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Indo-Caribbeans in Canada
Kenneth Grant Mahabir, Indo-Caribbean pioneer to Canada (1908)
INDO-CARIBBEANS
By Frank Birbalsingh
Origins
The term “Indo-Caribbean” best describes the
descendants of people who left India
more than a century ago to live in the Caribbean. There
is no connection between Indo-Caribbean people and the indigenes or
aboriginals of the Caribbean and the Americas
– the so-called Indians, as they were misnamed by Columbus
at the end of the fifteenth century. “Indo-Caribbean” is best understood within
the context of European colonial history as it impinges on the Caribbean
region. During the nineteenth century, the imperial, colonizing states of Europe,
particularly Great Britain,
transported large numbers of people from India
to its other colonies, such as Fiji
in the Pacific Ocean, Mauritius
in the Indian Ocean, and Trinidad
in the Caribbean Sea.
Caribbean
region applies both to the islands surrounded by and the mainland
territories that border the Caribbean Sea. Those
territories range in size from the large islands of Cuba and Hispaniola to tiny
ones like Curaçao or St Kitts, and to mainland territories in Central and South
America like Belize (formerly British Honduras), Guyana (formerly British
Guiana), or Suriname (formerly Dutch Guiana). Historically, these islands and
mainland territories were settled, administered, and developed through the same
colonial process, and they were shaped by broadly similar social, economic, and
political influences.
Arrival and Settlement
Indo-Caribbean ties to Canada
go back to the second half of the nineteenth century. In 1864 a Canadian
Presbyterian missionary named John Morton made a visit to Trinidad
for health reasons. His visit had far-reaching consequences for Indo-Caribbean
people, for it led to the establishment of a Presbyterian Church mission, later
known as the Canadian Mission, which devoted itself to working almost
exclusively with Indian indentured labourers, especially in Guyana
and Trinidad. The first mission was established in Trinidad
in 1868, with others in Grenada
in 1884, in St Lucia
and Guyana in
1885, and in Jamaica
in 1894. While there were other Christian denominations active in the Caribbean,
only the Canadian Presbyterians concentrated on indentured Indian immigrants.
The Canadian Mission began its work at a time when
British colonial governments in the Caribbean gave
little priority to providing indentured Indians with social services. This was
the vacuum which the Canadian Mission attempted to fill. Although the main aim
of the Canadian Presbyterians was to establish churches and proselytize, they
also established schools at the elementary as well as secondary level for both
boys and girls, and built teachers’ training colleges and residential centres
as well. An important effect of the Canadian Mission was to provide Indian
labourers with access to Western education and culture and thus to enhance
their capacity for material progress, professional development, and social
integration. The fact that the work of the Canadian Mission was more intense in
Trinidad than in Guyana
is probably the main reason for the faster rate of Westernization and social
integration of Indo-Trinidadians.
The Canadian Mission also encouraged Indo-Caribbean
students to seek higher education in Canada
rather than in England,
which had traditionally attracted students from British colonies. Most of these
scholars returned home after their training abroad, but those who remained in Canada
formed the nucleus of the first Indo-Caribbean communities in Canada.
An example is the Indo-Caribbean community in Nova Scotia,
many of whose members first came to Canada
because Canadian missionaries had referred them to several Canadian
universities including Mount Allison
University in Nova
Scotia. The Carindo Cultural Association, formed in
1978 “to more adequately cater to Nova Scotians from the West Indies
who are of East Indian origin,” is one of the earliest Indo-Caribbean
organizations in Canada.
Until the 1960s, Canadian immigration policies
restricted immigration from the Caribbean to students
and professionals such as teachers, technicians, and doctors. Only a few of
these immigrants were of Indo-Caribbean background. Following the revision of
the Immigration Act in 1967, however, a new system was introduced and an
applicant’s education, skills, and other qualifications were considered. The
effect was to allow a wider cross-section of people to enter Canada,
including extended family members from all racial groups and women who would
previously have been denied entry because they lacked professional skills. The
increased immigration from the Caribbean included a
greater proportion of women and a larger Asian Indian component from Guyana
and from Trinidad and Tobago.
It is not possible to document precisely the
current Indo-Caribbean population in Canada because the relatively recent
classification of “Indo-Caribbean” has not been adopted by Statistics Canada,
which continues to use the term “South Asian” as a general descriptor not only
for people from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal but also for those of
Indian descent from the Caribbean, East Africa, and Fiji. Using statistics for
all immigrants from the Caribbean territories, however,
it is possible to make a rough estimate of the number of Indo-Caribbean
immigrants who have entered Canada.
