My Coming to Canada by Roop Misir
My Coming to Canada-Choice or Expedience?
By Roop Misir
In my heart of hearts, I’d like to think that I vowed
always to be Guyanese. But since by culture and no accident of history I’m
Indian, I am now living in Canada.
Here though I may be a citizen equal in Law to every other citizen, I have
since resigned myself to being referred to as Indo-Guyanese Canadian.
Dis a na wan Brer Anancy Story! [This is no cock n' bull
story.]
During our study of British Empire
history and geography in colonial British Guiana, no
other country fired my imagination so much as far away Canada.
The defeat of French General Louis Mountcalm in a decisive battle in the French
and North American Indian wars by General James Wolfe in 1759 heralded British
supremacy in Canada.
Like the much later (Indian Mutiny/ War of Independence) in 1857, we were
conditioned to believing that colonial Britain
was chosen by some higher force to civilise non-white savages. Thus we had
little choice but to take pride in our empire over which [in the minds of
loyalists, at least] the sun would never set. But the independence of India
was to prove that even though the sun is fixed in the firmament, what goes
around does come around….eventually.
We were subjects to the Crown though still not strictly
British citizens. Yet we could travel to certain sister counties like Canada.
without the need for travel visas. The expansive Canadian prairies, literally
as a major breadbasket of wheat for a hungry world, and major port cities
Halifax on the east coast, and Vancouver on the west coast, conjured in me vast
opportunies for the future. If there was any place I’d like to visit, certainly
it had to be
Many British Guianese had shown the way by going abroad.
During WW II many went overseas to defend the Empire. A few returned, but many
decided to settle and stay in foreign lands. Those who returned on rare visits
would paint pictures of what wonderful places there were beyond the shores of
our tiny country. Stories like these stood in striking contrast to those
Guianese who went to study at overseas institutions of higher learning. Having
concentrated on their studies and graduated as accountants. doctors, engineers
and lawyers, the vast majority of them were only too happy to return home where
they could be placed in plum positions upon their arrival. Many would get
married, and live happily while serving the country with dedication and at
times distinction ever afterwards.
As I was fast tracking my studies in High school, the now
infamous politically-inspired riots of the early 1960’s were in full swing.
Undoubtedly, these left on my impressionable mind memories so indelible that
perhaps one explanation for their ever-reminding presence is that some events
became imprinted into my gene pool of permanent recall. One such incident
sometimes referred to as the “Wismar Disturbance”, or the “Wismar Massacre”—a
period in May 24-26, 1964.
During this ordeal, Indian people were murdered, Indian women raped,
Indian-owned properties burned, and hundreds of Indians forced to flee from
their homes.
Why were fellow Guianese victimized and demonized? No
doubt, among Guianese one’s ethnicity defined and highlighted one’s
differences!
So what does this say about the British and the demanded
loyalty expected of her Guianese subjects? Was our connection with the Crown
and Mother Britain fading? Despite being taxpayers and free men and women of
the British Empire, are we now being abandoned? I guess
that as the colony was “maturing”, Guianese were expected to solve their
domestic problems—regardless of the consequences!
Shortly thereafter, Guianese were to learn that our
country would be granted political independence two years thence.
And what would be that date? You may guess it by now. May 26 1966.
Who set that date? Why was that date chosen? Your guess
may be as good as mine!
Forty years later at the May 2006 “Guyana Festival” in Toronto,
talking about Wismar is still a
taboo topic. Why? National political leadership groups have thus far remained
mum on the topic. Was it because its severity was overblown in the first place,
as some might have suggested? No doubt, future generations of Guyana’s
sons and daughters may not know, or be able to speak and come to terms with
this Wismar incident. Presumably,
part of the political silence of collusion designed to promote national harmony
and integration—aiming for the utopian ideal of One Country, One Nation, One
Destiny?
Can we see any parallelism of the Guyana Wismar Massacre
with the consequences of pre-European occupation and ethnic cleansing in India?
Not on the same scale in British Guiana, perhaps! But
still not very pleasant!
The hearts of reason clearly clashes with the mind of
acceptance!
As I watched helplessly, Indians were increasingly kicked
around. Many taking it on the right cheek would at times be forced to turn the
other cheek. An eye was not for another eye. Mahatma Gandhiji once said that
this tit for tat thing would make the world truly blind. And wasn’t it Lord
Jesus Who saw it coming, didn’t He, when He spoke these prophetic words:
“Verily, I say to you, Do not resist one who is evil. But
if any one strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also.”
A consolation for the helpless many? But certainly this
ahimsa and UN-cheeky snuff’s not for me!
With almost every economic entity, except the corner cake
shop or rum shop, now the property of the Cooperative Republic of Guyana, jobs
were plentiful yet scarce for most of us. And job-seeking Guyanese had to have
party cards to be considered for placements. Plus, monthly monetary
contributions to the Party were a must. And towing the party line were required
to keep one’s job.
With no hope in sight for the restoration of sanity in
our country, many Guyanese were forced to stake their future and fortune
overseas, mainly Canada,
the USA, and
the UK. Later,
as things got really desperate, others were forced to go to any country that
would take them, including impoverished Haiti
and parts of Mother Africa. Our country and its people were in a state not
unlike present-day Zimbabwe.
Here with another African strongman for life Robert Mugabe reigning supreme, he
blames former colonialists for his errors of governance and sheer incompetence.
