Indo-Caribbean Life
in Guyana & Toronto:
A Comparative Survey
By: Bruce Ally
From: Polyphony Vol.12, 1990 pp.16-21
© 1991 Multicultural History Society of Ontario
In the complex mix of communities that make up the South Asian diaspora
in Ontario, the unique historical and cultural experience of Indo-Caribbeans
separates them as a particularly distinct group. Bruce Ally describes the
changes in situation and experience of recent immigrants from Guyana.
Beginning in 1838 more than 600,000 Indians migrated to the Caribbean, including
approximately 238,000 to British Guyana. They went as indentured labourers,
an alternative work force for the sugar plantations after the abolition
of slavery in the British Empire. Though their time in the West Indies was
meant toj be limited by the contract, Indians who had completed their obligation
were allowed to commute their return passages into cash. Many were granted
an allotment of land that they could cultivate in addition to their estate
work.
With time, distinctive Indo-Caribbean communities were established-especially
in Trinidad and British Guyana, where the populations were large enough
to form a separate identity and community. In Trinidad, Indians eventually
constituted about 45 per cent of the population, and in British Guyana they
were the majority.
The Indian family in Guyana is a very close-knit band of extended lineage,
which includes two, three, and often four generations living in close proximity.
Elders are still valued highly. Their knowledge is seen as relevant to current
situations since culturally the way of life has changed very little through
the generations. Very often older family members who are no longer gainfully
employed are responsible for looking after pre-schoolers. This reinforces
the transfer of values and norms, as most personality theorists agree that
the significant personality developments occur before the age of eight.
Since parents pass their beliefs on to their children and subsequently to
their grandchildren, family values have remained constant, and the possibility
of family and personality conflicts have been significantly lessened. It
is also quite common for adults to continue in the family business or farm
and to seek to pass it on to yet another generation.
The general tendency of Indian families and the Indo-Guyanese community
generally is to maintain a distinctive and separate identity clearly derived
from their attachment to Indian culture. It was entrenched, however, by
the determination of the British planters to keep their Indian workers on
their estates and prevent them from acquiring an education and mainstream
occupations. Nonetheless, by the 1920s, Indians began entering the learned
professions, especially law and medicine, in substantial numbers, and the
trend toward increasing participation in leadership roles in mainstream
society continued until the mid-sixties. The situation began to change when
the Indian-dominated People's Progressive Party lost control of the government
to the People's National Congress, associated with the Afro-Guyanese. Although
there was no absolute ethnic split between Indo- and Afro-Guyanese in regard
to these two parties, increasingly violent confrontation entrenched the
ethnic division. An increase in racial discrimination and reduced opportunities
in the future also caused increasing numbers of Indo-Guyanese to consider
emigrating.
The situation in Guyana coincided with the removal of discriminatory immigration
regulations in Canada, and in 1967 a flow of Indo-Guyanese immigrants began
to arrive, most of them settling in Ontario. They were mostly educated or
skilled, but their initial encounter with Canadian racial discrimination
and their frustration with the lack of recognition of their trades and professional
credentials tempored their sense of arrival at a safe haven. In addition,
they had to adapt to a new social situation and to re-establish family and
community life in this new and exotic country.
In contrast to the spacious kinship arrangements of their lives in Guyana,
most immigrant families tend to begin their lives in Toronto in apartment-style
dwellings. These are obviously not suitable for an extended family, and
often grandparents are not available for preschoolers. Old-age and retirement
homes, which were quite alien institutions in Guyana and the West Indies,
have become the norm for families living here. An important effect of this
change is the loss of multi-generational participation in the intimate relationship
on which the transfer of culture largely depends. This challenge to the
family ethos is the first step in the loss of the extended family core in
the diaspora.
In Guyana, an extended family either shares one dwelling, or parts of the
same family live in very close proximity to each other. Consequently, when
one person or subfamily, such as a recently married couple was having difficulty
the rest of the family would join together, closing ranks by confronting
the issues without supporting either party and forcing the couple to resolve
the conflict and resume living together. This process often proved beneficial
since it forced each party to deal with his or her own view of the roles
and relationship in a situation that virtually required accommodation. The
family did not usually attempt to foster the argument; even if they did,
they were still intent on achieving a resolution and seeking a reconciliation
as the only solution.
