In Our Time - Indian Indentured Labour

Episode Date: May 21, 2026

Misha Glenny and guests discuss how, after the abolition of slavery in the British Empire in 1833, sugar planters recruited workers from India to replace or compete with their formerly enslaved labour...ers. Over the next 90 years, more than a million people in India travelled under five year contracts of indenture across the empire from Guyana to Trinidad to Mauritius and Fiji and colonies in between. These indentured labourers were to share vivid accounts of deception and abuse, especially in the early decades. From the outset there were critics and opposition gained pace with Gandhi and others in South Africa arguing the system was close to slavery and calling for the Indian government to stop the practice, which was to happen in 1917 with the last shipments of people in the 1920s. Meanwhile, rather than return after their contracts, a section of indentured labourers stayed where they were for their own reasons, negotiating their new identities alongside formerly enslaved people and the planter culture in a new Indian diaspora.With Purba Hossain Lecturer in Modern History at the University of YorkNeha Hui Associate Professor in Economics at the University of ReadingAnd Clem Seecharan Emeritus Professor of History at London Metropolitan UniversityProduced by Simon TillotsonReading list:Gaiutra Bahadur, Coolie Woman: The Odyssey of Indenture (Hurst and Co., 2013)Marina Carter, Servants, Sirdars and Settlers: Indians in Mauritius, 1834-1874 (Oxford University Press, 1995)Marina Carter and Khal Torabully, Coolitude: An Anthology of the Indian Labour Diaspora (Anthem Press, 2002)Jonathan Connolly, Worthy of Freedom: Indenture and Free Labor in the Era of Emancipation (University of Chicago Press, 2024)Maria del Pilar Kaladeen and David Dabydeen (eds.), The Other Windrush: Legacies of Indenture in Britain's Caribbean Empire (Pluto Books, 2021)Neha Hui and Uma S. Kambhampati, ‘Between unfreedoms: The role of caste in decisions to repatriate among indentured workers’ (The Economic History Review 75:2, 2022)Neha Hui and Uma Kambhampati, ‘The political economy of Indian indentured labor in the nineteenth century (Journal of the History of Economic Thought 47:2, 2025)Madhavi Kale, Fragments of Empire: Capital, Slavery, and Indian Indentured Labor Migration in the British Caribbean (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1998)Ashutosh Kumar, Coolies of the Empire: Indentured Indians in the Sugar Colonies, 1830–1920 (Cambridge University Press, 2017)Brij V. Lal, Girmitiyas: The Origins of the Fiji Indians (Fiji Institute of Applied Studies, 2004)Brij V. Lal, ‘Kunti’s Cry: Indentured Women on Fiji Plantations’ (Indian Economic & Social History Review 22:1, 1985)Andrea Major, ‘“Hill Coolies”: Indian Indentured Labour and the Colonial Imagination, 1836–38’ (South Asian Studies 33:1, 2017)Basdeo Mangru, Indenture and Abolition: Sacrifice and Survival on the Guyanese Sugar Plantation (TSAR, 1993)Kalathmika Natarajan, Coolie Migrants, Indian Diplomacy: Caste, Class and Indenture Abroad, 1914-67 (Oxford University Press, 2026)Clem Seecharan, 'Tiger in the Stars': The Anatomy of Indian Achievement in British Guiana, 1919-29 (Macmillan, 1997)Clem Seecharan, Finding Myself: Essays on Race, Politics and Culture (Peepal Tree Press, 2015)S. Sen, ‘Indentured labour from India in the age of empire’ (Social Scientist, 44:1/2, 2016)Hugh Tinker, A New System of Slavery: The Export of Indian Labour Overseas, 1830-1920 (Oxford University Press, 1974)In Our Time is a BBC Studios ProductionSpanning history, religion, culture, science and philosophy, In Our Time from BBC Radio 4 is essential listening for the intellectually curious. In each episode, host Misha Glenny and expert guests explore the characters, events and discoveries that have shaped our world.

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Starting point is 00:01:22 The final entry deadline to submit is the 26th of June. enter your podcast at signalaward.com for consideration. This is In Our Time from BBC Radio 4, and this is one of more than a thousand episodes you can find in the In Our Time archive. A reading list for this edition can be found in the episode description wherever you're listening. I hope you enjoy the program. Hello, when the British Empire abolished slavery in 1833, plantation owners turned to Indian indentured labour,
Starting point is 00:02:05 taking more than a million people to colonies from Guyana to Mauritius to the Caribbean and beyond. Critics, Gandhi amongst them later on, said this was little more than slavery and disguised and argued for abolition, which happened, but not until 1917, and there could be deception and abuse, especially in the early decades. But since many, especially from disadvantaged casts, chose to stay rather than return to India when their contracts expired, then questions about the experience of different peoples in different colonies became more nuanced. Well, with me to discuss this period of Indian indentured labour, Arpurba Hussein, lecturer in modern history at the University of York,
Starting point is 00:02:53 Neha Hui, Associate Professor in Economics at the University of Reading, and Clem Cicteran, Emeritus Professor of History at London Metropolitan University. And Clem, it's to you I turn to first. In 1833, give us a sense of how entwined slavery, sugar and the British Empire were. Well, it was a very long history of that. and some scholars have referred to it as the sugar slave plantation complex, certainly in the Caribbean. The sugar industry with slave labor was the dominant factor
Starting point is 00:03:34 in the economic development of the Caribbean islands. So it was crucial. In fact, when you think of sugar in the Caribbean, you think of sugar and slavery. and very often the expression bitter sugar crops up because I think it summarizes the experience under slavery as well as to an extent, certainly in the early stages, of indentureship which came after the enslavement of Africans.
