Neither Here Nor There-Indo Caribbean Diaspora | Shades of U.S.

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024

Комментарии • 296

  • @aniskashiwram1613
    @aniskashiwram1613 4 года назад +90

    Majority of Indian don’t know our history and Guyana has 46%Indians descent

    • @ayazahmed-ky4eg
      @ayazahmed-ky4eg 4 года назад +2

      Oh indo Guyanese women mingled with black men

    • @Art2Heart1234
      @Art2Heart1234 4 года назад +8

      @@ayazahmed-ky4eg than their descendants will be known as dougla

    • @ayazahmed-ky4eg
      @ayazahmed-ky4eg 4 года назад

      @@Art2Heart1234 guyanese women r very sexi I two got chance to enjoy them while I was in cannada

    • @silverglen5632
      @silverglen5632 3 года назад +7

      Hi, I feel in my heart that you guys more likely have come from south India near Tamil Nadu. In a way I'm lucky coming from that part of the world but still in touch with my roots (living in UK). Bless you all.

    • @kiranp5611
      @kiranp5611 3 года назад +1

      I agree not many know this !

  • @Sahil-ph1bp
    @Sahil-ph1bp 2 года назад +20

    As an Indian American I love my Indian Carribean brothers and sisters, at the end of the day we really are just one massive Indian diaspora and we are connected forever.

  • @vaishnavnegi9640
    @vaishnavnegi9640 3 года назад +21

    My people have suffered not only in the subcontinent but were also dragged over 2 continents and oceans to compound to it. Yet their resilience outshone their perils. Long live Bharat and its children.

  • @shaktir5309
    @shaktir5309 4 года назад +47

    Best attempt I’ve seen at explaining who Indo-Caribbean’s are and where we come from. Growing up in Orlando, I was there when the Indo-Caribbean community was extremely small and no one understood who I was. I remember being made fun of when my packed lunch for school was roti and pumpkin, or when people would be like you mean Ghana- no fool Guyana- and I most definitely remember saying I’m Indian but not Indian. So I get the statement “neither here or there”. As for the bridging the gap with India, I think it would be great for a more peaceful world, but in my opinion it’s like fighting for acceptance from a community that turned their nose at us. Growing Up I saw first hand my parents and then later on had my own experiences where East Indians in the Orlando area completely disrespected, did not accepted or looked down on us when they heard my family was Guyanese. I remember being in college and a good friend, who I know did not mean any harm, said “If only you were Guju you’d be perfect for my family “ and to this day I can’t help but think sooo because I’m Guyanese I’m not good enough. Over the years I’ve seen the term Indo-Caribbean pick up popularity and I see how the younger West Indian generations hold on to our Indo-Caribbean culture and I love it. To bridge the gap between Indo-Caribbean and East Indians would be wonderful but at the same time I’m very proud to be Indo-Caribbean and have no desire to have that change so it fits the mold of being “Indian”. Today when asked, I say my ancestors are from India. But I am Indo-Caribbean.

    • @naliniseecharan284
      @naliniseecharan284 3 года назад +1

      Shakti R....Wow!!...I feel the same way.....stay proud an true to who you are.....stay safe too...❤...from beautiful sunny Guyana..
      ..

    • @caribou2110
      @caribou2110 3 года назад

      @@naliniseecharan284 HI IM SEELAN FROM MALAYSIA.SEEN A FEW VIDEOS ON GUYANA AND IM FASCINATED WITH YOU PEOPLE.WISH TO VISIT GUYANA AND MEET THE INDIANS LIVING THERE.HOPE I CAN MAKE SOME FRIENDS FIRST BEFORE COMING FOR HOLIDAYS

    • @naliniseecharan284
      @naliniseecharan284 3 года назад +1

      @@caribou2110 ...yes Guyana is beautiful but of course like every other country we are not without problems....but Guyanese are very welcoming an proud people an our country is made up of other races as well.....so we have a very rich culture....so you are welcome anytime....❤..from Guyana...an stay safe in this time of covid-19
      ..
      ..

    • @diablovalley
      @diablovalley 3 года назад

      The Indians who looked down upon you must be narrow minded people who discriminate against others for various frivolous reasons.

    • @sirinatiwari3528
      @sirinatiwari3528 3 года назад +3

      Woah I can’t believe someone else felt this way too! I’m always explaining to people I am a product of Guyanese culture but I have Indian roots

  • @ramloganfracic5761
    @ramloganfracic5761 3 года назад +20

    You are born for a purpose. Our ancestors suffered immensely. Congratulations and continue your work Blessings OmNamaste. Viewing from the French island St Martin in the Caribbean.

  • @pavitrajaimungal1889
    @pavitrajaimungal1889 4 года назад +31

    Thank you for this historic and important documentary on East Indians of the Caribbean living in the US. Glad to know that many East Indians living in the big US still maintained their indian culture.

