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1. INDIAN INDENTURESHIP: The new slavery of British capitalism
INDIAN INDENTURESHIP: The New Slavery of British
Capitalism
By Gulcharan Mohabir
On May 5,
1838, two British ships, the Whitby and the Hesperus landed
in Port Georgetown, British Guiana (BG) (now called Guyana), on the South
American continent. The cargo: 396 Indians from India. (Eighteen
died during the voyage). This was the
first batch of Indians to arrive in the western world under the new system
euphemistically called Indentureship,
but which became in reality "The New
System of Slavery" ,according to Lord John Russell, a Secretary of State for
the Colonies.
In 1834,
black (African) slavery had been abolished in British
Guiana and the British
West Indies. The Abolition of Slavery Act
came into effect on August
1, 1834, and proclaimed that: "slavery shall be and is hereby
utterly and forever abolished and declared unlawful throughout the British
colonies, plantations and possessions abroad." Subsequent events have shown
that this was interpreted to apply only to black (African) slavery.
The newly
freed slaves afterwards refused to work on the sugar plantations, those
repositories of the most inhumane treatment ever meted out by humans to their
fellow humans. Even though the white plantocracy tried to entice them with
monetary inducements, freedom was far more valuable. (And who can blame them!).
Many sugar plantations were abandoned, especially the absentee-owner
plantations. Others became uneconomical propositions. Sugar was floundering.
The British plantation owners as a class were losing their collective shirt,
and also their status in society. The former black slaves had provided a ready
source of cheap, easily controlled labour, on whose backs the white plantocracy
had accumulated immense wealth and enviable status in British society. It
became imperative to find a new similar source of cheap and easily controlled
labour.
The British East India Company came
to their rescue!
Below is
reproduced a letter sent from British
Guiana to India in 1836:
Copy of letter
from John Gladstone, Esq.
to Messrs. Gillanders, Arbuthnot & Co.(1)
Liverpool,
4 January 1836
Dear Sirs,
I met with an accident here about three weeks ago, which confined me to
the house, from which I am now recovering, and hope in a few days to be able to
return to Edinburgh; this will account to you for using my son's pen for
writing in place of my own. I observe by a letter which he received a few days ago
from Mr. Arbuthnot, that he was sending
a considerable number of a certain class of Bengalees, to be employed as
labourers, to the Mauritius.
You will probably be aware that we are very particularly
situated with our Negro apprentices in the West Indies, and that it is a matter
of doubt and uncertainty how far they may be induced to continue their services
on the plantations after their apprenticeship expires in 1840. This to us is a
subject of great moment and deep interest in the colonies of Demerara and Jamaica.
We are therefore most desirous to obtain and introduce labourers from other
quarters, and particularly from climates something similar in their nature. Our
plantation labour in the field is very light; much of it, particularly in
Demerara, is done by task-work, which for the day is usually completed by two
o'clock in the afternoon, giving to the people all the rest of the day to
themselves. They are furnished with comfortable dwellings and abundance of
food; plantations, the produce of the colony, being the most common, and
preferred generally by them; but they have also occasionally rice, Indian corn,
meal, ship's biscuits, and a regular supply of salt cod-fish, as well as the
power of fishing for themselves in the trenches. They have likewise an annual
allowance of clothing sufficient and suitable for the climate; there are
schools on each estate for the education of the children, and the instruction
of their parents in the knowledge of religious duties. Their houses are
comfortable, and it may be fairly said they pass their time agreeably and
happily. Marriages are encouraged, and when improper conduct on the part of the
people takes place, there are public stipendiary magistrates, who take
cognizance of such, and judge between them and their employers. They have
regular medical attendance whenever they are indisposed, at the expense of
their employers. I have been particular in describing the present situation and
occupation of our people, to which I ought to add, that their employment in the
field is clearing the land with the hoe, and, where required, planting fresh
canes. In the works a portion are occupied in making sugar, and in the
distilleries, in which they relieve each other, which makes their labour light.