For those living in a transplanted extended family in the less spacious
and less leisurely Toronto environment, traditional pressures in support
of relationships may become part of the problem. As mentioned earlier, the
majority of West Indian immigrants live in apartments, at least initially;
and in the cramped confines of a two- or three-bedroom apartment, mother,
father, occasionally grandparents and one or two children can lose their
sense of private space and experience a continuous invasion of their privacy.
These living conditions, if not guaranteed to create conflict, certainly
will generate greater argumentativeness and a tendency to maintain hostl~es
and will reduce the possibility of reconciliation. Guyanese, like Canadians,
are no less prone to the disease of divorce. In fact, for the reasons previously
mentioned, and for other reasons to be discussed later, the Guyanese divorce
rate in Toronto is statistically higher than the Canadian average.
In the villages and towns of their homeland, religion was a major stabilizing
influence, which determined customary experiences; marking the year's calendar
with cohesive community events. In every village, the Hindu, Muslim, or
Christian shared with family and friends a temple, mosque, or church that
was as much the* own as their home. The congregations of these institutions
were a further extended family, providing added support in difficult times
as well as the opportunity to share in the celebrations of life. By virtue
of their relatively small size, congregation members become a necessary
and integral part of the every-day functioning, maintenance, and in fact,
the very life of their churches. The result was a sense of cohesion and
the confidence that people were able to depend on each other. Consequently,
as in the case of the couple experiencing marital difficulties, they were
faced with additional , pressure from their religious peer group and elders
to restore their relationship or be socially ostracized.
In Guyana proximity to church is also 1 instrumental in the development
of a sense of religious identity. Classes in religious instruction were
held at times convenient to those in need (that is, children) and were combined
with recreational activities, thus creating the easy and familiar environment
that made religious practice normal, natural, desirable, and even fun. This
also served to bind the children together, fostering a group dynamic that
propagated religious attitudes as the accepted norm and ostracized non-participants.
Thus children became very familiar with the dictates of their religion and
actively and willingly met their parents' expectations.
In contrast, in Ontario society, few temples and mosques exist, and those
that do are not conveniently near centres of Indo-Caribbean population.
For example, the Rhodes Avenue mosque is in a Pakistani neighbourhood, and
the Tablique Jamat is in a Greek district. Muslims and Hindus from every
country of the world participate in the activities of their mosques and
temples; and in many cases can afford to choose their location. But West
Indians are unable, for the most part, to claim this honour.
The cosmopolitan diaspora in Ontario has provided a unique reunion of Indians
whose ancestors migrated from the subcontinent in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, with those who have immigrated directly from India
during the last thirty years. While they all share a common source culture,
distance and generations of living in another society have produced inevitable
differences. Language-the most vulnerable legacy-is often lost. In Toronto,
prayers and sermons are often in Indian languages not understood by Indo-Caribbeans.
This also serves to alienate them from their organized religious practices,
as well as leading to the formation of cliques of people who speak the same
language.
In Guyana Indo-Guyanese students generally achieved high academic standards.
It was common to have acquired at least four to six "O levels,"
which is equivalent to Grade 13 in Ontario; and more than half of the young
people proceeded to obtain education over and above this. In fact, a surprisingly
high proportion attended universities, such as the University of Guyana
or the University of Cuba and large numbers attended universities or received
training in England and North America, acquiring qualifications in many
fields ranging from medicine, law, and accounting to naturopathy, dance,
and butchering, among others.
In Canada, on the other hand, a land having abundantly more educational
facilities, there has been a significant decline in the number of Indo-Guyanese
graduates. The lack of financial resources, the inability to attract support
from an "old boys' network," the discomfort and unease produced
by the need to identify with alien heroes and an alien history have reduced
the enthusiasm for education. In any case, because of the traditional commitment
to higher education and continuing parental pressure, the percentage of
students from the Indo Guyanese Canadian community that attends university
has remained high, compared with the Canadian average.