If we assume that 80 percent of immigrants from Guyana
and 60 percent of immigrants from Trinidad and
Tobago are Asian Indian, this means that a
total of 91,650 Indo-Caribbeans came to Canada
between 1962 and 1992. If another 10,000 are added to account for natural
increase and illegal immigrants, the current Indo-Caribbean population of Canada
can be estimated at about 100,000. And although small numbers of
Indo-Caribbeans may be found in most provinces of Canada,
for example, Nova Scotia, Manitoba,
Saskatchewan, and Alberta,
the majority have settled in Ontario,
and predominantly in the greater Toronto
area, where they are particularly noticeable in suburbs such as Scarborough
and Mississauga.
Economic Life and Culture
The primary concern of Indo-Caribbean Canadians has
been survival. As a thrifty, energetic, industrious people, they have prospered
in Canada and
achieved a material standard of living that is much higher than the one they
left behind in the Caribbean. In Toronto,
for instance, they have excelled in their traditional professions of law and
medicine. Most of all they have shown an aptitude for retail business that is
evident in the many Indo-Caribbean groceries, restaurants, and roti shops that
can now be found all over Toronto. While most of these establishments are
patronized chiefly by Indo-Caribbean customers, the roti shop, with its menu of
spicy, exotic dishes and its organization as a fast-food outlet, has made the strongest
impact on the wider Canadian community. Indo-Caribbean real-estate agencies are
another successful business enterprise. Evidence of Indo-Caribbean activities
in business and the professions may be found in numerous advertisements in
Indo-Caribbean newspapers in Canada.
One of the continuing frustrations of
Indo-Caribbean Canadians is the uncertain perception of their identity by other
Canadians, who generally consider them either as West Indian, that is to say,
black or Afro-Caribbean, or as South Asian, which implies familiarity with
South Asian languages and customs. Both classifications erase or distort
Indo-Caribbean identity. Caribbean people of Asian
Indian origin are not Afro-Caribbean because they are not African; neither are
they South Asian (except by race and ethnicity) because their culture derives
from the Caribbean. Their main difference from South
Asians is that they generally speak no South Asian languages: their language is
standard English or Caribbean varieties of English.
There is cultural dualism in other aspects of
Indo-Caribbean culture as well. The foods and eating habits of the
Indo-Caribbeans, for example, reflect styles of cookery associated with those
regions of India
from which indentured immigrants first came, in particular Uttar Pradesh and Bihar
in north India
and, to a smaller extent, Madras in
south India.
The rotis, dhals, curries, and other dishes that were brought from these
regions of India
underwent some adaptation depending on what ingredients – vegetables, fruits,
and spices – were available in the Caribbean. Thus,
although Indo-Caribbean Canadians have retained the food preferences, taboos,
and general style of Indian or South Asian cookery, there are significant
differences in their choice, preparation, and presentation of various recipes
and dishes. Vegetarianism, for instance, is less strictly observed among
Indo-Caribbeans, many of whom are partial vegetarians, with a diet that
includes meat but not beef or pork. This suggests greater flexibility in Indo-Caribbean
eating habits. The differences between Indo-Caribbean and South Asian cookery
are evident in the menus of the Indian restaurants and Indo-Caribbean roti
shops which have appeared in Toronto,
mostly within the last fifteen years. The roti shops tend to be more informal
in presentation and carry a more limited or specialized selection of foods.
In other areas of everyday life – in dress,
housekeeping, social activity, musical entertainment, sport, and even in sexual
habits and marriage customs – Indo-Caribbean patterns of behaviour reflect the
same flexibility that derives from dual loyalty to India
(South Asia) on the one hand and to the Caribbean
on the other. Indo-Caribbeans have a deep appreciation for Indian films and
film music yet participate actively in Caribbean musical
forms such as the calypso and in festivals such as carnival. They also tend to
depart from more puritanical Indian attitudes towards sexual and marriage
customs. Divorce, for example, is now as common among Indo-Caribbean (Hindu or
Muslim) couples as among couples from any other group. Intermarriage with other
ethnic groups has also increased. Generally, Indo-Caribbean Hindus are less
bound by general taboos and caste restrictions than South Asian Hindus, whose
more coherent religious practices were not subjected to the cultural mixing and
fragmenting influences caused by indenture.
In the post-colonial period, Indo-Caribbeans, in Canada
as elsewhere, have made outstanding contributions in the field of literature.