It is of great importance to us to endeavour to provide a portion of other
labourers, whom we might use as a set-off, and, when the time for it comes,
make us, as far as it is possible, independent of our negro population; and it
has occurred to us that a moderate number of Bengalees, such as you were
sending to the Isle of France, might be very suitable for our purpose; and on
this subject I am now desirous to obtain all the information you can possibly
give me. The number I should think of taking and sending by one vessel direct
from Calcutta to
Demerara would be about 100; they ought to be young, active, able-bodied
people. It would be desirable that a portion of them, at least one-half, should
be married, and their wives disposed to work in the field as well as they
themselves. We should require to bind them for a period not less than five
years or more than seven years. They would be provided with comfortable
dwellings, food, and medical assistance; they would also, if required, be
provided with clothing, or wages to provide themselves, which, for the
able-bodied, would not exceed four dollars per month, and in that proportion
for females and their children as they grow up; a free passage would be given
to them to Demerara, where they would be divided, and 20 to 30 placed on one
plantation. I do not know whether the class referred to are likely to be of a
particular caste, and under the influence of certain religious feelings, and
also restricted to any particular kind of food; if so, we must endeavor to
provide for them accordingly. You will particularly oblige me by giving me, on
receipt, all the information you possibly can on this interesting subject; for,
should it be of an encouraging character, I should immediately engage for one
of our ships to go to Calcutta, and take a limited number to Demerara, and from
thence return here. On all other subjects I refer you to letters from the
house; and always am,
yourstruly
John
Gladstone
Back came the
reply:
Copy of letter
from Messrs. Gillanders, Arbuthnot & Co.
to John Gladstone, Esq.(1)
Calcutta,
6 June 1836.
Dear Sir,
We beg to acknowledge your letter of the
4th January, referring to your desire to procure natives from this part of the
world to work upon your estates in the West Indies, and in some degree render
you independent of the Negro population at the termination of the present
system; and it is with regret that at the time the letter under reply was
written you were suffering from an accident, the effects of which, however, we
hope ere this are entirely gone.
Within the last two years upwards of 2,000 natives have been sent from this to
the Mauritius, by several parties here, under contracts of engagement for five
years. The contracts, we believe, are all of a similar nature; and we enclose
copy of one, under which we have sent 700 or 800 men to the Mauritius; and we
are not aware that any greater difficulty would present itself in sending men
to the West Indies, the natives being perfectly ignorant of the place they
agree to go to, or the length of the voyage they are undertaking. The tribe
that is found to suit best in the Mauritius is from the hills to the north of
Calcutta, and the men of which are all well-limbed and active, without
prejudices of any kind, and hardly any ideas beyond those of supplying the
wants of nature, arising it would appear, however, more from want of
opportunity than from any natural deficiency, of which there is no indication
in their countenance, which is often one of intelligence. They are also very
docile and easily managed, and appear to have no local ties, nor any objection
to leave their country.
In the event of your determining to introduce these people in the West Indies
and sending a ship for them, a contract such as the one enclosed, if approved
of, or modified or enlarged as you may think necessary, may be entered into
with any number of men you would wish us to procure, and this contract upon
landing the men in the West Indies and being registered at the Police-office,
would, we conclude, give your managers sufficient power to insist upon their
performing any reasonable task they may be set to. Such has been the case in
the Mauritius, and in one or two instances where the men have been idle or lazy,
they have been punished by the competent authority. It would perhaps avoid
after-discussion were the currency in which the men will be paid, and its
equivalent value with the rupee, stated in the contract. The best period for
procuring and shipping the men is in our cold season, between the months of
November and April, and the instruction to procure the men should precede the
ship about two months, to give time to collect them; we should of course not be
able to find a cargo for the ship, but some morghy rice might be sent, which
with a little care would keep for three years.
The security taken by government here upon taking natives to England is to
protect the East India Company from loss in the event of natives being left in
England without the means of subsistence or of finding their way back, in which
case the Company are bound to provide for them until a passage to India can be procured,
but no guarantee is required upon sending men elsewhere; as however the
colonial government will probably make the importer enter into an agreement
that these men shall be no burden to the colony, a provision is made in the
contract to withhold so much of their allowances as will pay their passage
back, should it be found necessary to discharge them before their period of
service has expired.
We fear we should not find so many as half of the number provided with wives;
as, however, our friends at the Isle of France have always discouraged the men
being so accompanied, we are not very well able to say how far the women might
be induced to go.
Our letters from the Isle of France speak very favourably of the men hitherto
sent, many of whom our friends write to us have their task completed by two
o'clock, and go home, leaving the Negroes in the field.
We are not aware that we can say any more on this subject, unless we add, that
in inducing these men to leave their country, we firmly believe we are breaking
no ties of kindred, or in any way acting a cruel part.