    • @82566
      @82566 3 года назад

      What's E.Indian ? Iam adopted from India and my adopted mom has said iam E.indian

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      yes we do ruclips.net/video/5vmmELF0hr4/видео.html

    • @vaishnavnegi9640
      @vaishnavnegi9640 3 года назад +1

      @@82566 Better ask her. It's not our place to say.

    • @82566
      @82566 3 года назад

      @@vaishnavnegi9640 I have she doesn't really know lol

    • @vaishnavnegi9640
      @vaishnavnegi9640 3 года назад

      @@82566 Then she might know that much only as well. 😂😂😂. Gotta be happy with that much. It's a can of worms, believe me. My heredity is a ambiguous as well and once I got some leads, I wanted to know more but couldn't find much and it bothered me so much. 😂

  • @dubiouswords7851
    @dubiouswords7851 3 года назад +37

    India is not one culture. Most indo-Caribbean people’s ancestors are from Bhojpuri speaking areas of the present day provinces of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. But most Indians coming to North America these days are from other communities - Punjabis , Gujaratis, Marathas,, Bengalis, Tamils, etc. So one cannot expect any sense of familiarity from these groups to long lost Bhojpuris who are now more Caribbean and/or Westernized than anything.

    • @imacarguy4065
      @imacarguy4065 7 месяцев назад

      Some of us are more Indian than mainlanders chief. That's not an exaggeration.

    • @dubiouswords7851
      @dubiouswords7851 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@imacarguy4065 so let’s say some Indo-Caribbean are more Indian than “mainlanders”, whatever that may mean, doesn’t that also lend credence for being different from one another and therefore losing a sense of affinity and/or familiarity? It’s only natural that separation over at least a few generations will cause a divide.

    • @VictorLionsTV
      @VictorLionsTV 5 месяцев назад

      @@dubiouswords7851 Yeah that's what makes sense, people from Northern Indian states like Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Kashmir and Madhya Pradesh do not migrate in the large numbers so the East Indians in North America would not know us.

  • @RyanChand-c5b
    @RyanChand-c5b 6 месяцев назад +6

    The younger generation of guyanaese definitely identifies with Guyana. Idk why the older generation always says that the younger generation doesn’t identify with Guyana but we certainly do.
    The older generation can come off as very insecure with this kind of thinking.
    What the younger generation is doing is taking western values that are appropriate and rightfully so incorporating them into guyanaese culture. For example, the younger generation tends to not be racist, less homophobic, we drink less (sometimes), we engage in was less adultery, way less domestic violence, was less sexual violence, we are more secular (non religious), less colorism, and we don’t hit our kids. These are all improvements to our rich culture. We maintain our language, food, dancing, and music along with these additive improvements.
    The older generation believes in religion over everything, being racist, being colorist, and of course hitting their kids.
    What the older generation sees as “American” isn’t necessarily America. We are making improvements to cultural issues: drinking, domestic violence, organized religion, and more. Again what they see as us leaving our culture is use actually improving it. We maintain the food, the language, the music, and the dancing and improve on everything else.
    The older generation just holds us back with this thinking. Our identity is complex as it just. The old people just need to learn to be some supportive.

  • @arambhhaiprachand
    @arambhhaiprachand 3 года назад +8

    I hve never beeen to Caribbean but cricket connected me to indian Caribbean and their journey is very fascinating. I love their culture and tradition they have managed to retain indianness. Hats off. I am a chef based in Uk and opened a Caribbean restaurant. I love you all and we all are connected and together. ❤️

  • @jmg9509
    @jmg9509 2 года назад +3

    1:00 - First Person (Dr. Dhanpaul Narine)
    10:37 - Second Person (Suzane Mahadeo)
    16:43 - Third Person (Mohamed A. Amin)

  • @djsal7769
    @djsal7769 3 года назад +25

    in Fiji we have a big Indian community and the culture is very similar to Trinidad

    • @rakeshbhagola1068
      @rakeshbhagola1068 3 года назад +4

      And Suriname

    • @bram992
      @bram992 3 года назад

      Fiji nice

    • @SomeOne-yv8jf
      @SomeOne-yv8jf 2 года назад +2

      I'm concerned for the welfare of the Native Fijians. They too much prosper on their ancestral land.

    • @bram992
      @bram992 2 года назад +1

      @@SomeOne-yv8jf The sun shines for everybody.

    • @SomeOne-yv8jf
      @SomeOne-yv8jf 2 года назад +1

      @@bram992 The sun must shower its shine on the Native Fijians. They too must prosper on their ancestral land.

  • @aniskashiwram1613
    @aniskashiwram1613 4 года назад +45

    We never Indians enough,we never Guyanese enough Sucks we lost our language

    • @Genus2525
      @Genus2525 4 года назад +11

      You can always learn any of the many dialects, again. In fact, if you can trace your great grandfather to India, you can apply for Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) status, and stay as long as you want in India, unlike the 180 days that citizens of other countries receive.

