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1.Sharing experience with our children
2. Carnival culture irrelevant and meaningless
3. Family is everything: A conversation poem
4. Web sites on Indo-Caribbeans by Lloyd Harradan
5. Ma's Day of Dying by Roop Misir
6. Guyana Update: Progess in the villages, black kidnap criminals on the defensive
7. Why are Indians not acting on TT kidnapping?
8.Indo-Caribbean and other immigrants: How much accomodation? By Roop Misir
9. The Defence of Indians
10. What is the future of Indians in Trinidad?
SHARING EXPERIENCE WITH OUR CHILDREN
Just this week my friend Reynold Ramdial, president of the Indo-Trinidad Canadian Association was telling me about his experiences as a young man growing up in south Trinidad. He spoke of the games he played, the life he lived as an Indo-Trinidadian before coming to live in Canada two decades ago.
These were the events that shaped his life and made him what he is today. In computer language you could say that this was his operating system, his Windows program that allows him to function. It is the essence of what he is, a mass of experiences and views and cultural approaches.
Reynold's concern was that his children, who had spent most of their lives in Canada, didn't understand very much of those experiences. His life as an Indo-Trinidadian, which is at the centre of his being as an Indo-Trinidadian Canadian, is mostly unknown to his children. He is not sure how to pass on his Indo-Trinidadian heritage in Canada, other than by showing by example.
My friend has a lot of company. I know that my children do not appreciate much of the cultural, political and economic situation that I faced, when they were no more than little boys. Indo-Guyanese friends who were forced to leave their homeland because of race riots and discrimination say their children do not comprehend those events so many years ago. They cannot figure out why their parents are so "hung up" about actions that took place before they were born in a country far, far away.
Just about every parent of Indo-Trinidadian or Indo-Guyanese origin is battling with this very problem, and all other immigrant groups here share the challenge. The young people themselves want to know what their parents are reminiscing about and lamenting that their offspring never experienced.
Transfer of heritage and experience is a probably the major concern of immigrant groups after they have settled the matter of financial security. Transfer of knowledge is also an old, old issue with parents who want their children to grow up as they did.
Enough of the problem. It's time to look at the answers. Just how do we make our Caribbean experiences meaningful to Indo-Caribbean Canadians? How do we pass on our Indian cultural heritage in this new land?
Since this is hardly a new problem, I would suggest that we study it as such. Look at the mechanics of it and how we (and others) dealt with it in the past. Look at how others in this country are coping with the problem and how successful they are. Decide exactly what information we want to pass along, and then figure out the best way to do it in these circumstances.
Our parents and grandparents did a fair job of passing along the Indian cultural heritage and their experiences to us, mostly through practice and talking. They showed us how to perform and live the culture, and by adapting their heritage to the new environment in the Caribbean. They did quite well in letting us know the experiences of indenture and afterward, but not so well in transferring the knowledge of experiences in India. There's something to be learned from that.
We can't expect our children to get big meaning from our lives in the Caribbean in the several decades ago. But we can talk to them about it and show them what we have learned.
For personal experiences, with the technology available now, we can certainly write it down too, in personal acounts, histories, reminiscences. We can videotape it, put it on CD- ROM and on web pages, make documentaries and films about it.
The cultural part is simpler. There is no quantum physics involved in understanding and teaching others about music, dance, behaviour patterns, philosophy, attitudes. This is just teaching, and we certainly can learn how to do it for our needs.
Is anybody else doing these things in Canada? Examples are everywhere. The Jews are an excellent example. Look at how they have organized a huge system for making sure that the experience and lessons of the Holocaust are passed on, together with their older system for passing on their Jewish values and religion.
Canadian blacks are making a valiant attempt to preserve and pass on their heritage, with their Black History Month, books, newspapers, plays, lectures, magazines. Italians have a massive system for continuing their language, preserving their traditions, their links with Italy, their games, their culture.
Check out the efforts of the Scots and the Irish towards continuing their lineage and their culture.In my estimation, several of these groups in Canada would get good marks for way they are tackling the same problem that Reynold and our Indo-Caribbean community are facing. They are not unwilling to share their knowledge either.
Learn from success, I always say. Defining the problem takes you half way to solving it. After that, all that is required is action.
I would suggest.
Ram Jagessar
CARNIVAL CULTURE IRRELEVANT AND MEANINGLESS
After
being in Canada for ten years, I thought
this year that I would go to see the Caribana parade, just so I could see what
it was for myself. But my group is
organizing a campout on that July 31st long weekend, and it seems
Caribana will have to wait for another year.
Instead,
I went to see the Sunfest in North York's Mel Lastman Square, an event which seems to be
part of the buildup to Caribana. I arrived in time for the highlight of the
show, which was David Rudder's performance.
There
was a crowd of several hundred people, mostly West Indian blacks, and a small
number of Indo-Caribbeans, milling about
and waving around yellow hats, scarves, and various parts of their anatomy.
They seemed to love David Rudder, singing along with the lyrics, which they
seemed to know by heart. No interpreter was needed to tell that this was their
thing.
