Full
of the typical anti-colonial sentiment of the times, the young author looks at
the conditions of East Indian indentured life in Trinidad. Written in 1937.
After
1834, the slaves, given the liberty to work for a shilling a day or starve,
thought freedom meant freedom and scorned the wages offered by the sugar
companies. They went into the hills of Trinidad where they formed primitive
communities that were entirely self-supporting.
Instead
of solving the labour problem, emancipation merely proved to be the progenitor
of a host of future problems. To solve the immediate difficulty, the
ever-resourceful British government hit upon the plan of importing indentured
labour from British India.
The
Indians recruited in Bombay and Calcutta were even more greatly deceived than
the "freed" slaves. They were cruelly misinformed about the great
possibilities of Trinidad by the recruiting officers and immigration touts, who
associated that backward, almost feudal, island with the fabulous development
then going on in the United States. With this portrait of paradise across the
seas painted for them, they signed labour contracts that sold them into an even
worse slavery than the Africans had had to endure.
With
the African, in ordinary cases, the value of a strong body in the open market
had made the physical well-being of the slave a matter of concern to the owner.
His old age usually was secure in a hut on the master's estate. The East
Indian, after serving his term of indenture, which gave him wages just barely
sufficient to keep him alive, was released just when the useful period of his
life was over and his need of security had begun.
Under
the terms of these infamous contracts, they received one shilling a day for their
labour. What was the actual value of this shilling and its purchasing power was
not told to them. They were housed in what proved to be overcrowded, filthy
barracks. At the expiration of their contracts, they were given the choice of
remaining free citizens in the land or being repatriated at the expense of the
government.
Thousands
of them, unable to save a penny out of their miserable wage, returned to their
native land, with which they had completely lost touch, penniless, old and
broken irreparably. Those who stayed did so only because they had children who
had established roots in the island. To these children belongs the credit for
laying the foundation of the power of the East Indian community in Trinidad.
These
young East Indians worked on the sugar estates alongside the newly arrived
contract labourers from India. Here they saw the conditions under which their
parents had worked. They would see a party of white and mulatto overseers hide
in the canefields to ambush a recent arrival who had revolted against the
unexpectedly harsh conditions by refusing to work. The pain inflicted upon the
backs of their brown brothers was not.hing to the hatred each stroke of the
tortuous leather cut into the souls of these East Indians of the second
generation.
They
buried their hatred in their hearts and worked and saved. Born agriculturists,
they performed miracles of thrift to purchase small holdings of land. On these,
they made every inch produce all it was capable of doing. With all the
disadvantages they faced, in two generations they became the largest group of
peasant proprietors in the island.
The
full story of the settlement of the East Indians on the land will no doubt one
day be told. It is already written indelibly in the events of the past
half-century. The swamps of Oropouche and the fever holes of Fyzabad, all its
settings, and then in the backwoods the struggle curved. The government
remained indifferent to the questions of a water supply, roads, public health,
education and indeed of every sort of public service—which alone justifies the
imposition of taxes.
Oil
with historic precedent helped to break this indifference. The impenetrable
lands were promising an importance that can only be gauged by the dishonesty,
secrecy and cunning in which the
situation was allowed to develop.
As
the third generation was growing up, much to everybody's surprise, petroleum
oil was discovered in Trinidad. Oil in such quantities that it was destined to
make the island the richest of the West Indies; but the mineral rights were
theirs.
Local
and English companies were formed for exploitation. In advance of their
geologists came a non-conformist minister. He saw opportunity knocking at his
door and set out to win leases and lands from the unsuspecting peasants. With
the aid of a pious mein and some soul-saving meetings, innumerable blocks of
land in the richest oil-bearing districts shortly appeared as the property of
the minister. A system of expropriation, common under capitalism, was at work
in deadly earnest.