    • @chidambaranathans1975
      @chidambaranathans1975 4 года назад +1

      Many Indians list there language too. So what leave that every Indian had different language in North East nearly everyone talks English what do you mean by you are not Indian enough

    • @Scarlitcorpse
      @Scarlitcorpse 3 года назад

      I used to have a uncle from Guyana he was the fucking best. :( miss him

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      Aniska,you sound lost, go to india and learn the langauge put on the dhoti and return to Guyana,and I can certificate you are a real indian. And who the skunt tell you not Guyanese enought? you sound like a beaten fool

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      @@chidambaranathans1975 ruclips.net/video/5vmmELF0hr4/видео.html

  • @fijianz1
    @fijianz1 3 года назад +9

    The Fiji 🇫🇯 indian Community came under the indentured system and carry on their traditions just like the Caribbeans. Almost half left for new zealand, Australia, USA, Canada and some in UK after the political turmoil of 1987 in Fiji. Fiji Indians are proud of their heritage and say they are Fiji indian no matter which part of the world they live in. Fiji is now more excepting and has matured as a nation and acceptable of all races namely the Indians. So pleased to see this video

  • @jmartin4204
    @jmartin4204 4 года назад +11

    I am quater Indian from Trinidad paternal side and Muslim I was brought up Christian either way proud to have Indian and Muslim as part of my background and my family loves us all unconditionally

  • @anesiaandrews214
    @anesiaandrews214 2 года назад +10

    Who else is here because of the Caribbean Civ assignment?

    • @aaliyamaharaj5066
      @aaliyamaharaj5066 2 года назад +2

      Me

    • @anesiaandrews214
      @anesiaandrews214 2 года назад +1

      @@aaliyamaharaj5066 Good luck!

    • @gloriasmith7744
      @gloriasmith7744 2 года назад +3

      me and i don't even understand what we even suppose to do ugh

    • @anesiaandrews214
      @anesiaandrews214 2 года назад +3

      @@gloriasmith7744 Mood, just stick to the guidelines and pray... that's my plan.

    • @nevelliarambatha2985
      @nevelliarambatha2985 2 года назад +1

      Me
      I would have felt so much better if it was about afro Caribbean

  • @_checosb1tch_236
    @_checosb1tch_236 4 года назад +13

    in Trinidad and Guyana it’s always blacks against Indians, this needs to change. Majorly in politics it’s always these two races against each other

    • @_checosb1tch_236
      @_checosb1tch_236 4 года назад +5

      Josiah Joseph funny that’s funny, says the gov that shut down the sugar cane factory and the oil factory

    • @marlene97280
      @marlene97280 Год назад +1

      But this division dont exist in your french neighbourhood in Martinique and Guadeloupe, they live together into mix creole culture without impact of british racialism

  • @Sherirose1
    @Sherirose1 4 года назад +17

    Geographically Guyana is South America, culturally Caribbean and mixed with their and others' ancestry. We are often lost in our identity. Stop comparing with others, we all had our struggles. Stop the hate, stop the fights, stop the racism.

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      hay Anna we are lost in Guyana, we cant speak hindi, do you know how many slepless nights we have with this? but there is hope ruclips.net/video/5vmmELF0hr4/видео.html

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      Hay Anna the only one lost is you--ruclips.net/video/IZrJUMJ7SQs/видео.html

    • @natashadickson4819
      @natashadickson4819 2 года назад

      Also economically part of the Caribbean as a member of CARICOM.

    • @VictorLionsTV
      @VictorLionsTV 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah there was a time when many Indo-Guyanese people were claiming to be Spanish and Portuguese.

  • @tc2334
    @tc2334 3 года назад +4

    14:05 - In case anyone's interested in that dance, it's the title song from the movie 'Aaja Nachle', not Devdas (which was also a really good movie with beautiful dances).

    • @natashadickson4819
      @natashadickson4819 2 года назад +1

      Madhuri Dixit. I'm Afro Trinidadian and even I know the famous dance scene from that movie.

  • @renithabechan7262
    @renithabechan7262 4 года назад +15

    Very similar to South African Indians....S.A also had an indentured system.

  • @gatheringleaves
    @gatheringleaves 4 года назад +23

    I have an almost obsessive interest with Indo-Caribbean narratives and history because up until a few years ago it was something I knew almost nothing about because there are no movies or tv shows or really any famous books fiction or non fiction which focuses on it, and yet it makes up such a large part of the Caribbean diaspora and culture in places like, not only Guyana and Trinidad but also Grenada, Belize, Jamaica, St. Vincent and even Antigua and Barbuda that I feel it should be more well known. Growing up in the states I am already well versed in how bad the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade was and the intricacies and horrors that came with it as well as the relationships and culture which arose from that in the United States alone. But I didn't know until fairly recently in my life that most of the slaves didn't even go to the United States they went to Brazil in South America! I also didn't know that after slavery African indentured laborers came to the Caribbean from places like Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Saint Helena. It sometimes feels as though the powers that be are trying to push this history under the rug because they want to push some sort of agenda.