The works of V.S. Naipaul, who was born in Trinidad in
1932, although he has lived in England
since 1950, are internationally acclaimed. His nephew, Neil Bissoondath, is the
major Indo-Caribbean writer in Canada
today. Bissoondath, who was born in 1955, first came to Canada
as a student in 1973 and has stayed in Canada.
He has already published two collections of short stories, Digging up the
Mountains (1986) and On the Eve of Uncertain Tomorrows (1990),
and two novels, A Casual Brutality (1988) and The Innocence of Age
(1992). In two of the stories in particular – ‘Insecurity’ from Digging up
the Mountains and ‘Security’ from On the Eve of Uncertain Tomorrows
– Bissoondath illustrates a fundamental irony of Indo-Caribbean experience:
while Indo-Caribbean immigrants have escaped from the psychological insecurity
caused by political instability, social marginalization, and interethnic
tension at home, coming to Canada has brought its own insecurity caused by
urban-industrial alienation, race and colour prejudice, the impersonal secular
mores of the new society, and the pressures of modern city living.
As the most prolific Indo-Caribbean writer in Canada,
Cyril Dabydeen, who was born in Guyana
in 1945, corroborates Bissoondath’s insights. Dabydeen has written several
volumes of poems and stories and two novels; he has also edited two anthologies
of immigrant Canadian writing. His titles include Goatsong (poems,
1977), Elephants Make Good Stepladders (poems, 1982), To Monkey
Jungle (short stories, 1988), Dark Swirl (a novel, 1989), and the
anthology A Shapely Fire (1987). Like Bissoondath, Dabydeen portrays
the feelings of displacement and alienation that affect most Indo-Caribbean
Canadians. In particular, he provides a frank appraisal of racism encountered
by “coloured” or nonwhite immigrants in Canada.
According to Dabydeen, South Asians (including Indo-Caribbeans) have responded
only in subdued ways to the racial discrimination and outbreaks of so-called
Paki-bashing to which they have been subjected in Canada.
He suggests that the Indo-Caribbean experience of racism in Canada
has, so far at any rate, tended to be more psychological than physical.
Other Indo-Caribbean Canadian writers, such as
Arnold Itwaru and Ramabai Espinet, also see the Indo-Caribbean Canadian
experience as largely one of increased material well-being coupled with inward
unease that is the result of many factors including racism. Itwaru, who was
born in Guyana
in 1943, has written fiction, poetry, and criticism; his books include Entombed
Survivals (poems, 1987), and Shanti (a novel, 1990). Writing with
a fresh feminist outlook, Espinet, who was born in Trinidad
in 1948, asserts the toughness and resilience of Indo-Caribbean women as
homemakers, and suggests that the disadvantages that women suffered under
patriarchal structures in the Caribbean may be reduced
in Canada. News
reports, in fact, support this view and discuss issues of wife abuse, child
care, and employment equity in a more explicit way than they would in the Caribbean.
In this respect, at least, immigration to Canada
has brought distinct benefits to Indo-Caribbean women.
Religion
In the colonial period the combined effect of
missionary activity and Creolization converted some Indo-Caribbeans to
Christianity, but most retained their ancestral faiths – Hinduism and Islam.
This is significant because most other Caribbean groups
tend to be Christian, at least on the surface. Asian Indians are therefore
clearly distinguished from other sections of the Caribbean
population by their religious beliefs and practices.
Nothing identified Asian Indians more clearly as
alien, “uncivilized,” heathen outsiders than their adherence to non-Christian
religions. The fact that only Christian festivals – Christmas and Easter – had
official sanction as religious holidays, together with the general awareness
among Asian Indians that conversion would ease their way into better jobs and
social acceptability, encouraged a flexible attitude toward religion. Some
Indians outwardly converted to Christianity, mainly for official or career
purposes, but inwardly retained their traditional faith. Others, although they
did not convert, were familiar with Christian worship because they attended
Christian schools or took part in Christian festivals and social activities. In
the Caribbean, much of this has changed today, and a
Hindu festival such as Divali has become an official religious holiday in Guyana
and Trinidad and Tobago.
Flexibility in religion, however, remains a characteristic of Indo-Caribbeans.
It is quite common to attend Indo-Caribbean funerals in Toronto,
for example, where both Hindu and Christian rites are observed.
Before 1967 the majority of Indo-Caribbean
Canadians would probably have been Christians, who were more likely to be
Westernized or have professional status. But since the large-scale immigration
of close relatives and extended family members became possible after 1967, the
Hindu/Muslim/Christian ratio among Indo-Caribbean Canadians is similar to the
ratio in the Caribbean itself – Hindus being the most numerous, followed by
Muslims, with the Christians third. This is borne out by the recent appearance
of a large number of Hindu temples and Muslim mosques in Toronto.
