Some 25 years after the introduction of indentureship saw
very basic changes in the overall socio-economic situation of the Indian
immigrants. By the 1870s, the vast majority of Indians were resident on the
estates. About 67% of which, nearly 40% in total, were indentured. At the turn
of the 20th century, only 21% still lived on the estates, of which just some 8%
were indentured.
While Trinidad-born Indians made up just 16% of the total
Indian population in 1871, this ratio had risen to 44% in 1901, almost as many
as Indian-born immigrants. by the early years of the 20th century, the majority
of Indians were already living off the estates. They were starting up small
settlements and villages, vegetable farming and livestock rearing, crafts and
smalltime trading in the context of peasant proprietorship. This was the
beginning of a pattern from which Indian life in Trinidad would eventually
develop. It constituted a fundamental change from estate life, where the very
necessities for survival were bound to the requirements of the owner. In terms
of social leadership amongst the Indians, estate life caused traditional forms
of leadership (e.g. cast) to take second place. New leadership patterns emerged
to suit the needs of the plantation owner, e.g. the driver of the estate owner
would become an influential person amongst the Indian labourers.
The move away from estate life was caused by a worldwide
depression in the cane sugar industry in the 1880s. Deteriorating conditions on
the estates meant that people had to fend for themselves or else go hungry.
Wages fell and fell. All this caused an outflow from the estates into the
villages and settlements. As small holders, the Indians grew food crops and,
when possible, rice. They went into cocoa, both as contractors and as
freeholders. They began to grow sugarcane as independent cane farmers from
about 1885. The Indians contributed to local food production very
significantly, even as their situation on the estates grew worse.
Indians during this period of transition and uncertainty
developed a trait that was to brand them in the eyes of the creole society.
This was the habit of thrift. Not sharing the creole society's attitude to
showing wealth through clothes and ostentatious life styles, the Indians were
accused of being miserly. But in much the same manner of many a first
generation immigrant, be they Chinese, Portuguese or from the middle East, the
Indians would save all they could and live in poverty so as to achieve future
goals. Basically through ignorance of the cultural values of the Indians,
Trinidadians of all races evolved a range of stereotyped attitudes towards
them. Basically all were unfavourable - the pettiness of colonial island life
obviously sought for a scapegoat. The Indians were seen as deceitful, but in
fact were no more so than anyone else! They were thought to love litigation. No
one in those days considered that the Indians may have no understanding of the
'moral force' of an oath or a promise in western terms. Indians were seen as
prone to violence, especially towards women. Nobody thought of the disparity in
number between Indian men and women, and the extent to which poverty and need
may drive a woman with children from one protector to another. The collapse of
traditional restraints against adultery, as would obtain in family life as
opposed to barrack conditions, contributed to this.
At a time when here was no television or magazines, and
ordinary people had no idea what other people looked like or wore, the Indian
way of dressing - or rather, in Western eyes, not dressing - appeared as
barbaric to Trinidadians. The manner of decorating women in silver and gold was
regarded as pagan by the Christians
and was consequently sneered at. What was not known amongst the creole
society is that Indians generally did not put trust the banks, and some rather
worked their coins into jewelry which their wives and daughters wore - another
reason for her to not run away from the owner of that wealth, too!
Religious prejudice bore down on the newcomers. The
religious practices of the Muslims and Hindus were regarded as equally bizarre
by the Catholics, and dealt with contempt. A society which was already
segmented along race and class lines as the result of the previous historical
circumstances, joined forces to alienate the latest arrivals and would do so at
a later date to elements of the Ottoman empire who sought refuge here - the
Arab immigrants from Lebanon and Syria.
Very few Indians were literate in English before 1917. In
1911, 97% of the Indian-born population was illiterate. Compared to Creoles,
hardly any Indian children went to school. Indian parents, fully understanding
the pressure of creole society, kept their children at home, away from creole
teachers whom they feared would ill-treat their children, ridicule them and try
to convert them.
The Canadian Missionary Schools,Canadian Missionary Schools, established in 1868, gave
thousands of Indian children the opportunity to learn to read and write. They
were a westernizing influence, and many benefited from the generosity and
kindness of the missionaries.
The Indians started to arrive in Trinidad in 1845 and
continued to come until 1917. By the time that indentureship ended, some Indian
families were into their third or fourth generation. Many families had adopted
western values, were educated and cultured in the context of the New World. On
the other hand, many remained on the land. The evolution of the Indians was not
parallel to creole Trinidad in terms of access to education, the production of
political leadership, or the assimilation of western cultural values until
after the last war and the advent of party politics.
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