Starting point is 00:04:08 So what happened to the former enslaved people? What did they do? It varied, Misha, in... Some islands like Antigua, for instance, where the possibility of acquiring land was virtually impossible. So very difficult indeed. You didn't even have the so-called apprenticeship system which existed on other islands or in other colonies in the Caribbean. Because the planters knew that they freed people, the former slaves, the former enslaved, had very few options, very few alternatives so that their labour was still accessible to the planters.
Starting point is 00:04:52 But in places like Trinidad and British Guyana and Suriname in the Southern Caribbean, there was a considerable amount of unoccupied land, land that did not belong to the plantations, or land that was not used by the plantations. And in those places, the freed people had options to acquire land, as it did in British Guyana as well as in Trinidad. And it was to those places where people had options and therefore were inclined to leave the plantations after emancipation.
Starting point is 00:05:31 It is to those places where that vacuum was left, where Indian indentured labours, in fact, other forms of indentured labourers, including Madeira and Portuguese indenture labour and Chinese indentured labour. So tell us a little. bit about the compensation. Who was compensated for the abolition of slavery? But certainly not the enslaved or the freed people. The compensation ironically was referred to those who owned
Starting point is 00:06:00 the enslaved Africans and they were being compensated for their property and enslaved people were not human beings. They were property in the same way, the oxen and the mules. And it was huge sums of money, as I understand. Well, it was over 20 million pounds. It's certainly for Caribbean planters and that was a vast amount of money in its time. So, Neha Hui, tell us a little bit about
Starting point is 00:06:28 this man, John Gladstone, and what problem he perceived he had once slavery was abolished? John Gladstone was a Scottish merchant, a member of Parliament and the father of future Prime Minister William Gladstone. He
Starting point is 00:06:44 was also a slave owner. He had more than 2,500 slaves across nine plantations, and he was one of those people who got the compensation that you were talking about a minute ago. He got over 100,000 pounds in compensation, which was close to 83 million pounds in current money. So as was mentioned, as Clem mentioned, it isn't like plantation owners like Gladstone lost complete control. So right after slavery was abolished. A transitional period of apprenticeship was instated where former slaves were required to continue working for their slave owners for a period of up to eight years. However, Gladstone was looking beyond that. He wanted access to a reliable labor force. Just if I can butt in there,
Starting point is 00:07:34 how much were the former enslaved workers being paid during these apprenticeships? So, So during the apprenticeships, they were required to provide unpaid labor for up to 45 hours a week. And yes. So it's not quite the abolition of slavery that we thought it was. No, no, definitely at least not in the initial years. So, yeah, so going back to Gladstone, so Gladstone was very keen to continue having the supply of reliable labor. And so he knew that Mauritius had already started getting a supply of Indian workers from 1834 and he started lobbying the parliament. Yes, so what arguments was he making and who did he
Starting point is 00:08:20 need to persuade in order to introduce this system of indentured labour? There were a couple of things, couple of concerns that the plantation owners felt would reduce their profitability. One was, of course, the Slavery Abolition Act. But then there was another act which was being debated around the same time as indentured labour in the Parliament. That, was the Sugar Equalization Act, which sugar equalization bill, which became an act in 1846. That act would remove the preferential treatment that British Caribbean sugar had in Great Britain, and they would face competition from slave-produced sugar from Brazil and
Starting point is 00:08:58 Cuba. The kind of argument that people like Gladstone was making was, they were concerned that these newly freed former slaves would have increased bargaining power. And then they were also concerned, as Clem mentioned, because there was abundance of fertile land, these workers would be contained with bounties of nature, was the term that was used. So he argued for a flow of workers from India.
Starting point is 00:09:24 So, Porrima Hussein, the legislation goes through relatively swiftly. The indentured system is set up, and it begins with the Atlas voyage going from Calcutta to Mauritius in 1834. Why does it begin in Calcutta? So Calcutta in 1833, if you take the year that the Slavery Abolition Act is passed in the British Parliament, Calcutta is a very, very important city already in South Asia. It is a port city. It is a really quite massive port traffic connecting East Asia, China on the one hand, all the way up to Europe.
