[1] In June 1957, he was part of a delegation of 11 Goans chosen for consultation by Prime Minister Nehru.
Others included Armando Menezes and his brother Nicolau Menezes, along with Luis Gracias, J. N. Heredia, Gerald Pereira, Vishwanath Lawande, Pundalik Gaitonde, Rama Hegde, Peter Alvares and Purushottam Kakodkar.
[3] Following his release from jail in the early 1950s, Jorge moved to Bombay and began contributing to T. B. Cunha's Konkani periodical, Azad Goem (transl.
After resigning from AIR in 1970, he began editing and contributing to the Konkani daily newspaper, Uzvadd.
He lamented that both Hindus and Christians in Goa, under the Portuguese rule, wore "Western" clothes manufactured outside of India.
He stated that the Catholic Church in Goa was used by the Portuguese to impose "Western (occidentals) dressing and customs".
Urging Hindus to turn back to their culture, he said,[5] To the Hindus of Goa who, perhaps carried by a supposed superiority [of the European], leave the ancestral habits of their land and adopt those of the foreigners, as there is no greater inferiority than to accept all that is imposed on us, without the slightest reflection and criticism!