The Hill tribes, known by the name of Dhangurs, are looked down upon by the
more cunning natives of the plains, and they are always spoken of as more akin
to the monkey than the man. They have no religion, no education, and, in their
present state, no wants beyond eating, drinking, and sleeping; and to procure
which they are willing to labour. In sending men to such a distance, it would
of course be necessary to be more particular in selecting them, and some little
expense would be incurred, as also some trouble; but to aid any object of
interest to you, we should willingly give our best exertions in any manner
likely to be of service.
We are, &c.
Gillanders, Arbuthnot & Co.
P.S.--You will observe, upon reading over the form of our contract, that
it is registered in our Police-office, and authenticated by one of the
magistrates, in whose presence the document is signed, after the nature of it
has been explained to the parties in their own language.
(signed) G., A.& Co.
Notice the derogatory language used in the last
paragraph of the second letter. It's as if the writer, by denigrating these
people as "monkeys and not humans", is justifying the imposition of slavery on
these Indians. Even in present day, whites refer to the peoples of the former
British colonies as "natives", a term that intentionally denotes an inferior
status.
Additionally, because of their inability to communicate
in English, they were branded as being illiterate (2).
These unfortunate souls comprised the first batch of
what was euphemistically known as INDENTURED LABOURERS, sometimes derogatively
referred to as "coolies", which meant that they were bonded under contract for
five or more years for a paltry annual wage to work on the sugar plantations of
all British colonies. This successor system of the new slavery was devised
wholly and solely to circumvent the original Abolition of Slavery Act.
Indians were duped into making the journey across the kala
pani(3); some were simply kidnapped and forcibly transported to the
colonies; whilst a few voluntarily agreed to go(3). It is also believed that
some signed up to go to the colonies to escape British retribution after the
Great Mutiny in 1857 in India. Worse, there were many cases of young
children being kidnapped and taken to the colonies. Of especial significance is
the despicable conduct of arkaati's, Indians who acted as procurers for
the British in India to acquire candidates for Indentureship.
They were made to sign a contract (4) drawn up by their new masters in the
English language, and so most were ignorant of the terms and conditions of
their indentureship contracts.
There were three major elements of these contracts:
each ‘indentured' was made to serve on a particular sugar estate for a
specified pay for a specified period; the duration of the contract was for five
years(5); and the plantation owners had to pay for the return passage to India at the end of their contract. Fortunately
for them, they were permitted to practice their religion and other cultural
practices. (Under the previous slavery system, Africans were completely
dispossessed of their entire identity).
These Indians knew nothing of their final destination;
neither did they know how long the journey would take. Needless to say many
died on the trip. It is estimated that the death rate of each trip was as high
as seventeenth percent.
On their arrival in the colonies, they were deployed
in various sugar plantations, where they were lodged in loogies, which
were actually the living quarters of the original black slaves. The harsh
treatment meted out to them was similar to slavery. In fact, Indentureship
became a euphemism for the new slavery, since for all intent and purposes,
these Indians were basically slaves (The white masters had complete control
over their lives). There were many rebellions against their owners, but as Dr.
Brinsley Samaroo in his article: "Two Abolitions: African Slavery and East
Indian Indentureship" stated: "East Indian resistance to Indentureship often
expressed in fashion similar to the African resistance to slavery took the form
of riots, strikes, desertion and murder of offending managers and overseers.
Such resistance was invariably, as in the days of slavery, put down with exemplary
harshness. Yet resistance persisted, as Indians were becoming increasingly
better organized, producing strong leadership as the immigrants grew more
accustomed to their new environment". Several instances of revolt resulted in
commissions of inquiry set up to investigate the treatment of Indians on the
sugar plantations. Commissions consisted of both British and Indian Nationals.
Abuse of Indian women by white personnel on the sugar estates was also rampant.
Many Indians even tried unsuccessfully to return to India, and many died in the dangerous forests.
On recapture, they were usually flogged and salt rubbed on their wounds, and
then imprisoned.
On the sugar estates, Sardaars were appointed as mainly go-betweens. These were Indians
who had somehow acquired a smattering of the English language, and so were able
to facilitate communication between the plantation owners and the indentureds.
In time, these Sardaars became very
powerful themselves, and in their privileged position have been known to mete out
more atrocities on their own kind. Many acquired substantial wealth on the
backs of the common labourers.
The then British Government did appoint a special
agent in each colony (called the Immigration Agent-General) to ensure that the
welfare (including their health) of these indentureds was protected, and that
the inhuman practices of the former slavery system were not repeated. These
supposed protectors were all whites, and of course, they always sided with the
white plantation owners. Each colony only had one such official, and it was
impossible for him to be present all the time in all the plantations. And so in
their absence, untold atrocities were meted out. On the few occasions when they
visited particular sugar plantations, the owners would ply them with food and
alcohol until they are too drunk to perform any kind of investigation of
abuses. Most importantly, Indians were regarded as habitual liars, and this
perception pre-empted any investigation of claimed abuses.