For
me, however, it meant nothing. I couldn't understand the words David Rudder was screaming into the mike, and even
if I could, I'm not sure I would care either. This calypso, this soca, this
Caribana, this carnival, this steelband, this parade of the bands, this fete till you drop, is just
not my thing. No interpreter is required.
This
little Sunfest had caused me to re-examine my relationship with what is supposed to be the
national culture in Trinidad and Tobago, and certainly the heart of
the black West Indian culture in Canada. I mean the calypso-soca-Carnival-steelband
culture.
And
my conclusion was that I have no relationship to this culture. As an Indo-Caribbean,
I find this culture simply irrelevant, and without any meaning to me. It was so
when I lived in Trinidad and it remains so today.
Saying
this publicly in Trinidad would be sure to cause argument, if not accusations of disloyalty and treason. Over the years
Trinidadians have been blanketed with propaganda that says they must like
calypso and steelband and carnival. Quite a few Indo-Trinidadians have come to accept
this, and treasure as their own a cultural form that was developed by and is still
basically a creation of black Trinidadians. Indians still remain marginal to
Carnival culture.
But
it will not cause such problems in Canada, and my comment is not
intended to start any controversy. I know that no black West Indian would have
any concern about saying that he finds Indian culture irrelevant and
meaningless to him. He would be highly shocked if any of us tried to tell him that he should
like Indian culture, the culture of the majority of the population of Trinidad.
Ram Jagessar (2000)
Family is everything
Harry say the family phone back home
Not working right
The phone only calling him
when they want money
when they want advice
when they want something
sometimes they calling collect
just to collect serious change
from Harry.
send it right away Harry
Western Union
Don’t forget now.
Boysie need false teeth
they calling Harry
To pay the dentist.
Car get in accident
Call Harry to help
out
The situation
Children want copy book and pencil
Harry will send from Canada
What they think,
Harry have a gold mine
Or a money tree up here?
And they always singing this song
When you coming down Harry?
Coming for Christmas?
Coming for Divali?
Coming for Carnival?
Coming for your vacation?
Bring down something nice for we
When you coming.
Ah go send you a list.
If anything will kill Harry
Is that list
They want IPod and DVD
Designer jeans
That Harry can’t buy for heself
Hundred dollar basketball shoe
Fancy sari from Gerrard Street
Maybe a nice digital camera
Not less than 5 megapixels
Gifts for about fifty people
90 year old aji
and Mohan five nephew
Harry never see before.
And they waiting in the airport
With mini van to pick up
All them box Harry have to pay
Overweight for.
Harry don’t get no vacation
When he go back home
Every little problem
Waiting since last year
Drop in Harry lap
big brother from Canada
will fix it.
Harry paying for everything too
He have to treat the family
When you have you must spend
Not so?
Harry say he need a family break
A break from the family
When the phone ring
Use that call display
Let the machine take a message
Don’t answer for a week
Was out of town you know.
Let Boysie buy he own false teeth
Or else enjoy some serious porridge.
Next vacation Harry
Heading for Cayo Largo, Cuba
Second honeymoon in the sun
Come back relaxed
Feeling good.
Them Spanish people really
Appreciate your hard currency.
Now Harry have nothing against family
Family is everything
He might call them from Cuba
to say so
But the phone system not so good
In Cayo Largo.
(Ram Jagessar 2006)
Web sites on Indo-Caribbeans
By Lloyd Harradan
Look at some of these sites:
The
mother of all IndoCaribbean websites is here:
http://www.jahajeed
esi.com/
A
large site about Indians in the Caribbean and Canada
:
http://www.indocari bbeanheritage. com/component/
option,com_ frontpage/ Itemid,1/
General
Sites:
http://www.guyana.
org/
http://www.guyanaun dersiege. com/Default. htm
http://www.indolink .com/displayArti cleS.php?
id=050705041142
http://www.movinghe re.org.uk/ galleries/
histories/ caribbean/ settling/ indo_caribbean. htm
http://www.saxakali
.com/indocarib/
http://www.nalis. gov.tt/Culture/ arrivalday. htm
http://www.saxakali .com/indocarib/ sojourner5.
htmArticle on Indians in Jamaica:
http://www.jamaica- gleaner.com/ pages/history/
story0057. htm
http://www.caribbea
nhindu.net/
http://www.caribbea
nhindu.net/ Arrival.htm
http://www.movinghe re.org.uk/ galleries/
roots/asian/ migration/ colonies. htm
http://www.jagan.
org/
http://www.indialab ourarchives. org/publications
/prabhu2. htm
http://www.prospect -magazine. co.uk/article_
details.php? id=8359
http://scholar. library.miami. edu/emancipation /trade2.htm
http://www.geocitie s.com/yuddh1/ gateportal. htm
Indians
in St Vincent :
http://svgindianher
itage.com/
Indians
in St Lucia :
http://www.slucia. com/visions/ 2002/indian. html
Indians
in Belize :
http://www.nlsbze.
bz/East%20Indian s.html
http://www.cavehill .uwi.edu/ bnccde/belize/
conference/ papers/premdas. html
Indians
in Martinique and Guadeloupe :
http://www.tamilnat ion.org/diaspora /guadeloupe. htm
indereunion.
net/actu/ sahai/interjs. htm http://www.
