Title: Asian Migration and Linguistic Presence
1Asian Migration and Linguistic Presence
2General Aims
- To examine the history of the migration of Asians
to the Caribbean. - What did the slaves and the planters do when
slavery was abolished and how did this affect
interaction/language? - How did the arrival of substitute labour from
(largely) Asia affect the linguistic picture of
the Caribbean? - To examine their mark on the linguistic situation
on countries such as Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad
and Tobago, and Suriname (to a lesser extent
Cuba).
3Asian Migration -- Background
- British Colonies at the time
- Jamaica, Antigua, Dominica, St. Lucia, Barbados,
St. Vincent, Grenada, Trinidad, Guyana - Jamaica, Trinidad, Guyana -- large territories
- Antigua, Dominica, St. Lucia, Barbados, St.
Vincent, Grenada small territories
4Asian Migration --Background
- Spanish - Cuba
- Dutch - Suriname
- French - Martinique, Guadeloupe
- Some territories had no immigration
- Haiti, Santo Domingo, Puerto Rico Barbados
5Asian Migration -- Background
- The Apprenticeship system ended in 1838.
- Mass exodus from the plantations on the larger
islands (this will help to inform us why
different colonies had different numbers of
Asians). - Labour shortage on larger plantations.
6Asian Migration - Background
- Marshall (in Beckles and Shepherd 1996) outlines
three views of what Africans did upon
emancipation. - They were so horrified by slavery they left the
plantations (where they could) and set up small
villages in the interiors of territories (the
Jamaican experience being the typical example)
7Asian Migration - Background
- In general, they stayed on plantations but many
left eventually when wages/working conditions did
not prove favorable (typically Barbados) - Africans so acculturated to forced labour they
vowed never to do arduous work of any type.
8Asian Migration - Background
- In Cuba abolition did not trigger a flight of
labour. - Many slaves became waged labourers, often in
similar conditions to the life under slavery in
barracks, genders typically separated but a
growing reconstitution of family life around the
provision grounds. - Others joined caudrillas or work gangs who
hired themselves out to plantations and who moved
depending on the terms of employment.
9Asian Migration - Background
- Situation seemed to be similar for the French
colonies. Eric Williams reports the following - - 1846 1856
- 34,530 (h.c) 32,000 (h.c.) Martinique
- 43,500 (wkrs) 43,794 (wkrs)
- 45,000 (h.c.) 32,000 (h.c.) Guadeloupe
- 51,522 (wkrs) 51,659 (wkrs)
10Asian Migration --Background
- In Jamaica and Guyana substantial numbers of
ex-slaves remained as waged workers. - Hall (1996)
- Golden Grove Estate
- 1838 500 workers
- 1842 400 workers
11Asian Migration -- Background
- Labour began to leave the plantations (where they
could) when planters began to charge rent for
provision grounds and housing and when wages
became uncompetitive (this is in a context of
falling sugar prices and general economic
problems).
12Asian Migration --background
- In the colonies of Barbados, Antigua and St.
Kitts so called high density colonies where
arable land was scarce because of the geography
and the scope of the estates, labour was
plentiful.
13Asian Migration - Background
- The West Indian planters pressed for liberal
immigration policies to solve their labour
problems. A number of immigration schemes were
tried. - West African
- Phased out in 1865/1870 for grater reliance on
Indian immigrants - European (poor English and Scots, French, German,
14Asian Migration --Background
- Portuguese from Madeira
- North America
15Asian Migrants Why were they brought to the
Caribbean?
- All other schemes were unproductive. They came
chiefly to solve labour problems i.e. to satisfy
the labour shortage on the plantations. - Planters required cheap consistent labour. The
indenture system was a purely economic
undertaking, and no attention was paid to the
possible implications of introducing one more
ethnic component into the West Indies (Black et
al 197653)
16Asian MigrantsWho came from where?
- Two main Asian groups came to the Caribbean.
- Chinese
- Indians
- Asians, by far, dominated numerically.
17Map of Asia
18Asian Migration Who came from Where?
- As early as 1806 efforts were made to import
people from Hong Kong (China) , Singapore
(Malaysia) and Calcutta (India) to settle as
peasant farmers and to replace Negro domestic
slaves in Trinidad.
19Asian Migration -- China
- Chinese were recruited mainly from Canton. They
were generally Hakka/Cantonese - After the mid 19th Century a large number came to
the West Indies as contract labourers, but they
tended to drift into towns, where they acted as
brokers and distributors of food and small
shopkeepers.
20Asian Migration -- China
- Between 1853 and 1879, British Guiana imported
more than 14,000 Chinese workers, with a few
going to some of the other colonies - The Chinese languages brought to the Caribbean
were - Cantonese
- Mandarin?? (to the extent that standard speakers
migrated to the West Indies)
21Asian Migration -- India
- In July 1844 the British government gave
permission for West Indian colonies to import
labour from India chiefly at their own expense
(minor imperial assistance). - Calcutta and Madras were designated as ports of
embarkation in India.