    • @82566
      @82566 3 года назад +1

      Me too !!! I had no idea of our cultural servitude or how far we spread out under servitude British rule .iam from the states also and learned of the African aspect of slavery but had no idea we were under similar conditions it blew my mind glad iam not alone in this discovery

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      you frighten me, but I love a b sky ruclips.net/video/5vmmELF0hr4/видео.html

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      come to Guyana and see,--ruclips.net/video/IZrJUMJ7SQs/видео.html

    • @natashadickson4819
      @natashadickson4819 2 года назад

      There were also European and Chinese indentured people. Forgotten history.

    • @VictorLionsTV
      @VictorLionsTV 5 месяцев назад

      Well there's several reasons why Indo-Caribeans are overlooked in the North American Context, and also why East Indians (people directly from India) do not know them. One is that when people think of the West Indies they think of countries such as Jamaica which is 90% African populations. Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname, and Mauritius are a bit different, albeit Mauritius is not Caribbean. Also; most of the people who immigrate to North America now are from places like Gujarat, Punjab, and Goa whereas the ancestors of Indo-Caribbean peoples came from the Hindi Belt from places like UP, Bihar. Also a big reason why in India they are not taught this information is because right wing governments do not want to shine a light on it and show that the economy was so terrible to the point where mass numbers of Indians were leaving.

  • @sanjay.t.gowrisunkur4055
    @sanjay.t.gowrisunkur4055 7 месяцев назад +2

    In Mauritius too my ancestors came here out of the identured system .However , here in Mauritius might be due to the proximity the connection with India has been stronger. Here we fought for the teaching and acceptance of the Hindi language and also that the Indian ritual religious marriage be an accepted norm .

    • @Soullight09
      @Soullight09 7 месяцев назад +1

      I thought in Mauritius, they can't speak Hindi properly. The two countries where Hindi language has survived the most among indentured labourer communities and their descendants is 1. Fiji 2. Suriname

    • @sanjay.t.gowrisunkur4055
      @sanjay.t.gowrisunkur4055 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@Soullight09 most of us understand Hindi and still flient in Bhojpuri !

    • @sanjay.t.gowrisunkur4055
      @sanjay.t.gowrisunkur4055 7 месяцев назад +2

      ...,.still fluent ....

  • @hannah60000
    @hannah60000 3 года назад +12

    @3:58
    Not they did NOT come on “the same boat, literally”.
    Where they the East Indians chained, or where their Indian names stripped from them?
    It’s historically inaccurate and insensitive to make chattel slavery and the experience of enslaved Africans to that of indentured East Indians in the Caribbean.

  • @0230Raveena
    @0230Raveena 3 года назад +24

    True. I'm Guyanese but left when I was really young. I get so offended at the term "white washed" but at the same time, there is such a thin line. I agree with you. I'm not Indian enough or Guyanese enough and I look middle eastern. There is such a conflict of identity, like living on the edges of all these cultures but never being fully assimilated. But That's where the future is heading, if not already. There will come a time when people are so mixed and multicultural that it would be a non-issue.

    • @82566
      @82566 3 года назад

      I feel I can relate as far as the look lol but I love my middleastern" jasmine" eyes 😉

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      my dear you are Guyanese desent, thats all you need to know, so dont get confused now ok?

    • @0230Raveena
      @0230Raveena 3 года назад

      @@amazonwarrior7126 . You are too kind. :-). I do appreciate the reassurance.

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      @@0230Raveena with my love ruclips.net/video/5vmmELF0hr4/видео.html

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      listen Dear, I am goingto brown wash you now,and you going to be happy
      ruclips.net/video/KNB6D43u9YY/видео.html

  • @welcometototalitarianism812
    @welcometototalitarianism812 2 года назад +3

    Did he say they came on the same boat? No, sir, they didn't. -A Jamaican Indian

  • @slim9978
    @slim9978 3 года назад +6

    I once spoke to an Indian from India she could not believe that Indians from the Caribbean listen to the indian music and not understanding then she says we r indians not them but its also how Jamaicans Indian s get look at comparing them to guyanse and Trinidad indians

    • @VictorLionsTV
      @VictorLionsTV 5 месяцев назад

      Well there's several reasons why Indo-Caribeans are overlooked in the North American Context, and also why East Indians (people directly from India) do not know them. One is that when people think of the West Indies they think of countries such as Jamaica which is 90% African populations. Trinidad, Guyana, Suriname, and Mauritius are a bit different, albeit Mauritius is not Caribbean. Also; most of the people who immigrate to North America now are from places like Gujarat, Punjab, and Goa whereas the ancestors of Indo-Caribbean peoples came from the Hindi Belt from places like UP, Bihar. Also a big reason why in India they are not taught this information is because right wing governments do not want to shine a light on it and show that the economy was so terrible to the point where mass numbers of Indians were leaving.

