On May 30, 1845, eleven years after slavery was abolished, a ship called Fatel Razack landed on the shores of Trinidad and Tobago, depositing the first boatload of indentured servants from India. These workers would go on to work on the islands’ many sugar plantations, settling down, raising families, and planting their own roots in the Caribbean. Like many of their own names, even the name of that ship they arrived on, Fatel Razack, was a permutation of the original, in this case from the Arabic phrase “Fath al Razak,” which means “Victory to Allah the Sustainer.”
A hundred years later, in 1945, the Indian citizens of Trinidad
and Tobago marked the centenary with a procession and ceremony, calling the celebration
Indian Arrival Day. It was attended by a number of public officials, such as the
acting governor representing the UK, and with greetings read from other noted dignitaries
such as Mahatma Gandhi. Celebrations of the event, akin to the Mayflower
landing in North America, continued on and off over the next few decades with
less success than that first one and under different names, until 1995 when
Prime Minister Patrick Manning declared the date of the 150th
anniversary of the ship’s arrival as a permanent public holiday.
Between 1845 and 1917, more than 140,000 Indians emigrated to Trinidad alone, and today, ethnic Indians (East Indians as they're known in the Caribbean)
celebrate Indian Arrival Day, mainly in the Caribbean, on
different dates depending on country, but elsewhere as well. May 5, 1838, in Guyana. May 10, 1845, in Jamaica. June 5 in
Suriname. In Fiji, where the event is known as Girmit, on May 14, 1879. In
Mauritius, November 2. According to a number of Internet sources, the event is
also celebrated in Australia, Britain, Canada, Martinique, New Zealand, South
Africa, and the United States.
Nowhere is it more popular than Trinidad and Tobago,
though, where it’s a public holiday with at least a dozen melas (parties) thrown across the islands. On some levels, it’s a
controversial holiday. Some suggest taking out the word “Indian,” for why
should any one group get to celebrate their arrival when so many
others hail from other lands and cultures as well?
Whatever your position on that subject, Trinidadian blogger
Nicholas Laughlin makes an interesting observation about arrival day itself:
“I suppose I wish I knew exactly when my ancestors first
arrived in Trinidad, and maybe a few days' research at the National Archives
would turn up some answers, but I find I'm far less interested in the moment of
arrival itself and far more interested in the new journey that 'arrival' begins
– in the process by which wanderers, exiles, prisoners, and explorers make of
the disjecta membra of many old worlds, something new and strange and perhaps, in the original
sense of the world, wonderful.
We reach. And the journey now start[s].
Bon voyage to us all.”
We reach. And the journey now start[s].
Bon voyage to us all.”
Very interesting piece, Supriya! And Nicholas is right about arrival starting another journey. But I think both legs of the journey are equally important. It's good to know your cultural roots even while adjusting to the new culture around you. I think it's sad when the older traditions are lost.
ReplyDeleteSo interesting, Supriya! Thanks for sharing and Heidi's right, we need to learn about our cultural roots and remember them. I think it's a big part of who we are.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, Supriya. Thanks for sharing a note from history that few of us know about.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Patricia, and absolutely agree, Heidi and Alli. I'm always as interested in how emigrants arrive to a place as what they do next. But I also agree with the idea that we're always traveling, always on a journey of some kind. New country, new house, new job.... happy NEW year, by the way!
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