Indian
Arrival Day:
http://www.nalis. gov.tt/Culture/ arrivalday. htm
http://www.nalis. gov.tt/Festivals /Culture_
IndianArrivalDay .html
Very
early arrivals of Indians in the Americas
:
http://www.iafpe. org/php/showNews Details.php?
linkid=5&newsid=5
On-line
journals:
http://www.hansib-
books.com/ root/icn4. pdf
http://www.hansib-
books.com/ root/icn3. pdf
About
emigration records in India
:
http://www.aggarwal overseas. com/booksDetail.
aspx?productID= 73101&catId=AGO038&detail=t
Ma’s Day of Dying-- We Love You Ma
by Roop Misir
I
have just returned from Bronx-Lebanon Hospital Center in New York City.
Ma’s was in a coma, no doubt one of the effects of a malignant tumor.
About
one year ago, Dr. Hugo Seaford, her family physician discovered a lump
in her left breast. At the time, it was described as a benign tumor.
Then a few days later, we were told that tests showed it was actually
malignant. She had breast cancer. And Dr. Seaford reluctantly informed
our family of his diagnosis.
Ma was now advanced in age, in
her mid-eighties. But to us children, she was the best mom in the
entire world. Not that we actually did a scientific study to compare
the maternal ability of mothers of her age and disposition. To my six
brothers and four sisters, there has never been any need to do this. We
just knew this instinctively.
The lump in Ma’s breast was no
news to me. I had known about it since I was a toddler nearly sixty
years ago. I used to feel a little lump on Ma’s left breast during my
usual nursing every day.
Was I surprised at the news of this lump that is now making Ma sick and sucking the life out of her weak and comatose body?
Now that’s a tough question for every son or daughter to face up to!
And so I inquired what, if anything, could we do to revive Ma and make her rest comfortably?
Sensing that Ma now had one foot in the grave, I asked Dr. Seaford:
“What’s next, Doc?”
“Not much, Mr. Persaud,” he regretfully replied.
“We
can try to keep her alive, hoping she could come around. We are going
to put her on life-support. Maybe given sufficient time, she can
recover some strength and pull through this time”
“For how long, Doc?” I asked.
“As long as it takes. Of course, if there is no improvement in a month or so, we shall have to review her condition then.”
Nine
months later, Ma’s condition showed no change. Still on life-support.
With drugs, chemotherapy and radiation treatment not very effective,
the family must make a decision soon.
What are we to do?
A
few months ago, we fixed the wedding date of Aishwarya, Ma favorite
granddaughter. Aish meant a lot to Ajee. This supposedly joyous event
is scheduled to take place in four weeks’ time. There was nothing in
the world that would have made Ajee happier than to participate in the
wedding of her little darling, now set to become a prettier than a
picture bride on her wedding day. Lots of friends, relatives and
well-wishers. Lots of fun--hopefully to last a lifetime too.
Already,
we have invited members of our extended family from various parts of
the world, including Guyana, Trinidad, Canada and England. In two
weeks' time, Vivek's (the groom’s) parents are flying in from New Delhi.
The
dilemma facing us now is what to do? The medical staff agreed that
essentially Ma is now brain dead. In fact she has been a living
vegetable some six months after she was put on life support.
Should we allow her to vegetate as signs of creeping rigor mortis claim more and more of the distal digits of her extremities?
Or should we “pull the plug” of life support, sending our dear Ma to the place where no one really knows but some do care?
If
we take this action, are we relieving her of the excruciating pains
that she can't even sense? Hoping somehow to giving her comfort in the
process? Are we denying her the right to life? To living her life to
the fullest? Or are we prolonging the suffering and our own agonies?
Will we upset Ma’s karmic balance by sending her away prematurely —for OUR convenience only?
As
we contemplate which day may be best for Ma's passage to the world
beyond, do we really have the right to tinker with her death’s date?
All of which raises a lot of moral issues. Don't these also apply to our dear Ma? Or do they, really?
As her fateful date approaches, can we truly say that love for dear Ma is any different from that for ourselves?
In
these trying times, the Persaud family like countless others the world
over, takes solace in comforting words eternal. Words like:
The
Spirit is neither born nor does it die at any time. It does not come
into being, or cease to exist. It is unborn, eternal, permanent, and
primeval. The Spirit is not destroyed when the body is destroyed. (Bhagavad Gita 2.20).
As we Persaud's
Lord Blessed adored
We got His word clear
No uncertain way
Need not persuade
Maji's now at Home
GUYANA UPDATE:
Progess in the villages, black kidnap criminals on the defensive
(Indo-Caribbean Times, March 2007)
On a recent trip to Guyana I realized that there was an undercurrent in the country that was not reflected in the media.
I hadn’t visited in 5 years and there were some immediate visible changes. For example: the roads. I was really impressed with progress on the roads around the entire country, not to mention Georgetown. In and out of Georgetown there are 4 lane highways that are well lit. I am wondering, “is this Guyana or Toronto?” Housing is another area that struck me. The government has in the last few years given out affordable house lots to the ordinary people to build. And it is visible that there are significant improvements in this area.