  • @maddymadd6500
    @maddymadd6500 2 года назад +2

    My goddaughters mother is Puerto rican and her father is Afro Guyanese. She is beautiful. I ❤NYC cause we have so many different cultures and i love the food.

  • @krisanthonysilveira8244
    @krisanthonysilveira8244 3 года назад +14

    The majority of Indians are not able to encapsulate the diversity within their own country.
    Let alone understand and take in our Caribbean brothers and sisters.

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      Kris, I think you full of bull shit, your stanse is more suited to Africian Jamacians

  • @shantanubasu9289
    @shantanubasu9289 3 года назад +6

    Please don’t listen to politicians. Respect everyone. Love all. Get the best education you can manage. We will succeed in our own way!
    Thanks and God Bless all of us.

  • @mamashabana1732
    @mamashabana1732 3 года назад +7

    Dhanpaul is a great person (the first speaker). I know him personally. He is not a Indo-Caribbean historian. Please keep that in mind. He is narrating his experience.

  • @haripalrampurtab5820
    @haripalrampurtab5820 9 месяцев назад +1

    WISHING OUR PEOPLE ALL THE BEST AND WELLCOME BACK TO OUR INDIAN FOLD.

  • @missbloodymary4064
    @missbloodymary4064 3 года назад +4

    You are always welcome in your ancestors home brothers and sisters . Namaskar 🙏🙏 🙏

  • @L20241
    @L20241 2 года назад +4

    It’s so sad that in India they don’t learn about indentured Indians that the British French Dutch kidnapped and took to many places Fiji to the Caribbean Malaysia Singapore to South Africa Mauritius to reunion island Seychelles Kenya Uganda Tanzania etc

    • @botheredbewildered5646
      @botheredbewildered5646 5 месяцев назад

      They learn the basic fact in history but don’t delve into it.

  • @Nxyphoenix
    @Nxyphoenix 3 года назад +3

    This is amazing , thank you so much everyone involved in documenting this . Definitely so beautiful to acknowledge our heritage and that we are not alone and to learn more about our history as well as modern day presence . So much relation to this . When I lived in queens during highschool , it was the best experience . Many desi classmates connected with me and helped expose me to other aspect of Indian culture . Grew up around so many diverse cultural ethnic roots , and it was hard to explain to people growing up plus , I didn’t know much about origins as well . So excited that there is community . This resonates so much and I’m glad and looking forward to connecting further . 🙏🙏🙏💖

  • @mayena
    @mayena 3 года назад +1

    1:36-1:46 other official sources the Indian-American population was 3.852 million (United States Census Bureau - 1/7/2018). Ministry of External Affairs of Indian, 4.460 million (31/12/2018).

  • @Smilawhil
    @Smilawhil 2 года назад +5

    UWI brought me here.

    • @keishajohnson5258
      @keishajohnson5258 2 года назад

      me too

    • @natashadickson4819
      @natashadickson4819 2 года назад

      UWI = University of the West Indies
      🇹🇹 🇯🇲 🇧🇧

    • @keishajohnson5258
      @keishajohnson5258 2 года назад

      🇻🇨🇻🇨🇻🇨🇻🇨🇻🇨🇻🇨💙💛💚 UWI Assignment brought me here. good documentary

  • @RyanChand-c5b
    @RyanChand-c5b 6 месяцев назад +2

    We didn’t abandon India. We were enslaved!
    We were taken against our will!
    Need I say, had we stayed we would’ve still been at the bottom of the caste system.
    In some ways our ancestors had to choose between two evils because even when they returned to India after slavery we weren’t accepted.
    I love Guyana and I don’t need acceptance from anyone.

  • @naliniseecharan284
    @naliniseecharan284 3 года назад +4

    Yes my foreparents came from India....an I am Guyanese an a proud one too.....Even sometimes the Indians from India don't see us as Indians because we cross the waters they say....but I ndians from Guyana have maintained our identity even sometimes surprising the Indians from India.....all an an I love my culture an proud of it...

    • @truthunbiasedunfiltered1428
      @truthunbiasedunfiltered1428 3 года назад +9

      It's nothing like that dear, we Indians are proud of u and with the onset of globalisation, more and more Indians are knowing abt u, although we read only a little abt ur history, but its soon going to change with the new Education policy being more Indo-centric and not glorifying our oppressors overboard, this year. You are always free to come back to your motherland))

    • @naliniseecharan284
      @naliniseecharan284 3 года назад

      @@truthunbiasedunfiltered1428 ....Thank you....an you are very welcome to come to.Guyana too.....our culture is very unique..