22Asian Migration -- India
- Recruiting agents were paid bounties (per head).
- Indians were recruited from the cities and the
depressed areas of the Granges Valley. - In 1846 the first shipload of 226 Indians arrived
in Trinidad from Calcutta.
23Asian Migration India China
- According to the rules, they(Indians) were to be
- Allotted to estates in parties of 20-25 or 50
under a headman or sidar. - Given medical care, housing, provision grounds,
monthly food rations, yearly allotments of
clothing and free return passage after their
contracts expired.
24Asian Migration India China
- Contracts were for five years nine hours per
day six days per week - Immigrants were bound to reside on the
plantations which indentured them. - Land grants (among other more dishonorable
tactics) were used to induce immigrants to remain
on plantations after their contracts ended
25Asian Migration -- India
- The Indian indentureship system was abolished
in1917. - Between 1838 and 1917, nearly half a million East
Indians (from British India) came to work on the
British West Indian sugar plantations, the
majority going to the new sugar producers with
fertile lands. Trinidad imported 145,000
Jamaica, 21,500 Grenada, 2,570 St. Vincent,
1,820 and St. Lucia, 1,550.
26Asian Migration contd
- Chinese were the main immigrants to Cuba. By
1877 Cuba had 54,000 Chinese. (Indentureship in
Cuba abolished in 1921) - Jamaica
- 37, 000 Indians up to 1921, 4, 500 Chinese up to
1946) - Guyana 1838 1900
- 165,000 Indians, 13,000 Chinese, 12,000
Portuguese
27Asian Migration contd
- Guadeloupe
- Indians 42,500, Africans 6,500, Chinese 500,
Madeira, 413, Japanese 500 - Suriname
- 22,000 Javanese (1890- 1939). By 1971 the
Surinamese Javanese community numbered 60,000,
comprising 16 of the population of the colony.
34,000 Indians (1873-1916)
28Asian Migration contd
- Trinidad (1845-1916)
- 145,000 Indians, 4,000 Chinese
29Indian languages which were brought to the
Caribbean
- Bhojpuri speakers were not the first Indian
indentured labourers to be brought to the
Caribbean. For the first 15 years of organized
emigration most recruits came from Chhota
Nagpur, the Calcutta hinerland and Calcutta
itself. - These people were native speakers of Bengali,
Oraon, Mundari and Santali and Tamil (recruits
brought from the Port in Madras)
30Indian languages contd
- Of these first language only Tamil took root in
tiny pockets for almost a century in Trinidad. - By 1860 recruiting concentrated on Bihar where
regional dialects of Bhojpuri, Maithili and Maghi
were spoken and later on Uttar Pradash where
Western Bhojpuri and the Eastern Hindi dialects,
mainly Avadhi were found.
31Indian languages contd
- Some labourers also came from further west and
spoke dialects of Western Hindi and Braj. - Note---Though all labourers were Hindi speakers
they actually spoke geographical varieties which
were very different from each other and since
labourers were uneducated they did not know
Standard Hindi or Urdu.
32Linguistic impact of Asian Migration
- Introduction of new languages into the language
mosaic which already existed in the Caribbean. - LINGUISTIC IMPACT OF INDIAN MIGRATION
- For Indians there were new patterns of language
contact, both internal and external, resulting in
many linguistic changes.
33Linguistic impact of Indian Migration contd
- There was increased interaction among speakers of
the different geographical dialects. - In the new environment (Caribbean) they needed
linguistic unity. - This led to dialect levelling and dialect mixing.
34Linguistic impact of Indian Migration contd
- There were external contacts with Indigenous,
European and Creole languages which caused large
scale borrowing and some structural changes. - Vertovec (1996) provides an 1855 comment when
these people meet in Trinidad it strikes one as
somewhat strange that they may have to point to
water and rice and ask each other what they call
it in their language.
35Linguistic impact of Indian migration contd
- For Indians the development of a new varieties
of Hindi (Overseas Hindi) distinct from any form
of Hindi in India. Each developed under similar
social and historical conditions yet have been
maintained in varying degrees.
36Overseas Hindi
- Among the places where what is referred to as
Overseas Hindi developed were Guyana, Trinidad
and Suriname.
37Guyanese Bhojpuri
- Indians emigrated form 1838 1916 (78 years).
- Today Guyanese Bhojpuri is used only in a very
limited way by members of the oldest generations
in rural areas.
38Guyanese Bhojpuri contd
- Rural men and women over 60 ---bilingual in GB
and Creole/English - Between 35 and 59 years ---passive bilinguals
- Under 35 monolingual in Creole/English
- GB has very limited use in the home but is used
in some folksongs.
39Trinidad Bhojpuri
- Indians emigrated between 1845 and 1916.
- Spoken by old, usually rural Indians. It has been
displaced by Trinidad English Creole. - NBStandard Hindi is an important ethnic language
in Trinidad today.