With respect to “black outs”: I did not experience a single one in the 10 days that I was there. Black outs used to be the norm in Guyana.
I noticed that when I entered a home there was a phone there, even in the villages. This was a surprise also. Even water availability was noticeably improved.
Driving around Georgetown I observed dozens of hotels under construction. I learnt that these were being built for the 2007 Cricket World Cup. I also learnt that the hoteliers are given a 10 year tax holiday as incentive to build these hotels. But who are the owners of these hotels? Well, interestingly, it appears that the owners are mainly the drug boys. You see, Guyana has emerged as a key drug centre. Because of the strict anti laundering laws in North America, the drug money is stuck in Guyana. So the money is now appearing as hotels. One of the big debates in Guyana was the casino issue. It appears that this is another form the money can be laundered.
Noticeably absent were the high profile crimes like kidnapping and businessmen murders. These are invariably against Indians. After asking around I found out that the businessmen/drug boys took the situation in their own hands: they went on their own campaign to clean out the elements in Buxton who were responsible for these crimes, including Wadell the racist, who called himself the African freedom fighter who publicly expressed his anti Indian hatred.
There was an uneasy calm in Guyana. It was the first time I was there and I was not having “loose bowels” when I passed Buxton. What I heard was that the criminals in Buxton were at a loss as to deal with the vengeance from the drug boys. Coincidentally, the drug boys are mostly Indians and the kidnappers blacks. This has put a pause on the race crimes in Guyana. What this is saying is that if the anti Indian crimes are answered with quick and vicious response that they will stop.
This has happened in Guyana just by coincidence because it affected the drugs boys who happened to be Indians. Because of the calm and non- obstruction for the PNC racist elements, the government is able to move ahead with their development program at a normal pace. This is benefiting Guyana …..for now. Who knows how long this calm will last? It will last as long as the Indians will not tolerate the nonsense from the racist destructive elements from the black populace.
In this instance we are lucky that the blacks struck the raw nerve of the drug boys who happened to be Indians and are bold enough to fight back. Let’s keep this up and live out the dreams of out forefathers to inherit a great land across “kala pani”. Our responsibility is not to run to Canada but to stick it out and fight for what is rightfully ours: a free Guyana where we can prosper and enjoy!
Ganpat Singh
Hurting Guyanese longing to return home
Why are Indians not acting on TT kidnapping?
Ram Jagessar, Indo-Caribbean Times April 2007
People have been throwing hard questions at me since the publication of two kidnap horror stories in the first issue of Indo-Caribbean Times showed the rape and abuse of Indian women kidnap victims in Trinidad. What is wrong with those Indian men in Trinidad? How could they allow kidnappers to abuse our women like that and do nothing?
There are plenty of angry Indo-Caribbeans in Canada (and in the United States too) who are as furious at the kidnappers as they are at the inaction of the Indian population in Trinidad. Some have told me they cannot sleep in the night when they think of how those vicious kidnappers are ravaging Indian business people and abusing helpless Indian women.
The situation they lay out is simple enough. A plague of kidnappers, who appear to be mostly black, are targeting business people who are mostly Indian. An average of around 200 reported kidnappings have happened over the last five years, and maybe ten times as many have not been reported to the police. Tens of millions of dollars have been ripped away from the Indian kidnap victims, over a dozen have been killed. Many, if not all, of the women are sexually abused, and several victims like Vindra Naipaul are missing and believed dead.
The Ministry of National Security and the Trinidad police have been pathetically useless in slowing or stopping the kidnapping. Most of the Indian population now believes that the police are involved in the kidnapping racket, and that some members of the police are helping the kidnappers and getting their cut of the ransoms. The bulk of the non-Indian communities in Trinidad are indifferent or unsympathetic to the plight of the Indian kidnap victims. Some elements of the black community actually seem to enjoy the ravishing of the Indian community by the kidnappers.
In short, the Indian community in Trinidad has no security from kidnappers. The forces of law and order are useless and hopeless. Indians are cowering and hiding like food fish while the kidnappers roam free like barracudas. The Indian men are not doing a single thing to defend their community from these kidnapping criminals, not a thing to save their women from these kidnap rapist animals. These Indian men, who have billions of dollars in assets, have no ideas and no willpower aimed at defending their half a million strong community. Why? Why? Why? What’s wrong with these Indian men?
I have to tell people right away that I don’t know. Maybe 18 years away from Trinidad is too long, so that I don’t understand Trinidad as I did in the eighties before I migrated. If any of my readers have a clearer idea why Trinidad men have been so passive towards kidnapping, please share it. If anybody has any ideas on getting the Trinidad men to wake up and act, please share it.
What I can say is that the behaviour of Trinidad Indian men is unnatural and very scary. They are members of a society where they are being robbed of their life earnings, when they are being killed and practically driven out of the country. When they see that the security forces cannot or will not protect them, they must conclude they have no security. They have to take their security in their own hands and fight for their lives, or they have to flee. It comes down to fight or flight.