Starting point is 00:09:59 In the 19th century, Calcutta is the capital under the East Indy Company, later under the British Crown. But also there are multiple important shipping companies and merchant companies based in Calcutta. And in fact, when Gladstone in 1836 writes to Calcutta-based merchant company where his cousin works, to ask if Indian labour is a possible way of bringing labor into the Caribbean and a way of ensuring that sugar production is not stalled, they have this conversation that is very focused on what Calcutta can provide. The idea is that the merchant companies based in Calcutta can kind of run the operations at the port city side, but there would be labour recruiters going into different parts of eastern India,
Starting point is 00:10:43 into villages and towns and cities, entice people in, in some cases, as we know now, kidnap people and bring them to the port. So what were the voyages like? What were the conditions that the indentured workers were kept in? So the voyages were actually an extremely important part of the indenture experience. And maybe I'll start with the caveat that this changes quite a lot. In the 1830s and 40s, we see really long. voyages with the coming of steel ships and much improved steamship engineering in the 1880s and 90s,
Starting point is 00:11:15 it does change quite a bit. And presumably it's a lot quicker once you've got steam. It is a lot quicker once you get to the end of the 19th century, yes. But surprisingly, people's understanding of the ships and the voyages does not change as a complete overhaul. For context, in the 1830s, 40s and 50s, if you go from Calcutta to Mauritius, it takes about one and a half months. If you go to Fiji, it takes about four months. If you go to Jamaica, it can take up to five months. It depends on the time of the year and all those other geographical concerns as well.
Starting point is 00:11:48 That are a large part of becoming an indentured migrant and becoming used to the system of having an overseer, becoming one laborer amongst many, and following very particular kind of almost the synchronized system of waking up at a particular time, being allowed on deck at a particular time, living with other indentured migrants. Most of the indentured men, women and children
Starting point is 00:12:12 were living under the decks. They were allowed upon decks for certain times. There were real concerns with spread of disease because they were living very, very closely together. There were other issues such as sexual harassment of women. There was really quite rampant on these ships. So, Clem, let's focus a bit on Guyana, which became one of the main destinations after Mauritius.
Starting point is 00:12:34 What were conditions like for indentured labourers at first when they arrived in Guyana. It's some gradation here in terms of the treatment of indentured labors. It's not a uniform thing. And the first indentured labors who were taken to British Guyana arrived there on the 5th of May, 1838, even before the final day of the formal end of slavery. So we're dealing here with a society that was still a slave society.
Starting point is 00:13:04 And obviously the attitudes of planters, in spite of the fact that they were facing this potential loss of labour, the attitude of planters was still the attitude shaped by being slave masters. So I think the initial experience was quite awful. And it was primarily because of that experience in British Guyana with the first two ships that arrived there in 1813. that the system was suspended for a number of years. And it wasn't restarted again in the Caribbean. But suspended because the conditions were so awful. The conditions were so awful.
Starting point is 00:13:47 And there was a high mortality rate among the first batch of indentured labors. And it was restarted again in 1845. But what is interesting to note here, Misha, is that those freed people of African descent, the former slaves, they understood their bargaining position because British Guyana was not a developed slave society like Jamaica, Trinidad was not a developed slave society like Jamaica or Barbados. So there was considerable montal land and the freed people realized that they had a bargaining strength, a bargaining advantage because of their access to land and they started to buy land and to acquire small villages and so on
Starting point is 00:14:41 on the periphery of these plantations. But they were very conscious that they could bargain with the planters. In fact, they went on strike in 1842 in British Guyana and they were able to get an increase in wages. But when those same freed African people went on strike in 1848, by then indentureship had started again. And therefore, those, those. Those Portuguese and Indian indentured labors were able to undercut the bargaining position of the freed people. Yeah, of course, the Indian indentured labor was not the only indentured labor system that emerged in the 19th century. We saw this particular with Chinese workers as well. Neha, you mentioned before about the lifting of the sugar monopoly in the 1840s.
Starting point is 00:15:30 So we've got a tension between the colonialist, planters and the free traders in Britain at the time. What role does the idea about free labor? How does that fit into this? So liberal thinkers of that time saw an Indian indentured labor as an uneasy compromise between slavery and free labor. So say for example, the Indian indentured workers did have sort of macro freedom to travel from one part of British colony, India, to other parts. However, of course, mobility was restricted within the plantation. There were other things that made indentured workers superior. Say, for example, a right to passage back home.
Starting point is 00:16:15 Recruitment was at least theoretically free and people were signing a contract to get into the system. Of course, there was a lot of evidence of abuse and coercion there. Inundered workers were paid a wage. It was less than free wage, but they were paid a wage. So it was a bit of a compromise. The political economists of that time were uneasy about this, but they didn't explicitly talk about indentured labor. Adam Smith, who of course predated indentured labor, was unambiguously opposed to unfreedom. So in his work, a theory of moral sentiment, he calls states that had slavery, the vilest of all states.
Starting point is 00:16:55 And then in wealth of nation, he said that unfree labor was inefficient because workers just did not have the incentive to work more. J.S. Mill also opposed on free labor on a very deep philosophical ground in his work on liberty. He argued that indentured labor, because it resulted in loss of freedom, actually made contracts meaningless. Well, talking about those contracts which they were signing, Porba, back in India, who was doing the recruiting? And how much did the indentured workers know what they were signing up for? Labor recruiting was done by quite a wide range of people. Back in India, the general idea was that plantation owners in different parts of the British Empire, including British Caribbean, would write to the merchants in Calcutta, some merchant companies and say, we need this many people at this time. The merchant companies would recruit local Indian men, Muslim, to go into the hinterlands of India.
