This is a tale of two royal princes and how they made
their way to the Land of the Hummingbird. It is a fictional, dramatised account
of two true adventures, one of an Indian prince who came to Trinidad as an
indentured labourer, and one of an African prince who was freed from a slave
ship.
The history of Trinidad and Tobago is a story of immigrants.
Coming to these islands from three continents, these themselves separated by
thousands of miles, distinguished by cultures fundamentally different, the
immigrants shared, however, the island's eclectic and dynamic 19th century
culture. Sometimes, they had a unique background in common, like royalty.
Ishwarisingh, by the grace of God, was born into the royal
house of Jaipur. He was the third son of Motilal Singh, uncle and one time
guardian of the Maharaja of Jaipur, Surat Chandra Singh. Ishwarisingh grew up in
the shadow of the great mandir dedicated to Shila Devi, who represents
Mahishasuramardini, the 'slayer of the buffalo-demon'. He became a musician,
poet and devotee, a dedicated priest to that shrine of Her benevolence.
Ishwarisingh was born in the 20th year of the reign of Queen
Victoria of England, whose majesty had spread across the known world, even to
India, where her agents and military had engulfed the Mungal kingdoms and
threatened the independent princely Rajput states. Jaipur stood as an island,
independent, as it had done for close upon a thousand years. defended by the
wealth and the wisdom of her ruling house and walked in the ruins of long
deserted temples.
Ishwarisingh, in the flower of his youth, decided upon a holy
journey, a pilgrimage, so as to visit shrines and sites of his devotion. He traveled
in the style not of a prince of the blood, but as a mendicant, a humble
musician, a storyteller. He followed the dusty roads of India's vast hinterland,
through huge forests and across gigantic mountainscapes. He bathed in holy
Gangama, visiting ancient cities that had been built upon even more ancient
ones. He thronged with millions of the poor and touched the feet of the holy,
and visited in wonderment the great and majestic palaces of long dead kings.
His travels took him eventually to the magnificent city of
Calcutta, built up the breast of the great river Ganges. One evening, the sun
setting with Asiatic splendour, he found himself in a throng of travelers
surging up on the great wharves of the city. In the distance, he could see the
tall masts and elaborate rigging of a sailing ship. Soon he could see her vast
hull, portholes, gunells, ballast, bails, barrels, boxes, trunks, cargoes. Lines
of passengers with expectant, eager, fearful, excited expressions surrounded
him. The gang plank leading to the vessel "Count of Lancaster" now
named by the merchant Yusuf Haji Mohammed Sadeek of Bombay the "Fath Al Karim", Victory of
Allah the Generous, the Noble.
What karma placed the foot of Prince Ishwarisingh upon that
path none but he could tell. What destiny drove him to leave his dharti mata,
his land of birth, his kingdom, to take this journey that for some would be one
of no return, no one would ever know. It is said that he was told by the
immigration agent that he had been recruited under false grounds. His reply was
that he had promised to go and so he must go.
The ship slipped away with the very early morning air on the
hoogly on the 19th April 1871 with a cargo of 218 Indians. It sailed silently
down the river for about 100 miles and reached Sangor Island at the mouth of
the Ganges and would not drop anchor for another 60 days and 500 miles.
The journey to the South Atlantic island of St. Helena
commenced with the Fath Al Karim sailing to the south west towards Africa's
Cape of Good Hope, the Kali Pani. The towering waves in a monstrous running sea
became even more terrifying for the passengers as the icy waters of the
Antarctic met the warmer of the Atlantic. Raging storms sent the wind howling
through the rigging. The ship's decks were awash from stem to stern. Creeping
damp grew to clammy wet to a dripping cold, which affected the food, the minds
and eventually the sanity of the travelers now bound together in the contracts
of indentureship.
On a bleak afternoon, the exhausted sea reduced to rolling
swells, the ship sailed warily into the great bay beneath the ancient volcano
of an island that had known only one famous visitor some sixty-odd years before
by the name of Napoleon Bonaparte. In the placid bay of St. Helena, the memory
of the "Pagal Samundor", the mad sea slowly fading, the indentured
were prepared for the final leg of the journey. This island, held by the
British since 1673, had previously been used as a holding bay for slaves en
route to the Americas, and from 1810 for the Chinese who were destined for
indentureship to the New World. Now it was a stop to drop off the sick or dying,
the "troublesome coolies"
and the rebellious European seamen.
The "jahagis" longed to be put ashore to touch the
earth, to step upon its firmness. but no. Soon, she set sail again, taking the
tradewinds north and westward over a rolling water for another 40 days and
nights to yet another island, named by the Christian navigator for his triune
God, Trinidad.
The journey had been gentle, and the jahagis had
recuperated. The sea was calm and the winds allowed the "Victory of Allah
the Generous, the Noble" to enter the Gulf of Paria through the Grand
Boca, to drop anchor before the smiling town of Port of Spain.
Ishwarisingh now knew his fate. To which estate he was sent
and what was his experience here is forgotten - there is no record. However,
Sir Neville Lubbock, Chairman of the West Indian Committee from 1884 to 1909,
in his evidence before the Sanderson Commission of 1910, makes reference to
this strange adventure. The following extract is taken verbatim from the
minutes of evidence of the said commission:
"I do not know whether you have had before you a rather
interesting report by Mr. Mitchell of Trinidad. It appears that there was a
Prince went out from India to Trinidad by mistake. He thought he was making a
religious pilgrimage, but when he got to Calcutta, he found his mistake. The
emigration agent there told him that he had been recruited under false grounds.
Well, he said, he had promised to go and he meant to go. He went to Trinidad,
served his five years, remained there the ten years, and when he was returning
to India, he told Mr. Mitchell his story: how he was an Indian Prince and how
he was very pleased with the way in which he had been treated in Trinidad and
thanked them and returned back to India. I think that is about ten years ago.
It is a rather interesting story."
No comments:
Post a Comment