Trinidad Indian men have chosen to do neither, and that is really baffling. To my knowledge they are not analyzing and studying kidnapping either. They are not developing independent plans and strategies to deal with the kidnapping. Incredibly, they still seem to be hoping the corrupt and incompetent Trinidad police will suddenly change its nature and become effective after five years of failure.
I have spoken to several Indo-Trini men about kidnapping in the last few years and I am still baffled. When given the standard “describe, analyze and solve” formula they do a fair job or describing and analyzing the kidnapping crisis. They fail utterly at the “solve” portion. I suggest that since the security position is critical and the official security forces have failed, Indians must then do what is needed to guarantee their own security in Trinidad. That’s where meaningful conversation ends.
Too many start musing, ”If Bhadase was alive…if the Poolool boys were alive.. if Dole Chadee was around..” I am not joking. They start calling on dead men to save them! Or they start suggesting that a few Tamil Tigers from Sri Lanka or Indo-Caribbean marines from the American army might do the trick. They say it will take special people (that they don’t have available) to defend Indians from kidnappers. They say Indian business people will not cooperate. They say how dangerous it will be, how long it will take. They will give a dozen reasons why nothing can be done and not one reason why anything can be done, just as the Guyanese Indians used to do during the Burnham/Hoyte era.
And then they say it’s easy for you to talk when you are living safe in Canada, but you don’t understand what’s going on in Trinidad. Obviously these Trinidad men are sleeping more comfortably in their beds than some of us in Canada, and that’s really, really scary.
Other than a very few exceptions like lawyer Anand Ramlogan, Trinidad Indian men seem to be neither pro-active nor reactive when it comes to kidnapping. They are mostly inactive. And yes, I know it’s easy to be critical when we are sitting safe in our non-burglar proofed, unfenced homes in Canada. But we really cannot be happy at the non-response of our Indian brothers and sisters to kidnapping. A fire is burning up the drapes in the living room of Indians in Trinidad and the fire brigade is not answering the phone. They have to put out the fire themselves or else evacuate the building. Right now.
Indo-Caribbean
and other immigrants: How Much Accommodation?
By
Roop Misir, PhD
Indo-Caribbean
immigrants come to Canada mainly to economic reasons. As such, they
strive to achieve career objectives. Since this means doing things
differently, out of necessity they are required to adapt. However,
problems of adjustment can pose a challenge for some newcomers. With
few official centers to welcome immigrants, many find support amongst
relatives, and comfort in people of similar circumstances.
Often
overlooked is the fact is that we come not only with our skills but
also our culture. Some of us choose to retain only relevant aspects
of culture and tradition. However, many would like the best economic
opportunities, plus the freedom to lead their lives exactly as in
former countries. Are these expectations overlooked or ignored by
mainstream Canadians?
The
ongoing challenge is how to balance one lifestyle with another that’s
different. Whether we like it or not, aspects of our culture may
become modified and our former ways tempered as newcomers become
exposed to Canadian culture.
Culture
The
“culture” for a given population can be defined as all the
behaviors, ways of life, arts, beliefs and institutions that are
passed down from generation to generation. For an immigrant (or
other) group where culture dominates the way of life, then culture
also dictates the choice of food, codes of conduct, modes of dress,
as well as the language spoken, religion followed, rituals practiced,
morality and norms of behavior.
A
major challenge facing Canada is not only attracting talented
immigrants, but also helping that them adjust to life here. The task
of making them “feel at home” shortly after arrival may be easier
said than done, especially amongst new immigrants from countries
where peoples’ lives are governed by culture and tradition. For the
authorities therefore, the challenge is how to make newcomers happy
and as they strive to become contributing citizens in a strong and
united Canada?
Social
Dislocation a Necessary Price
There
is increasing movement of skilled workers across the globe. Many
immigrants like to acquire citizenship of adopted countries.
Naturally, some choose to retain ties with former homes. I myself
hold both Canadian and Guyanese passports.
Does
dual or multiple citizenships necessarily mean divided loyalties? Can
a person concurrently serve both Canada and a distant country?
Other
immigrants are willing to accept social dislocation as the necessary
price for economic advancement. And so they quickly become
assimilated into the social fabric of Canada. Who says that the rite
of passage from the home to the host country necessarily has to be
rough and traumatic?
If
there is a secret formula for immigrant success, what approach should
the host country Canada follow to assist new immigrants? Should it
be accommodation, integration or a combination of both?
“Reasonable”
Accommodation
At
the time when there was debate among Quebec politicians over limits
to “reasonable accommodation”, Prime Minister Stephen Harper
said: “I first of all think immigrants come to this country to
belong to this country.” Then he spoke of the need for
accommodation for immigrants and their cultures. He added that the
Canadian mixture of integration and accommodation might be the right
approach. By rejecting the notion that the country is facing a crisis
involving newcomers who won't embrace Canadian values, Mr. Harper
then pointed out: “…our country also consciously changes somewhat
for new immigrants and new cultures.”
[http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20071223.wharperimmigration1223/BNStory/National/].
Limitations
to Accommodation
During
the October 2007 Ontario election, the Progressive Conservatives
stirred up debate over what was “reasonable accommodation” when
they proposed that the province fund private schools, including
religious-based schools. But voters strongly rejected this proposal,
and thwarted Tory leader John Tory’s election bid. Despite this,
private schools are still allowed to operate, but the students must
pay tuition fees.
