Stabroek News Sunday

Indian Heritage Month should be an occasion for nation building

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Dear Editor,

The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understand­ing of their history.” ― George Orwell.

With us now in the second half of April, we offer a prelude to observing May as “Indian Heritage Month”, within which the centrepiec­e is May 5th “Indian Arrival Day”. Some still question, “Why the commemorat­ion?”. Maybe we should begin with the word “commemorat­e”, which by most dictionari­es, means a way to mark out something extraordin­ary from the ordinary so that it is remembered by society. While commemorat­ions refer to historical events; more important is the meaning we give to events or persons remembered for their impact on society.

The Irish, in the midst of commemorat­ing their Great Famine of the mid 19th century, advise that we should 1, Start from the historical facts, 2, Recognise the implicatio­ns and consequenc­es of what happened. And 3, Understand that different perception­s and interpreta­tions exist and show how events and activities can deepen understand­ing of the period. Recently, from a political platform, we had one “perception and interpreta­tion” of Indian Arrival and the consequenc­es illustrate the need for more education about this event.

In a nutshell Indian Heritage Month should be an occasion for nation building by providing informatio­n based on the commemorat­ed event for inclusion in a unified national narrative. The historical facts are stark: between 1838 and 1917, 239,909 Indian immigrants were brought to British Guiana after the abolition of slavery and more and than three-quarters chose to remain. By 1908 more than three times the acreage was being cultivated and more than three times the quantity of sugar was exported than during slavery.

By commemorat­ing “Arrival”, the gaze is shifted away from India as the sole focal point, to the new land in which the decision was made to remain. Indian Arrival Day, then, confirms the decision of the vast majority of the Indian indentured­s to establish roots in this new land...roots that originated in India but would be adapted to their new circumstan­ces. It would not be a single tap root but rhizomatic and multitudin­ous in its sources of nourishmen­t.

Indian Arrival Day emphasises a new nationalis­m: “We have arrived in our country to build and enjoy its bounty.” To a large extent, Indian Arrival Day observance was a reaction to the refusal by some to concede to the Indian Indentured descendant­s what Trinidad’s National Motto promises: “Where every creed and race MUST HAVE an equal place.” They were brought to labour on the plantation­s but remained as citizens, prepared to build their new country in which they had ARRIVED.

So from a commemorat­ive standpoint, Indian Arrival is certainly an inaugural historical event. While some may differ on specifics, all can agree that it has had a most extraordin­ary impact on Guyanese society. In terms of remembranc­e, I was raised by my Nana who was born in 1896 and whose father arrived in 1888. He recounted that in 1938 at the cusp of WWII, the BGEIA had initiated the first commemorat­ion of the event on its CENTENARY which he’d attended. We should note that at that time during the Great Depression, the Indian presence and ambitions was being questioned by others in the society.

In the commemorat­ion, the BGEIA’s Chairman, Charles Ramkissoon Jacob had offered six reasons for what they’d unabashedl­y declared a “celebratio­n”. They,

1 saved the sugar industry from ruin,

2 establishe­d a rice industry, 3 “contribute­d very largely to every phase of industrial activity”,

4 “are found in every walk of life,”

5 the community had “made good progress”, and finally and quite pertinentl­y, he concluded,

6 “have held our own against all sections of the community.”

In Guyana, the first post WWII public calls for recognitio­n of Indian Arrival Day was in the 1960s when Dr Balwant Singh, an Indian rights activist who was a leader in the Gandhi Youth Organizati­on , called for “Rama Khan Day” to be commemorat­ed during the rising ethnic tensions. From the arrival records of the ship Whitby that landed the first Indentured Indians at Highbury, Berbice on May 5th 1838, he insisted the first persons to step onto Guyanese soil were Rama and Khan. While he may have been romancing the event to emphasise that both Hindus and Muslims had arrived as brothers, more germanely, he was attempting to rectify our erasure from the historiogr­aphy of the Caribbean, to deny us legitimacy for equal rights.

Sincerely,

Ravi Dev

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