There is considerable fluidity in the intraethnic
relations of Indo-Caribbean Canadians in Canada,
in religion as in other areas. Indo-Caribbeans are different from South Asians
in important respects yet similar to them in race and ethnicity and in
religious practice. The membership in Toronto’s
Hindu temples reflects the cultural dualism among Indo-Caribbean Canadians. For
instance, the president of Vishnu Mandir, one of the largest Hindu temples in Toronto,
is a medical doctor from Guyana,
but his congregation consists of Hindus not only from the Caribbean
but also from other sections of the South Asian community in Canada.
The same fluidity is evident in the joint worship of Indo-Caribbean Muslims
with other South Asians and people from Africa and the Middle
East. If their classification as “Indo-Caribbean” separates
Indians of Caribbean origin from other South Asians, it does not do so
completely, just as it does not completely separate them from black
Afro-Caribbeans with whom they share many linguistic and other cultural traits.
Group Maintenance and Ethnic
Commitment
It will be possible for Indo-Caribbean Canadians to
survive as a group only if they can overcome the feelings of displacement and
alienation that are so deeply rooted in their history and experience. Victor
Ramraj has argued that Indo-Caribbeans have always been marginalized in
historical accounts of their region, and that feelings of marginalization were
the impetus for their migration in the 1970s and 1980s. It would be ironic
indeed if having emigrated from the Caribbean in order
to escape being marginalized, Indo-Caribbean immigrants, classified as South
Asians in Canada,
should now face the risk of becoming culturally invisible. Yet to be identified
only as South Asian and grouped with people whose numbers are much greater, and
whose cultures are older and more homogeneous, may threaten the very survival
of Indo-Caribbean culture in Canada.
Bissoondath’s story “Security” raises the issue of
the second generation of Indo-Caribbean Canadians who are becoming culturally
differentiated from their parents because of their rapid absorption into
mainstream Canadian life. And Kamala Jean Gopie suggests that the experience of
Indo-Caribbean Canadians may follow the general immigrant pattern in which the
original immigrants are inwardly sustained by memories of their native land and
culture and thus resist wholesale assimilation, while their children are
quickly assimilated and show little interest in the culture of their parents.
It is then left to the children’s children – the third generation of immigrants
– to try to recover their cultural roots. The conflicts between Indo-Caribbean
Canadian parents and their children, so often discussed at conferences and
workshops, suggest that Indo-Caribbean youth are becoming assimilated into
mainstream Canadian culture and turning away from their parents’ customs. At
the same time, the existence of Indo-Caribbean student organizations, for
example, at Ontario’s York
University and the University
of Toronto, suggest that all
Indo-Caribbean youth seek to retain their cultural identity.
Gopie speaks of the need to collect and record
information about Indo-Caribbean experience for the use of younger
Indo-Caribbean Canadians in the future. As we have seen, this need is already
being partly met in the literary work of the remarkable group of Indo-Caribbean
writers in Canada.
The more practical job of classifying, recording, and stimulating
Indo-Caribbean culture in Canada has also been started by the Ontario Society
for Services to Indo-Caribbean Canadians (OSSICC), which holds conferences,
workshops, and lectures and brings out publications on Indo-Caribbean culture,
for example, Indenture and Exile (1989). The OSSICC also holds an
annual event called Indo-Caribbean Heritage Day, which includes a formal
dinner, Indo-Caribbean music, awards for community service, and a keynote
address by a distinguished speaker. Previous speakers include Cheddi Jagan,
former president of Guyana,
and the late Reverend Roy Neehall, an Indo-Trinidadian who was a minister of
the United Church of Canada.
Indo-Caribbean culture was also sustained in Canada
by several Indo-Caribbean newspapers, for example, Indo-Caribbean World (1983–
), Equality (1984– ), Caribbean Camera (1990– ), and Guyana
Times (1992– ). These papers are all based in Toronto
where they appear fortnightly or monthly. Numerous radio programs serve a
mainly Indo-Caribbean audience by providing music and information on community
events. In addition, there are several religious organizations (both Hindu and
Muslim) and social groups such as school alumni associations that serve to
propagate Indo-Caribbean culture in Canada through the organization of
conferences, religious festivals (for example, phagwah), concerts,
recitals, and picnics. These are all public events that can stimulate group
solidarity.