By
rejecting public funding for religious schools, does this mean that
Ontarians are insensitive to specific religion or people’s belief
systems? Or do they prefer that the same education be provided to ALL
Ontario students? Why? Is it because the prevailing view is that
there SHOULD NEVER be special privileges for special interest groups?
Need
to Revisit Multiculturalism?
Ever
since it became official, Canadians were apprehensive that official
multiculturalism may have its drawbacks. While conceived with the
best of intentions, is there a sinister side? For example, does it
encourage racial or ‘bloc’ voting, or promote the radicalization
of fringe elements in religious communities? In recent times, there
have been calls for prayer rooms in public spaces, and the insistence
on dress code preferences in schools and in sports. While these
demands are by no means illegal, are such requests unexpected and
asking too much? Do they undermine the spirit of multiculturalism?
The recent arrest and charge of a Muslim Canadian man for the murder
of his teenaged daughter, allegedly for refusing to wear a
traditional headscarf has cast elements of multiculturalism in a
different light.
Then
there is the view that the multicultural label can be unconsciously
patronizing. Newcomers arrive in a cloak of exotic mystery. This
supposedly discreet charm is never allowed to fade by assimilation,
but rather is preserved by the façade of official
multiculturalism. As a consequence, the exotica becomes embedded in
immigrants’ permanent identity. Nowhere else is this
“accommodation” more obvious than at summer fairs and other
cultural extravaganzas. Here newcomers showcase food and costume
(“sari and samosa”), and music and dance (steelband and bhangra).
Immigrants are encouraged to hang on to their identity of origin
rather than adopting ways of the new country. In these circumstances,
isn’t there is the risk of immigrants becoming “people of
nowhere”? Yes, celebrating one’s culture may lay our claim to
both lands; but the fact of the matter is that it also gives
newcomers no true place to call home.
Of
concern to us all is: Does multiculturalism encourage immigrants to
assimilate or integrate? Or does it force them to remain “ethnics”—on
the fringes of Canadian mainstream—merely to be seen and not heard?
Is there a hidden agenda here? What are possible implications for
Canada in the long term?
My
Love Has No Bounds
True,
most us get emotional when it comes to the place we call “home”.
Like a son to a mother, my love for Guyana is unquestioned. But
having left her shores many decades ago, I now realize that my love
for other places also has no bounds. For some 35 years, I have lived,
studied and worked in many provinces and cities of Canada. To me,
home is wherever I happen to live. For new immigrants and
Indo-Caribbean people, that home is Canada. For young people born
here, that place is also Canada. My own children have little interest
in my ‘marti bhoomi’ Guyana, choosing to consider my mother
country as just another place on the map. Should I get them for that?
Or should I be man and mature enough and respect their views? Signs
of the times, eh?
Like
fellow Indo-Caribbean immigrants, I know that I am the one who choose
to come to Canada. Accordingly, it is incumbent on me to adjust in
order to become successful in this wonderful country. I have had no
hidden agenda, no cultural axe to grind, and everything divine to
respect. As a Guyanese-Canadian with Indian roots strong and proud,
universal truths are instilled in my cultural DNA. One of the finest
sayings in Sanskrit with universal appeal is: Vasudhaiv Kutumbikam:
“The world is one family.” Billions around the world increasingly
share this conviction.
What’s
the best way for Indo-Caribbean and other newcomers achieve success
in Canada?
Those
with eyes let them see. Those with ears let them hear. And those who
choose to whine, or use Canadian secular laws to push linear agendas,
let them persist. Where it will all end, only time will tell, but in
the end, Satya meva Jayate - meaning: “Truth Alone Triumphs”!
Indo-Caribbean and other immigrants who try hard enough are most
likely to succeed. Knowing what our rights is one thing; demanding
them is another. Complaining will get us nowhere.
Amidst
the apparent turmoil of life in ‘multicultural’ Canada, is there
one happy medium where all can be reasonably accommodated and
respected? And can this be done without compromising our new
country’s goals for peace and prosperity?
[Dr.
Roop Misir is an Indo-Guyanese Canadian Teacher with the Toronto
District School Board. You may contact him at
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THE DEFENCE OF INDIANS (1977)
By Ram Jagessar
Files can be very embarassing things, especially when they reveal documents like this 1977 pamphlet on the issue of security for Indians in Trinidad. It was released by a small group in St Augustine of which I was a member. As a reminder of opportunities not taken, I am releasing it as it was printed over 30 years ago. There may still be something for Indo-Trinidadians to learn from it now.
THE DEFENCE OF INDIANS
Over the years we Indians have had to defend ourselves from all kinds of attacks. Others have attacked our religion, culture, political parties, our place in the economy, and have all failed in their efforts.
Today it is time to prepare ourselves for another kind of attack, and to organise our own defence. This time we are facing physical, criminal attack from members of another racial group. It is plain racial robbery and terrorism, with Indians being attacked mostly by non-Indians. All of us know about it. Every day it gets worse.