Starting point is 00:17:54 We've talked about Calcutta, but that was not the only port. There were two big ports in southern India as well, Madras and Bombay. So the idea being labor recruiters go into villages and towns and cities in the hinterland and try to argue that indenture system is a really good alternative, especially for people who were already quite used to agricultural labor. That is not actually how it happened. There were people coming back from the Caribbean who had been an indentured migrant and they would then have the job of trying to then entice other people to join the indentured migration.
Starting point is 00:18:27 Their contracts lasted for about five years, is that right? Five years, yes. Five years was the standard contract. And were they generally, after five years, free to choose what to do next? On paper, yes. Actually, no. Sometimes it really depended on whether they had been paid their wages up on time, on whether their wages had been cut because of being ill, for instance, where you couldn't work on certain days. Various plantation colonies use the double cut in wages. So if you miss one day, you get two days wages cut. that was supposed to be paid for the voyage back to their port of origin, many weren't paid that. Generally, we do know of multiple indentured migrants who did after they have gone to the Caribbean to Fiji, to Mauritius,
Starting point is 00:19:12 who did take the opportunity of the end of the contract to try to get some of that agency back. We know of multiple people who put in applications to move to a different colony or to a different estate, because they heard from other indentured migrants that that was slightly better for them, or move to colonies would be easier to kind of settle down a bit. But we know so many indentured migrants who had absolutely no idea what they were signing on for. We know of people in the 1830s who was told that they were going to be going on a five-day journey.
Starting point is 00:19:45 They ended up going on a two-month journey. Who were told they were going to be abroad for six months. They were abroad for, well, five years in the plantation and then the travel time. As late as 1898, we know of people who thought that land, would be visible throughout the journey. Many of these people from the hinterlands have never been on the oceans.
Starting point is 00:20:03 So many of them we know were expecting really a river journey to somewhere in or near India. Step inside the Range Rover sport and experience refinement in every detail. With features like cabin air purification and active noise cancellation, every drive feels composed and considered.
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Starting point is 00:21:04 Like all the way. Stack more sales with the best converting checkout on the planet. Track your cha-chings from every channel, right in one spot, and turn real-time reporting into big-time opportunities. Take your business to a whole new level. Switch to Shopify. Start your free trial today. The Signal Awards recognize the podcast that defy
Starting point is 00:21:29 culture and being honored by the Signal Awards sets your production team apart with recognition from the industry's top experts and access proof that your work is a standard bearer for podcasting worldwide. By entering, your work is heard by the Signal Awards Judging Academy, an invitation-only body of podcast professionals from acclaimed organizations which include the BBC. Grow your audience, celebrate your team, and stand out. The final entry deadline to submit is the 26th of June. Enter your podcast at signalaward.com for consideration. So, Clem, back to Guyana.
Starting point is 00:22:15 You've mentioned the fact that the agency of the freed and slave population was initially considerable, but then weakened by the introduction of indentured Indian labor. Did that result in ever any coming together of the two communities, or were they at daggers drawn, as it were, over the years? Yes, primarily because the indentured labors had access to a considerable amount of land on the Guyana coast. Because I said earlier, it wasn't a mature slave society in the way Jamaica and Barbaras were, some of the islands and the leeward islands and the windward islands. So after 1870 in particular, because conditions started to improve, there were reforms,
Starting point is 00:23:09 the system that Perba is discussing from the 1830s and the 1840s had undergone some reforms from the 1870s to 1880s. So increasingly, people were able to, or some people were able to move out of the plantations. So you had an interesting relationship where Indian villages were being created on the Guyana coast, on the periphery of the sugar plantations, in the same way that African villages were created. But in many cases, the Indian villages were substantially more successful because this is a place that's below sea level, tends to be very swampy during the heavy rains. And what happened there was that many people, many endangered labors who came from agricultural caste or people who were forced into agriculture because of the penetration of the economies of eastern uterpidation, Western Bihar, where many of the caste professions had become defunct.
Starting point is 00:24:17 So virtually everybody was thrown onto the land. So even the lowest of caste, people like the Chamars and the Dole, and the Dussads, who, today I presume, considered Dalits, or at the time were seen as untouchables, even those people had considerable experience as cultivators, renting land, of course, not owning land, but also as agricultural laborers. So the people who were taken, most of the indentured laborers
Starting point is 00:24:49 who were taking to British Guyana and Trinidad and Suriname and so on, had considerable agricultural experience. and they were able to maximize the advantages that were thrown up on the Guyana coast on these swampy lands, because these swampy lands were ideal for the wet-rise culture, whereas in many cases that militated against the kind of crops that African villagers were cultivating. So there was already a conflict there which had started with the inflow of indentured laborers, And that was magnified by the fact that Indian villages after the 1870s, the 1880s were emerging all along the coast, to the point where when some African villages or bits of land owned by Africans could not be profitably cultivated,
Starting point is 00:25:40 some of these lands were bought over by Indians, which exacerbated that discordance that had already emerged. Neha, Clem just mentioned there about the caste system and the fact that I presume most of the indentured labourers were Dalits or untouchables as they're often referred to. Can you tell us a bit more about what happened to the caste system as people went away? And who was signing up for this? Just to clarify, it's not that most people were from Dalit backgrounds, but then a significant number were. I think about a third that came out from my research. There were people from other caste as well. There were people who were from agricultural caste.