40Sarnami Hindi/Sarnami Hindustani/Sarnami
- Between 1873 and 1916 some 34,000 Indian
labourers left North India for Suriname two
thirds of which settled there (Damssteegt
2002249). - In 1980s there were approximately 130,000
speakers (Damsteegt 2002251).
41Sarnami Hindi/Sarnami Hindustani/Sarnami contd
- Although there is widespread bilingualism there
has not been a significant shit to Sranan (the
local Creole) or Dutch (the official language). - Sarnami Hindi is the only variety of Overseas
Hindi which has been recognized as a language in
its own rights but is not extensively used
outside informal contexts.
42Social factors and the loss of Asian vernaculars
in most Cbbean Terr.
- All instances of language death are the result of
language shift. - Investigating the processes leading to language
death therefore means studying language shift
situations.
43Social factors and language losscontd
- With regard to the phenomenon of language death
two levels are involved. - The environment political, historical, economic
and linguistic realities. - The speech community patters of language use and
attitudes
44Social factors and language loss contd.
- Concerning the first level the environment
factors such as status, demography, institutional
support (education and employment), time and
space, urbanization, occupation, contact with
other groups, pragmatics, access to information,
entertainment and the arts, cultural (dis)
similarity are relevant. - These influence the second level speech
community (patters of language use and attitude)
45Social factors and language losscontd.
- In terms of causal relations then, changes within
the speech community very often have to be
understood as reactions towards environmental
changes. - Minority languages are the ones threatened by
extinction in language shift situations.
46Social factors and language losscontd
- The minority language has to be valued highly by
the members of a speech community in order for it
to survive a generally hostile environment. - Patterns of language choice reflect language
attitudes.
47Social factors and language losscontd
- In cases of language shift one has to investigate
underlying changes in attitude towards the
languages involved, that is the abandoned
language and the target language. Additionally
investigations have to be made into
48Social factors and language loss contd
- Internal pressure on minority languages such as
limited communication yield caused by restricted
distribution of the language. - External pressures on minority languages such as
stigmatization, exclusion from education and
political participation and economic deprivation.
49Social factors and language losscontd
- The actual process of abandoning a language may
be observed in a decrease in - Number of speakers
- Functional domains
- Competence
50Social factors affecting language maintenance and
shift
- Asian vernaculars in general have had no
practical value -- they have never been (widely)
used in broadcasting, newspapers, information
distribution or entertainment in the form of
films, education, employment etc. European
varieties are used for these purposes.
51Social factors contd
- Pragmatic aspects
- Concerns how widely the language is used and the
benefits gained by its use. - In Guyana and Trinidad OH is dying because the
oldest generation of speakers did not regard the
language as having practical value, so it was not
transmitted. Languages have practical value in
areas such as education, employment, wider
communication, access to information,
entertainment etc. Situation is similar for the
Chinese.
52Social factors contd
- Urbanization and Occupation
- Language shift usually occurs more readily in
urban areas because of the increased contact.
People usually migrate to urban areas in search
of greater employment opportunities. - Language shift from Overseas Hindi in Trinidad
and Guyana is more extensive in urban areas. (In
general, urbanization does not necessarily lead
to widespread language shift, but when the shift
begins, it may occur more rapidly among the urban
population.
53Social factors contd
- Urbanization and Occupation contd
- Maintenance of occupation promotes language
maintenance. Mohan and Zabor (1986315) report a
close relationship between having been a labourer
on the sugar estates and high competence in
Trinidad Bhojpuri. - Two factors which have conditioned the near loss
Trinidad and Guyanese Bhojpuri therefore are the
shift in occupation and urbanization.
54Social factors contd
- Demography
- Chinese were not a numerically dominant group
(except in Cuba). Numerically non-dominant
groups are usually under pressure to conform.
55Social factors affecting language maintenance and
shift
- Size of the group is sometimes an ambivalent
factor. The expectation is that the large size
of the Indian communities would have encouraged
language maintenance. In terms of actual numbers
the country with the smallest Indian population,
Suriname has one of the thriving varieties of
overseas Hindi.
56Social factors contd
- Time and space can also be an ambivalent factor.
Longer history of migration is usually a factor
in language maintenance but Suriname which had
the shortest years of Indian migration is the
only speech community with OH thriving. - Trinidad (71years), Guyana (78 years) Suriname
(43years).
57Social factors contd
- Contact with other groups.
- Related to urbanization and occupationless
contact, the greater the chance of maintenance.
Indians working and living in sugar estates in
the rural areas are usually isolated from other
groups (Guyana).
58Social factors contd
- Education and Employment
- European languages served as official in
Caribbean territories before and after
independence. In Trinidad and Guyana, OH has no
official place in education and employment. - Gambhir (19813) the major reason for the shift
from OH has been the importance of learning
English for success in education, for economic
gain and for political power.
59Social factors contd
- Wider communication
- No Asian vernaculars have been useful for
intergroup communication. The advantage of having
another language for wider communication within a
country may be an important factor in language
shift. (In Suriname however, Sranan is the lingua
franca but there has been no shift from Sarnami
--ethnicity issues)