Another third rate political misfit with a trait for ignorance and arrogance,
if not downright stupidity?
For me though, life was reasonably alright. Having
completed studies in Science and Teaching at the University
of Guyana, the only way for me was
up. And yet somehow, I felt uncomfortable that some day I might be required to
fall in line with party policies if only to achieve my career objectives as
High School teacher, and not be harrassed by the local politburo informants.
Then a party hack confided with me:
“Comrade, times are changing. You "coolie people"
are behaving as if you are still INDIANS, not GUYANESE.”
“So how could I be a Guyanese, a patriotic one too?” I
inquired.
"For starters, join the Party. Someone as bright and
smart as you should command a much higher status—in your profession, in the
party, in the community, and in the country.”
To me this sounded like a religious zealot admonishing me
that world peace can by achieved only through mass conversion to supposedly the
only religion that seeks true peace! Eliminating the problem rather than
addressing it in a rational way seemed to be the Party’s stated unofficial
policy. So I told him that while I could understand his line of reasoning, I’d
have to get back to him shortly.
But for how long more could I take it?
Shortly afterwards, I left the shores of my beloved
country. Having been convinced that I would live to serve our country, I
proceeded to Universities in western Canada
where I studied agricultural sciences, majoring in Animal Science. A growing
population needs food, much of which is imported, but which can be produced
locally, I thought.
My father, himself a rice farmer was not too thrilled at
the prospects of me studying agriculture—the same type of work for which our
ancestors were shipped like beasts of burden from our ancestral home India
to Guyana, the Caribbean
and other parts of the Empire following the abolition of African slavery.
Indeed, he said: “Babu, why not study Medicine? If not
Law, why not Accounting, or Engineering?
Eventually, I was able to convince him that my choice was
not unreasonable in view of my stated determination to be part of Guyana’s
nation building team if and when conditions improved. Hopefully by then, a new
and more representative government would be in charge of the affairs of the
nation.
And so after studies at the University
of Manitoba, and thereafter at the University
of Alberta, and some work
experience, I felt qualified to return and make my contribution in the land of
my birth.
Just about this time, we heard stories of hardships
unimaginable. Of Guyanese from every walk of life leaving in droves. And of how
professional people and rich farmers would drive up to Timehri
International Airport,
park their Morris Oxford and Vauxhall Velox cars, board the plane and head off
to distant lands. Leaving all their worldly possessions including mansions,
lands, cattle, tractors and combines, and not even looking back!
As one friend having established himself in Winnipeg
reminded me later:
“Babu, once there’s life there’s hope. As long as I live
in peace, I can always start over fresh and rebuild.”
So after graduation and working for a year when I asked
my wife if she wanted me to go and work in Guyana,
she exclaimed:
“You maad, nah man?’ (Are you mad, man?).
Then later: “If you really want to go, you can go and
give it a try. Myself and the children will wait and see how if you like it.
Then we will let you know what we’ll do.”
That was over 25 years ago.
Later with the restoration of democracy following free
and fair elections in 1992, Guyanese from every walk of life were ecstatic, if
not euphoric. Many who could were heading back home. I myself did make the trip
after an absence of over twenty one years. But sad to say: Did I feel so truly
welcome in what is supposed to be my home and native land?
“Ah weh you bin deh all dem year wen abbee poor peeple
dese bin a punish?” (Where were you all these years when our people were
punishing?), some of my very own friends would ask me?
“Now dat tings OK yu wan fu come to hang yu mout weh de
soup a leak. Da de prablem bout yu foreigner!”(Now that things are OK, you want
to come and hang your mouth where the soup is flowing. That’s the problem with
you foreigners!)
Deeply hurt, I soon realised that I might have been too
long away from my matri bhoomi (mother country).
Perhaps, I may have to adopt Canada,
and consciously adapt myself to life in my new country, I thought.
Did I have much of a choice then? Canada
and other recipient countries need skilled immigrant to fuel their economic
engines of growth. Was this why these countries didn’t raise any objection
while Guyanese were fleeing with their lives and scant possessions by the
scores of thousands for their shores?
With my parents and most of my siblings and relatives
safely out of Guyana,
are we now the new crop of Guyanese exiles who’d love to return, but somehow
feel unwelcome in the country of our birth by the very people who've grown up
with?
True, reality can strike hard, especially when it does
sink in.
In my heart of hearts, I’d like to think that I vowed
always to be Guyanese. But since by culture and no accident of history I’m
Indian, I am now living in Canada.
Here though I may be a citizen equal in Law to every other citizen, I have
since resigned myself to being referred to as Indo-Guyanese Canadian.
So here we are, and coming full circle. Born and raised
in one colony now living in another former one, far removed in time and
geography. One now fighting for its survival as it haemorrhages through
backtracking, politicking and intriguing; the other, the envy of the world in
terms of economic prosperity and the quality of life. Both sharing aspects of
the same colonial history.
Perhaps what is consoling is that I can still intermingle
amongst so many of my Guyanese compatriots that I feel as if my proverbial
navel string (umbilical cord) is somehow now transplanted into my adopted
country. A land where citizens of long standing welcome me and address me by my
first name. In contrast to my own people in my very own Guyana who call me
funny names, citizens of my new country are not ashamed to welcome me as a
friend and greet me as a fellow Canadian!
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