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      wELL Nalini, you not indian but Guyanese,and why should the indians accept you? yes you indian in Guyana but when you leave Guyana you are Guyanese so get over it from a fellow Guyanese. Do the Argentians italians when thy go to Italy cry when the italians say they are not italians? plus they cant speak the Langauge. Do the English AMERICIANS who go to england try to be apcepted as English,no they dont, Now if you want to be a real indian then go to india learn the Langauge, put on the dhoti, and return,and they will accept you, and when you go to India dont ask for curry,as there is no such thing there,and this is no Joke.

    • @thebestevertherewas
      @thebestevertherewas Год назад

      ​@@naliniseecharan284Sis, my friend from Rajasthan also has the surname of Charan
      Charans were great Poets and are usually very smart( stereotype)
      You have great Ancestory

  • @L20241
    @L20241 2 года назад +1

    Suzanne looks like Laura Dern when she smiles!

  • @rin8500
    @rin8500 3 года назад +2

    I love this sm!

  • @sugarplumzredz7308
    @sugarplumzredz7308 3 года назад +2

    My great grandparents were on one those boats

  • @The1ByTheSea
    @The1ByTheSea 11 месяцев назад +1

    The major Indian Caribbean Diaspora predomitly from Guyana and Trinidad ,but also from Jamaica have settled in the state of Florida in the USA due to proximity to the Caribbean and similar weather The largest number live in the state of Florida live in S.E. Florida;predominatly in West Broward county the cities of Pembroke Pines, Miramar,Tamarac, Sunrise,Coconut Creek and Parkland harbor large Indo Caribbean communities.There are also large Indian-Caribbean communities in Orlando,Tampa and Jacksonville in Florida.Other areas with Indo-Caribbeans are : New Jersey.Raleigh ,North Carolina ;Richmond .Virginia; Texas,California,Chicago and Las Vegas

    • @VictorLionsTV
      @VictorLionsTV 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah in Canada there are many Indo Carribean people in Scarborough, Toronto, Oakville, and Pickering.

  • @nesikhaNofret
    @nesikhaNofret 3 года назад +3

    Just want to say: I am a mixed Trinidadian, half Indian on my father's side. Trinidad didn't have as much fighting as the Guyanese had in history amongst blacks and the Indian population I see. We still don't really have that in our community. Also, we have even more deeper identity issues as we have more Syrians and Lebanese than anywhere in the Caribbean. We share African, South Asian, and Middle Eastern cultures.

    • @zochbuppet448
      @zochbuppet448 2 года назад

      There was no been actual fighting or in Guyana between races. They like to flap their lip during election time, and most people just accept the outcome. ...unless its blatant election fraud.
      There was one race incident in Guyana between black and Indians, which was actually set up by the C.I.A in the 1960s during the 1960s coldwar/ communism scare in the U.S
      There were two Syrians families and another 1 family from Lebanon that went to Trinidad in the 1930's.. Another Syrians family went to Jamaica, that the extent of the people from these country that went to the Caribbean..and they went in more modern times.
      People from the Portuguese that went to Guyana was almost 10% yet they too didn't really much impact on the culture, except for a few dishes, some business and their far off families and last names

    • @sunshineysideoflife
      @sunshineysideoflife Год назад

      Hello! I am Trinidadian also.

  • @socialstudiessir9778
    @socialstudiessir9778 3 года назад +4

    Love from India that is Bharat 💕💖

  • @matthewmann8969
    @matthewmann8969 3 года назад +5

    Almost everywhere Indian Subcontinentals go they find success

  • @datronhicks7928
    @datronhicks7928 2 года назад +2

    Definitely didn’t come on the same boat

  • @landshark9992
    @landshark9992 10 месяцев назад +1

    It's weird that they think that these people simply "left". Indentureship was initially a five-year contract to work on the sugarcane plantations, taken up by people mostly from modern-day Uttar Pradesh and Bihar (where my ancestors were taken from to Mauritius), as well as some from South India and Maharashtra and even a few Punjabis
    Most of them went because it was a choice between staying in India with no income, potential homelessness and starving to death or following the false trail left by the British to promises of success by working on the plantations in the colonies. A significant number also arrived in these countries under false pretenses (as with Suriname, where many assumed they were going on the voyage of "Sri Ram") or through outright kidnapping
    Those who remained behind in their adoptive homelands either couldn't afford the hefty return fees, or simply had nothing to return home to. So as a descendant of labourers, I find anyone saying that they "abandoned" India disdainfully INCREDIBLY offensive

  • @marlene97280
    @marlene97280 Год назад +1

    But this division dont exist in your french neighbourhood in Martinique and Guadeloupe, they live together into mix creole culture without impact of british racialism

  • @haripalrampurtab5820
    @haripalrampurtab5820 9 месяцев назад

    HAPPY TO NOTE THAT THE PEOPLE ARE GOING BACK TO THEIR ROOTS AND RELATING TO THEIR MOTER LAND INDIA AND THE CULTURE NAMASTE.