There were many commissions (such as the Des Voeux
Commission) appointed to investigate the deplorable conditions under which
these Indians survived (some did not survive the cruelty). Some of these
comprised of high ranking Indians from the Government of India. Some of their
reports only served to white-wash most of the atrocities that were perpetrated.
There were a few Indian politicians, notably Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya, who
tried very hard to have the system abolished entirely, which eventually did
occur in 1917. The Mahatma himself (in view of his South African experience) is
believed to have also opposed this Indenturship system,
The British used the ex-African slaves as security
personnel to police the Indians on the sugar plantations. Some Africans were
also used as nurses in the hospitals maintained by the white planters. During
hospital stays Indians were forced to consume pork and beef by these nurses.
These practices bred hostility between Indians and Africans, and were probably
the beginning of simmering hostilities between the races, which persist until
today in all former British colonies.
The introduction of Indian indentureds into the sugar
plantation was a highly successful venture for the white plantation owners.
Sugar became king again! The industry grew to amazing heights never before
realised. Sugar made many new English barons. As can be imagined, the
plantocracy now wanted to keep the indentureds on the sugar estates for as long
as possible (5).
The return passages proved to be too expensive for the
scrooge plantation owners, and various schemes were devised to retain them in
the colonies. One such scheme was the allotment, for a price, of small plots of
land to many of the labourers to cultivate crops for themselves. This played
well with the Indians, who always dreamed of owning their own land. (In fact,
inspite of the many hardships encountered during their indentureship period,
many of them had saved up tidy sums of money and returned to India). They planted crops, and reared animals,
such as chickens, ducks, goats, sheep, and of course cows. Although this new
practice was devised to keep these Indians from returning to India, it gave those who remained in the
colonies a new dream for a better life. The cultivation of rice by
predominantly Indians in the colony eventually became a major industry in BG,
and was one of the main export industry there, (after sugar and bauxite). Many
Indians went on to make small fortunes from rice!
This inhumane system was also finally abolished in
1917. By that time, over half-a-million Indians had been transported to
the
West Indians, with the majority settled in British Guiana (238,909) and
Trinidad (143,939). Many did return to India, after having accumulated
small savings.
(The Indentureship contract guaranteed them a return passage to India,
at the cost to the plantation owners.)
Some 74,645 persons were repatriated from British Guiana to India at
the end of their contracts.
After this insidious system ended, many Indians continued
to labour on the sugar plantation as free men and women, but still receiving
paltry wages. Many also used their weekends and holidays to work their own land
and became fairly wealthy. They planted rice, which became one of the main
industries in British
Guiana. The
technology of the rice industry was imported from India, and its cultivation provided a source of
cheap food for the then indentureds. Families collaborated together to produce
wealth they never previously possessed. Most Indians laboured continuously
during their lifetime so that they could acquire the wealth to educate their
children. (The writer's father always confided that he will labour so that his
children do not have to experience what he endured).
Post-1917 brought some freedom and wealth to the
former indentureds. Nevertheless, there were many systemic impediments to
full-fledged citizenship. During the period 1834 to 1917, the former African
slaves, now freed, had established themselves as the new middle class, between
the white ruling class and Indians at the bottom of the social ladder. Africans
had acquired for themselves an English (read Christian) education, and so
became qualified to hold civil service and other professional positions. Since
they had all converted to Christianity, religion also became a qualifying factor
in job placements. To become a teacher, a policeman, a civil servant, or other
such positions, one had to be a Christian. Many Indians who remained in these
colonies were therefore forced to convert.(6)
As happened in Africa during and after colonisation, the Christian
missionaries were hard at work on the sugar plantations endeavouring to save
the heathens' souls. Indian children were forced to attend Christian schools,
and to worship in Christian churches. Schooling in Indian religion or culture
was not provided in these government-funded schools. In fact, Indians were
forced to send their children to evening schools, housed in Hindu or Muslim
churches to acquire a smattering of education in anything Indian. Even this
half-hearted attempt at an Indian education floundered when parents discovered
that only an English (read Christian) education could get their sons and
daughters jobs in the colonies. Eventually, they lost their language; but they
nevertheless clung to their religion, their culture, their Indian food; as much
as possible of their Indianness.(7)
Of particular importance in this most deplorable
episode of human history is the multifarious ploys employed by the white
plantation owners, with the willing connivance of the administrators of the colonies,
to subvert and even ignore current laws as they relate to these Indentureds.
