    The secluded sands of north Goa became the sun-kissed final destination
    for the beatniks and drop-outs on the Hippie Trail from Western Europe
    to Asia.

    With a culture based on drugs, free love and music, the hippies
    found the beach a haven but it has since become overcrowded, with a
    reputation for drug- and alcohol-fuelled excess and crime, as foreign
    tourism has increased.

    Eddie began the popular Anjuna flea market in 1975, originally as a
    place for tourists to sell or exchange their belongings.

    The open-air bazaar still exists but is mainly a place for tie-dyed
    clothing, ornaments and sometimes stolen goods.

    He also ran a soup kitchen for foreign visitors who had lost their way,
    money -- or occasionally their minds.




    From: A. Papazian
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