Whether Indo-Caribbean culture will survive in Canada
or whether, as Bissoondath’s story “Insecurity” hints, Canada
will simply become another stopping place for itinerant, permanently displaced
Asian Indians remains to be seen. After Columbus and European colonialism, the
sense of displacement, exile, and alienation thus produced by the willing or
enforced migration or trans-shipment of large numbers of people from one part
of the world to another is one of the chief subjects of major post-colonial
writers, especially Naipaul. But the second half of the twentieth century has
witnessed the phenomenon of large numbers of colonized people flocking abroad
to former centres of empire. Whether they are West Indians in London,
Africans in Paris, Indonesians and
Surinamese in Amsterdam, or
Indo-Caribbeans in Toronto, their
experience of loss and marginalization is similar because it originates in the
double displacement evolving out of largely similar post-colonial conditions.
It is too early to know the full consequences of
this double displacement for Indo-Caribbean Canadians. What we do know is that,
since their arrival in Canada,
Indo-Caribbean immigrants have acquired an increased measure of material
well-being, which has so far proved a mixed blessing because it is accompanied
by inner feelings of emotional unease and psychic disorientation – in
Bissoondath’s phrase, “insecure security.”
Further Reading
General studies that deal to some extent with
Indo-Caribbeans include V.S. Naipaul, The Middle Passage, (London,
1960); Eric Williams, Inward Hunger (London,
1969); and Hugh Tinker, A New System of Slavery (Oxford, U.K., 1974).
There is, however, ample literature devoted
specifically to Indo-Caribbeans. One of the earliest studies is by Dwarka Nath,
A History of Indians in Guyana, rev. ed. (London,
1970). Much more recent ones include D. Dabydeen and B. Samaroo, eds., India
in the Caribbean (London,
1987); Steven Vertovec, Hindu Trinidad (London,
1992); and T. Depoo, ed., The East Indian Diaspora (New York, 1993).
Two volumes in particular, both edited by F.
Birbalsingh, Indenture and Exile (Toronto, 1989) and Indo-Caribbean
Resistance (Toronto, 1993), are the results of conferences and other
activities by the Ontario Society for Services to Indo-Caribbean Canadians and
contain studies on Indo-Caribbeans in Canada; the latter work includes essays
by Victor Ramraj and Kamala Jean Gopie, both of whom are discussed in this
entry. There are more numerous shorter studies that address specific aspects of
the Indo-Caribbean experience, including J.B. Landis, “Racial Attitudes of
Africans and Indians in Guyana,” Social and Economic Studies, vol.22,
no.4 (1973); Graeme Mount, “The Canadian Presbyterian Mission to Trinidad,
1868–1912,” Review Interamericana, vol.7, no.1 (1977), 3–45; Alan
Adamson, “The Impact of Indentured Immigration on the Political Economy of
British Guiana,” in Kay Saunders, ed., Indentured Labour in the British
Empire, 1834–1920 (London and Canberra, 1984).
G. Sawh, ed., The Canadian Caribbean
Connection, (Halifax, 1992),
describes one of the first and more important Indo-Caribbean organizations in Canada,
Nova Scotia’s Carindo Cultural
Association.
FRANK BIRBALSINGH
Kenneth Grant Mahabir:
Indo-Caribbean
Pioneer in Canada
Kenneth
Grant Mahabir (1890-1942) is probably the first
Indo-Caribbean resident of Canada, and one of the earliest
South Asians to come to live in Canada.
Young
Kenneth went to Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia to study medicine when he
was 18, in the year 1908, and graduated in 1912 as a doctor. He was a brilliant
student and later a highly respected surgeon with a very large practice in Halifax.
He
served as a major in Royal Army Medical Corp in World War 1 (1914-1918) and was
stationed in Europe during the war. After the war he returned to Canada and practiced in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He died in 1942 of a heart
attack. He was married to Jean (deceased), and had no children.
Kenneth
was born 1890 in San Fernando, South Trinidad, the son of Kate and James Mahabir , an organist and
piano tuner at Susamachar Presbyterian Church on Coffee Street, San Fernando. .
He
attended Grant C.M. School and Naparima College in San Fernando. His six sisters worked to
send him and his two brothers to university abroad, with some help from the
Canadian Mission. One brother, a pharmacist died young. The other, Jules
Mahabir, studied law in England, practiced in Trinidad, and was the first Indian
to be appointed a magistrate in Trinidad.
Kenneth's
living relatives in Canada include his nephews Winston
Jules Mahabir, a retired doctor now living in Victoria B.C.,
and Rodney Mahabir, a psychiatrist practising in Toronto, both sons of Jules Mahabir.
(from a brochure by the
Indo-Trinidad Canadian Association, Indian Arrival and Heritage Month
1998)
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