They are stealing our cars, robbing our business places without mercy. They are mugging us on the streets, hijacking our taxis and cars or stealing them in broad daylight. They are burglarising our empty homes or committing armed robberies on our homes when we are present. They are raping our women. They are stealing our animals and our crops in the fields.
COMING INTO OUR HOMES
Crooks and bandits are openly coming into our areas, scouting for places to rob. They are selling cocaine and ganja at our street corners, sometimes with help from Indians. Sometimes they poison our dogs before coming to rob our homes. What it means is that these people are terrorizing us where we live and daring us to do something. A few of them are openly saying that we Indians nave the money and we have to mind them now. They are saying they must steal from us because they have no jobs.
Many incidents are taking place. Businessmen are sometimes robbed every week. Houses are broken into again and again. Everybody in Trinidad knows of some examples. We see too that the Police are generally useless and helpless to stop this racial robbery. Sometimes they seem to be helping people like the drug pushers. Some policemen do not seem to be interested in cracking down on crooks making a living by robbing Indians.
The result is that we are living in jails. We can't leave our homes and be sure to return and find them safe. Some Indians are afraid to go out to the cinema or a show, and are looking to migrate to other lands.
But that will not do at all. It is not an answer. We have to understand what is happening. Then we have to act, and do something to protect ourselves. A people who cannot protect themselves from attack are not sure to survive.
Some Indians have already started, happy to say. They are getting ready to defend their selves, homes, villages, vehicles, animals and crops. In St. Helena, for instance, after a nasty robbery the villagers have set up their vigilante squad. But a lot of us are not really thinking of self defence. We do not have to wait until we are personally attacked. When we see our neighbour's house on fire, we should take out our hose and start wetting ours.
THE GUYANA PATTERN
First we have to ask some simple questions. Why should we work to defend ourselves if we have the Police to do that job? The answer is that for the most part the Police are not doing the job and there is no likelihood they will start soon. They are mostly of the same group as the criminals anyway and neither side considers robbing Indians to be specially bad.
Can this pattern of racial robbery get worse? Yes, it definitely can.
Has it happened anywhere else? Yes, right in nearby Guyana, and that is the pattern we can expect to get here very soon. In Guyana we have had armed gangs of non- Indians from the towns going into the country areas and kicking down the doors of Indian homes, robbing, killing, raping as if they were in Uganda . Sometimes they use army and Police vehicles, and some of the bandits are in fact soldiers and police. They have terrorized the Guyanese Indians and made them like a bunch of helpless sheep.
We cannot let that happen in Trinidad. The Trini Indian is a different creature altogether. We did not sweat and sacrifice to build this nation for a bunch of crooks and thieves to take away the rewards from us. We have education, we have some money, we have numbers. We must drive the wolves back into their caves and scatter the corbeaux from our dinner table. We have to start now.
THE PROCEDURE
It doesn't take much to start on the road to self defence and safety of Indians. We start by opening our eyes to what is happening around us, in our own areas and elsewhere in the country. What is the trend, the pattern? Be sure it will reach you sooner or later.
Next, we look at the culprits. Exactly who are the people doing the crimes? Make a little investigation in your area, set up a little group to find out. Get the descriptions, and if possible the names, addresses and method of operation of the bandits. Sometimes they are making no attempt to hide, as if nobody can do anything to them. Then we can organise to show them different. Then we decide what weapons we need to deal with these bloodsuckers, and what kind or insecticide we have to apply. They have declared war on us, and since we cannot surrender, we have to fight them. It's as simple as that.
Some other things follow from this line of thinking. First, each Indian must look to making his home safe from attack from burglars, kick down door bandits, rapists etc. Do we need steel doors, bars, dogs, burglar proofing? Should we put up fences? Should we open the door for strangers without seeing who they are first? Should we keep a weapon handy in the house? What should it be, a club, cutlass, speargun, or something else? How do we alert neighbours of a problem? What do we do to protect our cars or our crops in the fields? These are serious questions which require answers. Do not assume you are safe because you live in a country area or because you nave not been hit before.
We have to move beyond just defending our homes and business places. We must .look to the defence of our area as a zone. That means co-operating with neighbours, neighbourhood watch, a telephone alert system, alarms, roadblocks, vehicle patrols, weapons. If there are known offenders in the area they have to be dealt with, very firmly. We have to protect women and children, especially women alone at home in the day or walking home at night.
SELF DEFENCE GROUPS
Various such self defence groups may have to get together to confront well known robber roosts, to pressure the Police or the political parties on a national basis. We are talking about making Trinidad a safe place for Indians to live and work, and nobody is going to do that job for us. We must do it ourselves, and take whatever steps necessary.
Even on a personal level, we have to look to our safety. We Indians have to start thinking of our safety, now and in the future. We must start learning karate, judo and other self defence systems. We have to get legal weapons to protect ourselves when we move around. We must understand that corbeaux will start eating us if we lie still and dead in appearance. Corbeaux fly away when they see an animal alive and kicking, especially when they see the kicking. Understand the nature of the enemy attacklng us, and we will drive him away. This is deadly serious business. What we do decides how, where and in what condition we Indians live in Trinidad.
