Maria was born and raised in Nairobi, Kenya and always treasures her sunny life—both metaphorically and in reality. In 1964 she graduated from Dr. Ribeiro Goan School. With secretarial skills and experience as a School Secretary she arrived in London, England in 1967 in the midst of “hippie world.” She studied at Pitman’s College for a Commercial Teacher’s Diploma which she successfully achieved in 1969. Due to the tenuous political situation in Kenya she had to find a new home. In the autumn of 1970 Maria emigrated to Canada in search of a home to put down her new roots. This she did with her husband, Tim who immigrated to Canada from South Wales, UK.To Maria and Tim, Canada became a land of opportunity and new beginnings. In pursuit of these opportunities, they lived in Hamilton, Montreal, and Toronto. Tim pursued post graduate work at the University of Toronto while Maria achieved a B.A. in Economics from York University followed by a B.Ed. from the University of Toronto. During this time, she and Tim nurtured their two sons. When they reached school age, Maria taught Computer Studies’ courses at high schools in the City of Toronto for fourteen years. In 1999 she achieved an M.A. (Leadership and Training) from Royal Roads University, British Columbia.By this time, their sons were old enough to pursue their dreams, and thus Tim and Maria moved to British Columbia where they spent ten years in the idyllic fishing village of Steveston. Maria was a College Instructor and Web Tutor at BC Open University. She also was a member of the boards of The Gateway Theatre in Richmond and the Gulf of Georgia Cannery Society in Steveston. The natural beauty and gentle pace of BC life could not keep them away from Toronto any longer. In 2010 they downsized and returned to the core of Toronto and are busily engaged in the buzz and hype of living in a big city. Maria is an active member of the University Women’s Club of Toronto. Maria and Tim frequently travel within Canada and outside Canada.
When Sabby Mendes leaves Portuguese Goa aboard the dhow Monsoon Wind bound for British East Africa in 1916, he has one dream—to find work as a tailor in the relatively new capital of Nairobi. Sabby is a young man, still a teenager, but he is determined to build a life for himself, and he knows that the opportunities in the British Protectorate are better than those facing him at home. A bright, affable young man with a genuine passion and talent for tailoring, he is not prepared for what he is about to find beyond the Arabian Sea. The Protectorate, which will become British Colony of Kenya, is a highly segregated society with the British firmly ensconced at its top; below them are the “Asians” like Sabby; and at the very bottom are the native African population who are regarded as little more than savages in need of civilization.Beneath the African Sun offers, through the eyes of its protagonist, a street-level view of the changing social and political climate of Kenya between 1916 and 1970, including the ‘Mau Mau’ Uprising of the native Kikuyu, the eventual independence of Kenya in 1963, and the political fallout that followed.More than a history, it is a story about family, home, social justice, and what it means to truly belong somewhere.
Video: Goan Cultural Group, Toronto: An evening with Maria Lynch (Class of '64), Author,"Beneath the African Sun" Added July 16, 2016