Starting point is 00:26:22 There were people from high caste as well. Now, no matter where they were in the caste hierarchy, in India, their lives would have been structured very much by gender and caste norms. So just to tell the listeners a little bit about what we mean by the caste system, in India, when the indentured workers came, the system of caste hierarchy would be a very structured system. that would deem some people or groups, Varna's, superior to others. And people who were at the bottom of the caste hierarchy,
Starting point is 00:26:55 they would live really difficult lives of material deprivation, having no access to educational institutions, locked in really bad quality, unskilled labour. People of lower caste were considered so polluting that anyone who, if someone of the higher caste, saw them, let alone touch them. them, they would be defiled. So people lived lives of physical segregation. Inter-dining was not allowed. Inter-marriage was not allowed. And the gender norms were particularly difficult for women
Starting point is 00:27:28 of higher caste, but then for most people, the caste structure was very strong and prohibitive. In the plantation colonies, not that caste completely disappeared, but it didn't exist in the same way. All the workers were working similar jobs. The hierarchy based on occupations, patient couldn't exist anymore. It's not that there was no hierarchy, but the hierarchy was more on racial lines rather than caste lines. Also, you know, coming together in the ships, living together in the sleeping quarters, eating together, meant that these prohibitions on interdining or these physical segregation could not be continued. Sex ratio was skewed, which meant that intermarriage cohabitation was quite common. In fact, in some instances, people of lower caste
Starting point is 00:28:12 were considered better options by plantation management because they were less trouble. They're able to stand up for their rights and less confident. Clem, you wanted to come in there. I just want to add to what Neha is saying there because I think that the whole process, as Neh was saying, that it's not just people from the lowest caste, you had people from a broad cross-section of caste,
Starting point is 00:28:38 including some minority of Brahmins, and Shatryas who were upper caste people. But you also had a significant amount of people from agricultural caste. If you go to eastern UP today or western Bihar, what is known as the Bhojjpur area, Bhojpuri speaking area, that Bhojjpur culture, the agricultural castes like the Kourmes and the Ahears and the Khoris and so on,
Starting point is 00:29:08 These people were among the best agriculturalists in 19th century, late 19th century, Eastern U.P. and Western Bihar. And many contemporary writers spoke about the great agricultural skills of the men, even more so of the women. But what was interesting about here is that these people, although they were the best agriculturalists, they owned very little of the land. So when they went to a place like British Guyana or Trinidad or Suriname and found that although they were from the lowest caste and they now had the means to acquire some land, even small parcels of land, that was magical for them. Because in spite of their agricultural skills,
Starting point is 00:29:57 in many of these places, there was absolutely no way they could acquire land. Acquiring land was magic. And that explains why, or to go. great extent, that explains why it's say a place like British Guyana. Only about 28, 29% of the people returned. I think in Trinidad it was less. They stayed on after their contracts. They stayed on because they were recreating a world. But not just recreating a world. They actually had certain advantages which didn't exist in India. Of course. And they were able to exploit a variety of niches in the village environments on the periphery of these plantations.
Starting point is 00:30:38 So you had a kind of symbiotic relationship between the villages where people were pursuing their particular skills and developing village communities, but at the same time during the harvest season, because they had recreated the Indian family as a kind of corporate economic unit, some members would be sent out to the plantations to earn cash. During the harbour seeds and re-plantations. Neha.
Starting point is 00:31:06 We've not spoken very much about the experience of women. Yes. And that is actually quite interesting because on the one hand, yes, there was a lot of sexual harassment, coercion and so on, right from the time of recruitment. However, there's also evidence that many of the women who went were women who were, you know, widowed, who were destitutes. Many of the recruitments were from pilgrimage areas where you,
Starting point is 00:31:32 women and men were recruited from, often under false prittance. But then many of these women were in the pilgrimage sites because they were widowed and they were sent away by their families at the death of their husbands. And they lived under extreme conditions of austerity with very little financial support. So for some of them, this signing of contract was also an act of agency given the very limited... And a real opportunity. Clem. Yes.
Starting point is 00:32:01 You'll come in on that. Yes, just to what Nehai is saying here. My maternal great-grandmother came from a low caste, Pasi, which would be a Dalit caste. And she came from the district of Ganda, which is on the border with Nepal. And she was 20 years old when she was taking to British Guyana in 1909, unaccompanied by anybody. and from Bridgel's study of Fiji, the late great Professor Bridglaal, an Indo-Fijian historian, we can extrapolate from that to say that the overwhelming majority of women who were taking on the indentureship, certainly to Fiji and possibly to the Caribbean, were not accompanied by anybody at all,
Starting point is 00:32:55 which was a clear indication of what Neha has been talking about. that for some of these women, their husbands had probably died. They were many. They were married at 14. 90% of the girls in this area in Eastern European, Western Baha, were married at the age of 14. So many of them would have been widows. Some of them would have been deserted. But what we have to understand also is that there was a culture of migration,
Starting point is 00:33:27 which had been opened up in the context. of the expansion of British colonialism. Let's pull out a bit now. Towards the end of the 19th century, we started seeing more and more voices arguing against the indentured system and perhaps some of the most important voices came out of South Africa.