The laws that allowed this system to operate were openly flouted, since the
administration of these laws and penalties arising thereof, were always in the
hands of whites. Provisions for the welfare of these people, such as hospitals,
schools, housing, etc., were grossly inadequate. Indians were even killed in
many cases.
The British had been masters at subjugation. So much
so that they made Indians kill other Indians. They used India as a source of slave labour in their
colonies, in the same way that they had used Africa. They even made us believe that what they were doing
was for our own good, and that we were the ‘white man's burden'. We are still
bedevilled with a colonial mentality, and have become adept at denigrating our
religion and our customs beliefs. More insidious was the practise that
developed and exits even today (and we see various forms of intellectual
contortions that evidence this): business interests of the powerful and
privileged are protected and promulgated by or with the use of political and
military power. This practice is rationalised as being "our national interest"
or "national security", and this justifies almost any behaviour.
Postscript:
This episode of Indian History has been more or less
ignored by the history books of India. This is incomprehensible, since a great
deal of the original documentation exits in archives in Calcutta and Bombay, and the India Office Library of the
British Archives(UK). One can only speculate as to the reason for this grave
omission.
In 1988, the Ontario Association for Studies in
Indo-Caribbean Culture (OASICC) celebrated the one hundred and fiftieth
anniversary of coming of Indians to the West Indies. This event was marked by a week long conference at
the University of York, and the end result was the publication of
"Indentureship and Exile", a compendium of papers presentation by several
scholars.
The Guyanese East Indian Association of Canada and the
Indo-Trinidadian Canadian Association started to celebrate Indian Heritage Day
on May 5, and the whole month of May was dedicated to celebrating Indian
culture and heritage. The intention was, and still is, to honour all our
ancestors who suffered so much, and gave their progenies so much. Another
concomitant motivation was to make our youths proud to be Indians, by celebrating
our rich cultural heritage and honouring our multifarious achievements
throughout the ages.
Mr Raminder Gill, an MPP for the Conservative Party in
Ontario, realised the immense importance of this celebration to the South Asian
community in Canada, and in December 2001, he introduced legislation (AN ACT TO
PROCLAIM MAY AS SOUTH HERITAGE MONTH AND MAY 5 AS SOUTH ASIAN ARRIVAL DAY),
which was supported by all parties in the Ontario legislature, and which was
into passed into law, making May 5 South Asian Arrival day, and the month of
May as South Asian Heritage month.(8) The Act proclaims "It is appropriate to
recognize and pay tribute to the contributions South Asian immigrants have
made, and continue to make, to the development and general welfare of Ontario."
This celebration has caught the imagination of the South Asian community, and
today there are as many as fifty different celebrations during May, and it is
expected that the future will see many significant enhancements to the type and
format of these events.
NOTES:
(1) Both these letters were abstracted from "HILL
COOLIES: A brief exposure of the Deplorable Condition of the Hill Coolies in
British Guiana and Mauritius, and of the nefarious means by which they were
induced to resort to these Colonies" by John Scoble. See http://www.indiana.edu/~librcsd/etext/scoble/index.html
(2) Indians were regarded as backward, illiterate and
uncivilized (according to the Britishers) because they did not know the English
language, and were not conversant with western culture and the lifestyle (Dare
we refer to whites as illiterate and uneducated because they do not know Hindi
or Sanskrit or any other Indian language for that matter, and totally
unfamiliar with Indian customs and practices!). But as Clem Seecharran has
documented in his highly acclaimed book "BECHU: bound coolie radical in British Guiana 1894-1901" there were Indians who were
actually more articulate than some of the white plantocracy they slaved for in
the then British colony.
In this book Dr. Seecharran chronicled the numerous
letters written by Bechu during 1894 to 1901. ‘He challenged the plantocracy's
definition of the colony's welfare purely within their own frame of reference.
Bechu's combative pen unmasked the evils of Indian Indentureship: poor wages
and conditions of work; sexual exploitation of women workers by managers and
overseers; the obsession with sugar and indentured labour; collusion between
colonial authorities - including the Indians' "protectors" - and the sugar
planters. Bechu's letters were a catalyst for debates on the central issues of the
day, as they were an inspiration to Indians in the colony.'
In February 1897, Bechu became the first Indian in the
Caribbean to appear before a Royal Commission
investigating conditions prevailing in British Guiana.