  • @rakatan8930
    @rakatan8930 4 года назад +23

    Mohamed is a brave soul.

  • @Athena-qi1ll
    @Athena-qi1ll Год назад

    ஆசீர்வதிக்கப்பட்டிரு

  • @michael-bz5qz
    @michael-bz5qz 3 года назад +1

    What language the indo caribbens spoke? I would learn but I cant, the only time I hear the language is when I list to old chutney songs

    • @mamashabana1732
      @mamashabana1732 3 года назад +1

      People from Bihar spoke Bhojpuri. We spoke various north Indian languages & that blend or north Indian languages is called "Hindustani" popularly still spoken in Suriname 🇸🇷 today.

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      well Micheal, we IN Guyana speak english ,and creolise, and it the creolise and hindi or Bhojpuri you hear in the chutney songs you get it? as for Trinidad I think it the same,

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад

      this is what we speak ruclips.net/video/KNB6D43u9YY/видео.html

    • @natashadickson4819
      @natashadickson4819 2 года назад

      An Indo-Trinidadian told me her ancestral language is Bhojpuri.

  • @vidyasagarkotha1132
    @vidyasagarkotha1132 Год назад

    Excellent

  • @alijordanx8954
    @alijordanx8954 3 месяца назад

    India cuisine have a major influence in the Caribbean

  • @abcdefghi9
    @abcdefghi9 10 месяцев назад +1

    The Indians of the Caribbean were the first in the western hemisphere.

  • @vaishnavnegi9640
    @vaishnavnegi9640 3 года назад +6

    Also, identity is a very important part of human psyche. An absence or obfuscation of it can cause immense emptiness. One that I've felt in recent years, despite living in India. We are people with amnesia. My parents can only remember the names of their grandparents and there are no written records of our genesis on either of my parents side.

    • @tigerlilly9038
      @tigerlilly9038 2 года назад

      I am sorry that is a very hard life.

  • @shantibahadoersingh3148
    @shantibahadoersingh3148 9 месяцев назад +2

    🕉️🙏🏽

  • @RyanChand-c5b
    @RyanChand-c5b 6 месяцев назад +2

    🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾🇬🇾
    💪🏽

  • @MentalPistol
    @MentalPistol 2 года назад +3

    Those guyanese left Guyana because they did not want to be under black leadership, not because they were being "repressed". How were they "repressed"?

    • @vernicejillmagsino9603
      @vernicejillmagsino9603 Год назад +1

      Why they live in the us it has black leader who is Obama like the Black Guyanese Leader

  • @kishikcm
    @kishikcm 2 года назад

    Great job!

  • @efrans2627
    @efrans2627 2 года назад +3

    Hindustan community in guyana suriname Trinidad and Tobago and Jamaican

  • @angelalumwai6164
    @angelalumwai6164 3 года назад +7

    People whose ancestry is from another continent need to know where that is; however they are often not accepted, as their identity and culture is where their parents and they were born and brought up in.
    A famous psychologist Alsop, once said; 'a white baby growing up in China , with Chinese carers, eating, speaking and growing up in China. This child will grow up thinking, speaking, dreaming, living and identifying as Chinese". The only difference is in his skin colour and features '.
    Indians from the Carribean who think they should be able to fit neatly into India or amongst Indian from India need to address their own identity, otherwise they will always feel displaced.
    What is wrong with seeing yourself as Trinidadian or Guyanese; or as a Carribean person! That is who your are. The Caribbean is made up of various racial groups. All of whom share a culture which is unique to their specific island or Country (in the case of Guyana ) you were born in.
    Having lived outside Trinidad for the majority of my life. I still consider myself a Trinidadian and although I have duel nationality, being a Trinidadian will always come first and I will never call myself anything but a Trinidadian. My identity is important to me

    • @nevelliarambatha2985
      @nevelliarambatha2985 2 года назад

      I aways say it's good to know your ancestors origin but in this generation if you were born in the Caribbean embrace your root as a Caribbean citizen. The Caribbean is made up of multiple races. Where you were born as a citizen is your place of origin or roots not where your ancestors arrived from.

  • @psroutine7132
    @psroutine7132 2 года назад

    Grt to see even after so much persecution u kept ur identity alive

  • @chrisventura1881
    @chrisventura1881 2 года назад +1

    Shop at wife's 2 Puja. Stores on Liberty. NAMASTE, and D&J.🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽

  • @karthi7016
    @karthi7016 3 года назад +2

    Same with South African Indians...