Starting point is 00:33:47 Can you tell us about what happened in South Africa and why that was so important? South Africa was one of the parts of the British Empire that also saw the use of Indian indentured labour. I believe from the middle of the 19th century, Indian labourers were also moving as indentured migrants to South Africa, working not just on the field, but in a variety of jobs. One of the reasons why South Africa becomes so important to the voices against indenture is because of Gandhi, who, you know, before he started becoming really involved in the Indian independence movement with a lawyer, educated in London, for instance, and then based in South Africa, where he realised that, There were multiple groups of Indian origin or Indians living in South Africa at the time. People like him who were professionals, people who were laborers, and people who had specifically gone under the indenture system to work in the particular part of South Africa, known as Natal.
Starting point is 00:34:44 And Gandhi became very involved in the rights of Indians. And in that case, the rights of Indians, of course, included the rights of indentured migrants and the descendants of indentured migrants. The South African voice then really comes in as part of. of the discussion of indentured migrants as part of a wider Indian diaspora and thinking particularly about how prejudice against people of Indian origin in South Africa, as in many other colonies across the British Empire, prejudice against Indian indention migrants became part of the prejudice against Indians as a whole. So when Gandhi is back in India in the beginning of the 20th century,
Starting point is 00:35:21 very end of the 19th century, this entire discourse and this entire experience he had in South Africa became part of the wider discourse that was coming up out of India this time, which was that the British imperial system that existed in India needed a complete overhaul moving later to the asking for complete independence. So, Clem, if we look at what happens as the movement to abolish the indenture system develops, what happens to the communities afterwards? they are now really part of the local countries that they've moved to. How do they respond to the end of the system?
Starting point is 00:36:06 The British Guyana case is especially interesting because when indentureship was abolished, the last indentures were cancelled in April of 1920. Some middle-class Indians in British Guyana launched something called the colonization scheme. It was headed by two very distinguished Indians, a lawyer and a legislator man named J.A. Lockhoe. And a man named Dr. William Huli Wharton, who was actually Indian, who was the first Indian in the Caribbean to graduate in medicine.
Starting point is 00:36:43 It studied at the University of Edinburgh. And they thought that the Indian population was stuck at something like 42 or 43 percent, precisely the time when no more indentured laborers would be taken into the colony. And they felt that that left them very vulnerable. Because unlike Mauritius, and they were citing the case of Mauritius, where the Indian population was already well over 60, maybe 70%, the Mauritian Indians had the instruments to begin to fight for greater political rights. But that in British Guyana, they didn't have,
Starting point is 00:37:22 that numerical strengths to be able to fight in the same way. You mean to fight for them with the British authorities? Yes, with the British authorities. Or the other peoples of British Guaya? Well, with the British authorities, but that's any kind of political battle of that nature inevitably acquired an ethnic dimension because the Africans were not in favour of the continuation of Indian indentured labors.
Starting point is 00:37:51 In fact, they were trying to get more Africans to come in from West Indian islands and from West Africa because they thought that their position in the future, their political and economic position in the future, would be gravely undermined if the Indian population was further increased. So that created a big battle there already between the two of them. Sir Neha, you have these populations in places as far away as feet, B, British, Guyana, Mauritia, South Africa, these Indian populations who remain there after the end of the system.
Starting point is 00:38:29 How do they view India itself? I mean, do they feel detached from it? Or what is their relationship with India? The Indian diaspora in the different colonies have a very distinct identity in themselves, which is, of course, influenced by India, but then it is distinct. Say, for example, in Trinidad and Suriname and British Guyana, there is a very strong Indo-Caribbean identity.
Starting point is 00:38:57 And during the time of decolonization, these people of Indian background played extremely important roles in every sphere of life in politics, in literature, and I'm sure Clem will tell you in sports. Of course. Yes. Of course. A distinct identity did exist, but then it was influenced by their background in India. There are traces of Indianness in different aspects of their life. For example, maybe the caste system didn't continue to exist in the same way, but then festivals got transferred.
Starting point is 00:39:34 So people of Indian origin in the Caribbean celebrate festivals like Pagwa, which is the spring festival of color, which is also known as Holy in India, as well as Diwali, which is the autumn festival of lights. Food has got a very rich influence from India, but then it is unique and their own. So yes, the culture did come in, but it's a very distinct identity. And Porba, how would you sum up the legacy of the Indian indentured system?