(3) One of my closest friends had told me the story
about his paternal grandfather. When this gentleman was about seventeen years
old and still living in India, he was out walking with one of his
friend. They were accosted by a white man, who asked them if they would like to
see what a British frigate looked like inside. The youths agreed to go on
board, and whilst they were inside the engine room, the ship set sail. By the
time these boys realised what was happening, they were already far out at sea.
(4) This is an example of the Indentured contract that
Indians were made to sign before embarking on the ship for the colonies:
Copy Form of Contract
Between the undersigned acting on behalf of
of Mauritius, and the natives whose names are hereunto affixed, the following
agreement has been entered into by the several parties binding themselves to
the observance of the conditions thereof:
1. The natives agree to proceed to the Isle of France, to work as labourers
there, upon a sugar estate, the property of and to remain there, if required, for the time of five
years.
2. The passage of the natives to the Mauritius shall be paid by who shall
also provide a passage again to this country, at the end of five years, for
each native who may then wish to return; but if any individual, from any cause,
should be discharged or leave the employment of before the expiration of five years, such individual
shall have no claim on him for a passage.
3. The pay of the natives shall be fixed at the rate of five rupees per
month for each man. The labour required from them will be that of digging
holes, weeding canes, working in the sugar-house, repairing roads and bridges,
or otherwise making themselves useful, according to their ability, as may order
them; the quantity of daily labour required from each to be fixed by the
manager of the property; the pay of one sirdar shall be fixed at seven rupees
per month, and that of one mate six rupeess, and boys at three rupees per
month.
4. As must be responsible to government that the nativess shall not be a
burden to the colony, in the event of their being discharged or leaving their
employments, one rupee per month shall be retained from the pay of each
individual, until there shall be a sufficient sum to provide a passage for each
to Calcutta; should no such contingency take place, the money shall be restored
at the end of five years.
5. In addition to the pay as above fixed, food and clothing shall be
supplied to each as follows--
Fourteen chettacks of rice (about 2lbs.), two ditto of dholl*, two ounces of
salt, and some oil and tamarind, daily; and annually for each, clothing as
follows; two dhooties, two blankets, one jacket, and one cap.
6. Each individual shall receive six months pay in advance, for which he shall
give an acknowledgement here; their pay to commence from the date of their
going on board the ship.
7. The nature of this agreement (which shall be registered at the police) is
such, that each native is individually responsible for the observance of its
conditions by every one whose mark it bears; and it is further agreed, that
while in hospital, from sickness or any other cause, the pay is stopped during
such time.
*
Something like dried split peas
SOURCE: Parliamentary Papers, LII No. 180,
1837-38. MF41.413-14
(5) There were many ploys that they white plantocracy
concocted to extend the period of indentureship, such as any period of imprisonment
had to be added to the contracted period.
(6) In British Guiana, this practice was abolished in 1962, when Dr Cheddi
Jagan, an Indian, became the first Premier of BG.
(7) In the last two decades, many Indians revisited India in the hopes of finding their ‘roots'.
They have always remained fiercely Indian, to the point where they would root
for the visiting Indian cricket team when touring in the West Indies.
Also, going to the cinema to
watch Indian
movies
become a favourite pastime for most diasporic Indians, as this was a
way for
them to relate to India and bind them to Mother
India.
It's always a source of amazement to recently
emigrated Indians in the North American Diaspora to hear Indians from the West
Indies singing Hindi songs, but not able to speak any intelligible Hindi.
(8) The movement to recognize May 5 as Indian Cultural
and Heritage Day was initiated by Guyanese and Trinidadians in Toronto. The term South Asian was preferred over
the original Indian nomenclature so that the celebration could be more
inclusive. This was a most magnanimous gesture on the part of Mr Raminder Gill,
who being Indian born, wanted to involve all Sri Lankans, Bangladeshis,
Pakistanis, Indians from the African continent, in addition to Indians from
India and the West Indies.
Some references:
1
Centenary
History of East Indians in Guyana by Peter Ruhomon.
2
Bechu:
bound coolie radical in British Guiana 1894-1901 by Dr. Clem
Seecharan.
3
Tiger
in the stars by Dr. Clem Seecharan
4
The
History of Indians in Guyana by Dwarka Nath.
5
Indenture
and exile - The Indo-Caribbean experience - compiled by Frank Birbalsingh.
(Selected papers from the York Indo-Caribbean Studies Conference, York University, Toronto, Canada)
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