Although racial tension and pessimism regarding future opportunities stimulated
a flow of Indo-Guyanese emigration, jobs in Guyana remain reasonably abundant
for newly-returned qualified professionals. They find gainful employment
either in private practice or in groups of their peers older than they who
often knew them before they graduated. For those without university degrees,
the main options were business, clerical, technical positions, and apprentice
ships with room for advancement in line with their qualifications that would
provide enough income to support them and their families. There were many
opportunities for finding such employment since one always had a friend,
relative, or in-law who either had or knew of a suitable position. Others
managed to create lucrative businesses that ranged from rice, animal, or
sugar cane farms, to extensive lumber mills, haberdashery, dry-goods stores,
large furniture emporiums, and textile mills. In fact, the Indian population's
businesses had grown to the point that they played a significant role in
determining the country's economic development and progress.
In Ontario, on the other hand, Indo-Caribbeans are often underemployed and
underpaid and have great difficulty in obtaining upper middle-management
positions in the private sector. In the public sector, they are under-represented
in numbers. In addition, there are numerous doctors who have worked not
only in the Caribbean but also in England and Scotland and have completed
postgraduate work. In Ontario, however, they are banned from practice unless
they are able to obtain an internship, which are heavily competed for and
few in number. Similarly, lawyers who have defended hundreds of cases are
unable to practise unless they return to university and requalify. It is
exceedingly difficult for a successful forty-five-year-old lawyer highly
qualified in at least two countries, with a family to support, to ·
consider returning to school to complete education he already possesses.
It is even more frustrating for him, having burned his bridges by immigrating,
to consider working as a clerk or security guard; yet many are forced to
do just that because they lack Canadian experience.
In Guyana, the Indian migrants became such a significant force that they
managed to be the founders of the first trade union. The Manpower Association
was founded in 1953 to champion the cause of the sugar workers. It also
worked toward furthering the rights of the bauxite workers. The Indo-Guyanese
were also fortunate to have the first Indian prime minister in Dr. Cheddi
Jagan, who not only won the elections against vigorous opposition but also
spearheaded the movement towards independence-a move that could only be
achieved by the active participation of the Indo-Guyanese people.
In Toronto, Indo-Caribbean natives have not achieved as much in the political
realm. However, it must be remembered that they are still relative newcomers,
the bulk of whom only began arriving in the last twenty to twenty-five years.
Nevertheless, the loss of political participation and influence is perceived
as severely debilitating to many.
The Guyanese of Indian descent who uprooted their lives and transplanted
themselves in the West Indies as migrant labourers, losing their roots but
certainly not their culture or their courage, became in a mere hundred years
a political and economic force to be reckoned with and developed a social
system that maintained individuals as part of the collective whole. The
second migration to Canada has reproduced the old challenges, the old struggles,
and the necessity to re-establish themselves in a new and alien society.
In the last twenty-five years there has been a rapid increase in the Indian
population of Caribbean extraction in Toronto. Initially, when they arrived,
they were fairly well treated because they occupied the menial jobs that
no one else wanted. However, as they were given the opportunity to perform
tasks at higher levels, in competition with their Canadian counterparts,
they have faced new challenges. Despite the incredible odds, the Indo-Caribbean
family has thrived, and there are members of the community who have sought
office in federal elections. There are members who are professors, doctors
are becoming recertified, and many lawyers are now available. As our community
has continued to grow, we have once again stretched our boundaries to surpass
our psychological mindsets and have once again realized that we are our
own most valuable resource, and that we exist not only to support our community,
but also to regenerate our support systems to provide whatever is required
to achieve our potential as a unified group. This recognition should grant
us the freedom we desire; the freedom to realize that any and all issues
affecting our community are ones which we have the opportunity to choose
and solve. As soon as we recognize what it is, we will no longer empower
others to control our destiny.
The challenge before us is to integrate our renewed Indian identity into
the mainstream of Canadian multicultural life.
Bruce Ally is a consulting psychotherapist practising in
Toronto.
Website design: TG Magazine, 1996