Because
he had to work alone, the minister missed a lot of valuable pieces he might
otherwise have swindled from th unsuspecting peasants. Those peasants whom he
had missed, and some who had been cunning enough to wonder what lay back of all
these efforts to secure lands and leases, were in a few years to make fortunes
almost overnight.
Meanwhile,
the expropriated ones soon lost the small sums they had received for their land
(and oil) in an island where mad commercial scramble was rapidly replacing the
former stable agriculture. These unfortunates would invariably end up sleeping,
almost naked, in the streets of Port-of-Spain, waiting for a ship to carry them
back to India that was merely a figment of their imagination.
Others
lapsed into the position of under-paid labourers on the sugar estates,
taking place of the contract
labour that had been stopped during the war years. They were undernourished
while every ounce of energy thev possessed was used up in the broiling sun of
the canefields. In the night, many took refuge in tho illusory world created
for them by the smoke of the ganja leaf.
By
l 920, oil had got over company-forming, land-filching stage and was flowing
from the numerous derricks by the millions of barrels. The East Indians who had
held their land against all effrorts of law and religion to dislodge them, now
began to cash in. With the oil gushed their royalties. A definite era of
prosperity lay ahead.
As
usual, it all went to their heads with the rapidity of imbibing. They imported
and raced highly-bred horses. They built large, uncomfortable houses and
furnished them with red plush sofas and sea grass chairs.
With
practical experience they soon learnt that life as lived by the West Indian
ruling class was not all it was cracked up to be. And the difficulty of winning
races (with horses, no matter how highly-bred), without having sufficient
experience of the turf, was not long in becoming obvious to them.
When
eventually to their Eastern eyes the incongruity of red plush and sea grass
became a painful sight, they abandoned these childlike efforts to follow the
ways of a people they had looked up to in their ignorance and turned their
attention to educating their children in the philosophies of the East and
consolidating their fortunes.
In
attempting the latter, they found that the principle that kept them from
winning races on the turf was the same as that which prevented them from making
any headway against what was crystallizing into a rigid monopoly of all trade by
a small group of British and creole men, all working for the overdrafts thev
had at the English and Canadian banks.
The
chief difficulties put in their way was getting credit from the banks,
exclusion from the higher councils of government and most unjust partiality in
favour of monopoly in the administration of the laws governing commerce. With
all this against them they still continued to hold their own against the
entrenched interests.
If
the East Indian community had been comprised solely of a class of suddenly
wealthy individuals, it would have met the same fate as its French prototype.
But the prolific breeding capacity of all Eastern peoples had been at work and
they were now more than one-third of the island's population.
The
largest pure racial unit. Although unaware of it themselves, it was the
down-trodden masses of the race that had saved it from extinction as a class.
Continuously
stale-mated in commerce and dissatisfied with the second-rate social position
offered them, they turned their attention to the one line of action opened to
them. They entered the political arena.
Here
the solidarity of their race made them more successful than any other subject
people in the island. While the solitary French of Captain Cipriani had had to
assemble a heterogeneous mass of followers, the numerous East Indian
politicians had their mass following already formed and hungry for leadership.
This
leadership was at first divided between the old business men and the younger
generation. The older ones, weary and satisfied with the status quo, which left
them barely hanging on to their fortunes, sat on the benches of the stacked
legislature like frizzled fire-crackers. The younger ones, mainly muzzled by
the third-class civil service positions they held, dissipated their discontent
by creating a Moslem-Hindu controversy,
This
storm over nothing (on the whole the race was more or less apathetic to the
religion of their forebears) was clearly nurtured in the Indian section of the
local press. There would be columns of Hindu anti-Moslem propaganda and vice
versa. This was reaching the stage of splitting the East Indian community when
their race threw up the leader who was to show them the true course.
This
young man shows them that they should neither waste their energies squabbling
over problems that belonged to oId India ,or accept the defeat of
"inferior success" as meted out to their elders. He teaches them to
consider themselves now as West lndlians and in a merging unity with the
peoples of the other islands seek to break the bonds of class and race which
binds them to most of their agonies.
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