Starting point is 00:40:06 It kind of touches upon everything, economy, politics, culture. This is about eight decades of Indians' moves. to different parts of the world, as you say, Fiji in the South Pacific all the way to Caribbean. One of the biggest legacies, of course, is the creation of these new identities that Neha just told us about
Starting point is 00:40:26 and these new aspects of the Indian diaspora, that many of whom remain quite Indian in their culture, but as you say, also have created their own distinct identity as Indo-Maricians, as Indo-Caribbean. And it has talked about the population and cultural legacies. To me, one of the biggest, legacy is, of course, as a historian, thinking about what's happening in India at the time, is considering how the abolition of indenture and the discussion and discourse that came out of
Starting point is 00:40:54 that snowballed into a very important part of the Indian independence movement and the mass mobilization politics that we know about the Indian independence movement today, many of it started with people like Gandhi who were based in India, but also ex-indentured migrants, a very important person being Totaram Sanadha, who was an Indo-Fijian man who came back to India this time, as many did as part of the repatriation process, who would go on and giving lectures around different parts of the country in India to try to show his experience of the indenture trade and use that as a way to rile people up to speak against the indenture system. And Clem, how about you? What do you think the primary legacies of the system are?
Starting point is 00:41:40 Well, I think, Misha, I've called it a social revolution. And in this respect, I think I was greatly influenced by Professor Briglal, who had a great impact on me. One of the most important things here was that the caste, notions of caste, were largely incompatible with the capitalist rationale, the capitalist ethos of the sugar plantations. But the whole process from the depots in Calcutta that Perber writes about in a very fine book, from there onto the ships, onto the plantations, into the loggies, the barracks, there was no recognition of one's caste background.
Starting point is 00:42:25 And therefore, people of necessity started to integrate and to create a new identity. In fact, those who travel on the same ship, whether they were Brahmhins or Shatryas or Kurmys or Chmars or people who were seen as being from a very low caste, they had to integrate, they had to work within this framework. And that is why I say the social revolution began there. And it continued onto the plantations. In fact, men and women who travel on the same ship saw themselves as Jahadis or Jahjins, ship brothers and ship sisters.
Starting point is 00:43:05 And that relationship became so strong that it was almost forbidden for such people's family to intermarry. And I think that that process was magnified by the fact that people were able to retain Islam as well as Hinduism in the Caribbean. Because Muslim people, Brahmins, lower caste people all were in the same, literally in the same boat and on the same plantations. Neha. Clem has mentioned a lot about what the pull factors, what kept workers back in British cana or other colonies. One thing that stopped many people from going back was the notion of Kalapani. So Hinduism imposes cast expulsion on people who have crossed the sea in a process called Kalapani, which translates to black water. And then that process can only be reversed through an expensive ceremony called Shulamination.
Starting point is 00:44:01 called Shudhi. And people of lower caste did not often have the means or the motive to go back. I was going to say, why would they? Yes. Just to confirm the fact that they were a Dalit. Exactly. And just one final point, Misha. I do not know how Orthodox Hinduism, for instance, which is still very strong there,
Starting point is 00:44:23 a sonat and term, how that could have been maintained if it hadn't been for the minority of Brahmins who were taken, to the Caribbean, because they themselves were conscious participants in this process, because they started in order to counteract to make a living, but also to counteract the Christian proselytizers who had come in because they had a whole set of hedons there as they saw them. But those Brahmins soon started not only to minister in the homes of people who were known to be a very low caste, with whom they would never have associated with in India.
Starting point is 00:45:05 Not only did they go to their homes to do the poohers and to do all the religious work and to recognize these people as human beings, but they also start to take cook food from these people. And for me to take cook food from you, if you're known as a Dalit or an Untouchable, that itself was a social revolution of great significance. And for me, that is what epitomizes this new identity.
Starting point is 00:45:31 entity that was being shaped. My thanks to Purbow Hussain, Clem Sitcheran and Neha Hui. Next week, the origins of cybernetics. Thank you for listening. And the In Our Time podcast gets some extra time now with a few minutes of bonus material from Misha and his guests. Are you taping this bit? Yeah, we keep this bit.
Starting point is 00:45:55 So there are a couple of things that really struck me. First of all, we didn't talk about Uganda. We didn't talk about what the long-term impact has been in politically, in places like Uganda and Fiji, in particular, where there's been real tension in the past 50 years or so and how that emerged. And the other thing that strikes me is that this is so reminiscent of something else that I've done some work on, which is the effective.
Starting point is 00:46:29 Indentured Labour of Bengalis and Nepalese in particular, but also Filipinos, into the Gulf states. It seems to me to be a very similar system. I mean, when you signed up for the indentured labour, did you, well, I mean, obviously you didn't have passports, but did you get any cash for it? Were there tangible benefits straight away for these people? On paper, every indentured migrant who signed up to join the trade. got six months wage advance. Multiple people who came back and spoke to multiple investigative committees
Starting point is 00:47:06 said that they never received that wage advance or they received it from the labor recruiters and then some of it was taken away as sort of fee. Some middlemanhood. Yes, yeah. Exactly. But there was the idea that you could just get cash in hand immediately. Right.
Starting point is 00:47:23 So, and did any of them take the money and run? Most indentured migrants were under quite... severe surveillance before they moved onto the ships. They were kept in these warehouse kind of spaces on the ports known as depots. In Calcutta and in Mumbai. In Calcutta and Mumbai and Madras and all the far. And how long would they stay in these warehouses? Five to six months, up to sometimes three months.
Starting point is 00:47:52 So there's been quite a bit of debate amongst researchers and scholars and presumably also descendants. of indentured laborers about the balance here. You know, was this a replacement for slavery or was this actually something which facilitated opportunities for people? I mean, is that a live debate amongst scholars? Well, I think a lot of people hold on to this idea that this was a new system of slavery.