To conclude: Let us observe the problem of non Indians attacking us on a widespread and growing scale. Let us look at the trends. Let us look at solutions, plans for defending ourselves and dealing with our attackers.
The position is serious. It calls for serious thought and serious action NOW, not in 1991 or 1995. Racial crime against Indians is a reality today. Let us put it on our agenda TODAY.
What is the future of Indians in Trinidad?
Over half of the Indians from Guyana and Suriname have left. Is Trinidad next?
By Ram Jagessar
Q. Which is an alien land?
A. Any place even if it is one’s native land, where he is not respected
Q. Which is one’s own land?
A. Any land where one is respected
Sri Sri Muralidhara Swamiji
Trinidad (and Tobago) is the last of the three Indian majority countries of the southern Caribbean where there can still be some debate about the future of the Indian community.
From nearby Guyana the majority of the Indo-Guyanese have long departed for safer and more developed places to live. About 700,000 Indo-Guyanese and their descendants live abroad, mostly in the United States, Canada, Britain and Venezuela, while around 375,000 Indo-Guyanese remain at home, most of them according to the old joke just waiting for their visa to depart. Indo-Guyanese have voted with their feet, and there’s little doubt their future is in New York and Miami and Toronto and London.
Next door in Suriname, the bulk of the Indo-Surinamese took off for Holland when the creole (black) NPK party was negotiating for independence. Now over 200,000 of them and their children are happily settling down as Dutch citizens. Less than 150,000 Indo-Surinamese remain in the land of their birth. No community can recover when more than half its people depart. The future of Indo-Surinamese is in New Amsterdam and various other Dutch cities.
So how do the Indo-Trinidadians shape up when compared with our cousins from Guyana and Suriname? The sad reality is that we seem to be heading along the same road and are well advanced towards the break point of having 50% of the Indo-Trinidadian community choosing to leave their home and native land for better prospects abroad.
If we leave the emotion behind and just look at the facts we will find that already around 250,000 Indo-Trinis and their descendants have departed and are living elsewhere, most of them unlikely to return. Remaining in Trinidad and Tobago are around 523,900, or 40.3% of the TT population of 1.3 million. Simple mathematics will tell us that of the total Indo-Trinidad population of 773,900, a full 250,000 or 32% have decided their future lies elsewhere than Trinidad and Tobago. That’s about one third gone and two thirds remaining, which is not as definitive as Guyana or Suriname but certainly getting there.
For those who will dispute the estimate of 250,000 Indo-Trinis gone, let me say how I arrived at it. We know that Canada has a minimum 50,000 Indo-Trinis, the United States more than double that amount, or around 125,000. Britain has well over 25,000 in my opinion, which brings us up to 200,000 already. There are sizeable but unknown numbers of Indo-Trinis living in Venezuela, Barbados and several other Caribbean countries, plus others scattered everywhere from continental Europe to Africa to India to the rest of Asia, and even Australia and New Zealand. I think it’s well within probability that we could have another 50,000 Indo-Trinis scattered around the rest of the world.
The natural question to ask is why have Indo-Trinidadians been leaving the most prosperous country in the southern Caribbean, and are we likely to continue doing so in the future? It comes down to the respect mentioned by Swami Muralidhara. Indians want an equal place in the land where they were born. They want a fair chance to build a life for themselves and their children. They want to able to keep their culture and religion and way of life without discrimination and prejudice. They want economic, cultural, social and religious equality with the other people living in the country, nothing more, nothing less.
That’s what the jahajis were looking for when they decided to stay in Trinidad rather than returning to India. It’s still what their descendants want. But we’ve never got that equality, that respect, neither during the long years of colonialism or in the fifty years since self government and independence.
It’s a simple equation. When the British were getting ready to leave Trinidad, the Indians and the Africans battled for political power to replace them. The Afros won and the Indos lost, in 1956, 1961, 1966, 1970, 1971, 1976, 1981, for 30 years in succession. The Afros got the political power, and with it economic, cultural and social dominance. The Indians became the political enemy to be kept out of power and position at any costs, and put in their place.
Seeing that their prospects for respect and equality were not good, Indians started migrating quietly from the late fifties and have continued to do so ever since. Indian leaders told them they could get equality when an Indian dominated political party won power, but that didn’t happen for 39 years, until 1995 when Basdeo Panday’s UNC won the government.
To their great surprise, Indians discovered that Panday was unable to do much towards getting the much desired equality for Indians. He lasted only 6 years in government, and then the Afro dominated PNM resumed its hold on power in 2001.
It boils down to this. For the 111 years since 1845 Indians got no respect or equality under the British rulers, and for the last 51 years since 1956 they didn’t get it from the Afros or even their own man Basdeo Panday. What are their chances of getting it in future from the Afro PNM and their leader Patrick Manning?
Not enough to bet your future on and that of your children, is my guess. There comes a time when you must cut your losses and look for a new game. The Indo-Trinidadians are already a third of the way along the Guyana-Suriname road of leaving their native land to find their own land. It's just a matter of time before they reach the point of no return when the majority of the majority Indians in Trinidad go away.
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