Starting point is 00:48:23 I think the early period you discussed in your book, certainly, you know, there was slave-like conditions and slave-like practices on the plantations. But you can't extrapolate from that and paint the whole thing in that sense. Yes, because it lasted 100 years, didn't it? Yes, it lasted 75 to 80 years. And people were very enlightened.
Starting point is 00:48:47 People understood. People were returning. Some who had returned went back to the Caribbean or went back to Fiji. Now, we knew live. little about this. As a descendant of indentured laborers, I had no idea until I was probably in my surteous as to where, what part of India these people came from. It was a closed book, as V.S. Naipal said, apart from the fact, as he put it memorably, that the poverty of these people,
Starting point is 00:49:19 and if you go to India today, these still remain two of the most deprived parts of India. Their poverty was immemorial. It went back many, many centuries. And here you had people, many of whom, certainly in the later stages of indentorship, were making a conscious effort to find a new life. But this was never discovered in families anywhere in the Caribbean. So, Pueba, how did people go about finding what their heritage was? What is the sort of record system?
Starting point is 00:49:52 Is there an excellent system of records of who was moving and why? Yes, so there are multiple times in the indentious system itself where people's names were recorded. So the first time is when people are brought to the port cities. There are government officials, colonial officials, who take down things like name and where they come from, their village, name or geographical space. For women, they often take down whether they're married or not,
Starting point is 00:50:19 as they have pointed out, there are multiple women who are actually travel. by herself, many pregnant, often giving birth on ships, often giving birth when they arrived. And as you say, many of them unaccompanied. So a lot of records were taken down, or were supposed to be at least taken down at the port of origin. And then when you go to Mauritius, Guyana, they're supposed to also kind of check that those are the people who arrived, because there were many deaths on passage as well. So, Clem, how did you track down your maternal grandmother?
Starting point is 00:50:52 Well, I've factung most of my relatives, because on their transport for the land that they owned in Guyana, their names would be listed, but it would say X-Avon 1884, which means that he came on the ship, Avon in 1884. And if you go into the National Archives in Guyana, in Georgetown, Guyana, has been there, I think. if you go there, you will see these volumes which state the name of the ship and the year, certainly from 1865, not the early stages, but from 1865 to 1917. So once I had that information from the land transport documents, I was able to go straight to the ship's registers, which would state their names, the village from which they came,
Starting point is 00:51:50 What district, yes, their caste background. They registered the cast background as well. Yes, they did. They did. And it would state where they came from. It would state who they were accompanied by. And then it would be penciled in. Rose Hall, Port Morant, wherever they were centered.
Starting point is 00:52:10 That would be penciled in. Also, whether they were re-adventured, whether they went back, whatever they took. Right, so you could track their career. Yeah, pretty much. So there's some advantage to that bureaucratization of the colonial system. It's there. I mean, I would never have known because this thing wasn't discussed.
Starting point is 00:52:34 You see, for two reasons. One, the idea that you were all kidnapped in a way handled this feeling of animosity that Africans had, that these people had come in to swamp us and to, as they used to put it, took the bread out of our mouths. When we were about to embark on our freedom, these people came in as cab labour. And we paid, because one third of the funding of it came from colonial budgets. So they said, we paid to bring these people into undercutters.
Starting point is 00:53:09 So if you were going there, saying, the initial labour, you said, well, look, I didn't come to undercut you. I was kidnapped. I was tricked. I was fooled. So you sustained that. That becomes the narrative. Yes. Everyone was kidnapped. One final point to that.
Starting point is 00:53:24 That within the family itself, we knew nothing. As Naipal said, I didn't know my great-great-grandmother was pregnant on this boat and she came here alone to Trinidad. They weren't going to discuss that past. That past was an area of darkness. It was never discussed because there were too many things hidden in that past. personal reasons for leaving, conditions within the family, and for women, two thirds of whom went on their own. And these were women, large among to them between 20 and 30.
Starting point is 00:54:00 They would have been married. They would have had all kinds of family connections. But to revisit that was far too painful. So it was a cultivated area of darkness. Well, thank you very much. I think you've all deserved a cup of tea or coffee, indeed, if that's what you want. and I think Simon is going to be making his... A shot of Guyana rum.
Starting point is 00:54:20 A shot of Guyana rum. They make a very good rum. I'm sure they do. If you've got any hand in Clem... They make a very good rum. Thanks very much. Who would anyone want to your coffee or you've got to go, me? I've got to go, unfortunately.
Starting point is 00:54:34 In our time with Misha Gleney is produced by Simon Tillotson and it's a BBC Studios production. Hello, I'm Johnny Diamond, and I'm the presenter of the Radio 4 series. How did we get here? Israel and the Palestinians. We explore the complicated backstory of that Middle East conflict as the region endures another wider war.
Starting point is 00:54:55 Through conversations with experts with a variety of perspectives, we travel back through the centuries to examine the history of the land that's now so contested between Arabs and Israelis, and we try and understand the past that's brought us to such a present. How did we get here? Israel and the Palestinians. Listen on BBC sounds.
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