  • @eileene
    @eileene 3 года назад +1

    From this it seems Jamaica does not have Indians....only Trinidad and Guyana mentioned....why?

    • @Unlike230
      @Unlike230 3 года назад +5

      There are a smaller indian community in Jamaica.

    • @asheragard140
      @asheragard140 3 года назад +1

      In the beginning he did mention Guyana and many other Islands . Indians were dropped off all over the Caribbean as indentured labourers.

    • @VenStarrr
      @VenStarrr 3 года назад +2

      They are indian communties in jamaica (probably more chinese-jamaicans), but they are not a majority. Jamaicans as a whole tend to intermarry with the various ethnic groups on the island so we're more mixed out. You'll find way more afro-asian mixed ppl than pure indians like guyana or T&T, where they seem to be more segregated or stick to themselves.

    • @marlene97280
      @marlene97280 Год назад

      Martinique and Guadeloupe too 😂

    • @marlene97280
      @marlene97280 Год назад

      But this division dont exist in your french neighbourhood in Martinique and Guadeloupe, they live together into mix creole culture without impact of british racialism

  • @jabaltariq4606
    @jabaltariq4606 Год назад +1

    Why is homosexuality a theme in story?

  • @shehzadchowdhury8327
    @shehzadchowdhury8327 4 года назад +4

    Where are the afro carribeans?

    • @rakatan8930
      @rakatan8930 4 года назад +20

      This is about Indo-Caribbean people, so what do you mean?

    • @zochbuppet448
      @zochbuppet448 3 года назад +1

      Well its obvious English is not your first language

    • @mstemplgod2717
      @mstemplgod2717 3 года назад +1

      I am sure u can find their documentary on utube if u r looking for it.

    • @marlene97280
      @marlene97280 Год назад

      But this division dont exist in your french neighbourhood in Martinique and Guadeloupe, they live together into mix creole culture without impact of british racialism

  • @vaishalisrigadhi
    @vaishalisrigadhi 3 месяца назад

    ❤ from 🇮🇳

  • @imacarguy4065
    @imacarguy4065 7 месяцев назад +1

    I feel like some of this is stereotyping India based on the average Indian who may simply be ignorant about this history. A lot of Indians would quicker think Indo-Africans like from Kenya and South Africa or Uganda when they see and hear about Indians from the outside, especially those who went through Indentureship.
    Not many know about Guyana and Trinidad, except for those who have come here for work. While I understand culture shock, a lot of Uttar Pradeshi and Bihari culture would be similar to Caribbean culture. You just have to go to the right place. These are big, DIVERSE, areas.

  • @spicylifevlogs8355
    @spicylifevlogs8355 11 месяцев назад +1

    We indian welcome all descendants of indentured labors feom carrebian, africa, fiji etc to visit Ayodhya and make pilgrimage to our lord rama temple which was demolished by muslim invaders.
    Your visist will also provide an opportunity for you to see your ancestors village/region.
    Similarly we indians want to explore carebbian,fiji for holidays, stress free vacations or investment.
    Long live indians and Hindus

  • @modaniem9428
    @modaniem9428 3 года назад

    Great respect

  • @strikerstrike3238
    @strikerstrike3238 3 года назад +1

    I think we need to think critically about colonial indentureship - the Indians brought to Guyana, some of the poorest, systemically marginalized ( through caste and political systems), and possibly uneducated people “signed” up to go to South America to work on sugar estates and plantations for “ payment “? Yes I’m sure the British paid great expat benefits to these people. Secondly I’m sure the local Indian governments were very critical of the treatment of their people “traveling” to the West Indies and those local governments were not incentivize
    Or paid by the British because they Indian citizens could never be considered just labor. Yea I’m sure British had great reason they did not want to record keep on people who were “indentured servants” right after slavery ended. Future generation didnt need know about their ancestors, thank god for British colonialism that made this happen!

  • @vixxa
    @vixxa 4 года назад +2

    good stuff

    • @darrellbrown6131
      @darrellbrown6131 4 года назад +1

      I appreciate you watching and your continued support.

  • @ayushbose599
    @ayushbose599 2 года назад +1

    🙏🏽frmKolkata🇮🇳♥️🇬🇾🇹🇹🇯🇲

  • @MrAllmightyCornholioz
    @MrAllmightyCornholioz 3 года назад +2

    SHIVA BLESS THE INDO-CARIBBEANS! JAI BHOLEKI JAI HIND!

  • @migspeculates
    @migspeculates 2 года назад +3

    Now that I think about it, the history of the Americas is full of generational traumas and separation. You got native peoples being conquered and even decimated (e.g. the Caribbean) to a handful of minority populations numbering only in millions. You got black and Asian people (Chinese and Indians) uprooted from their homeland to work in plantations for economic profit. The only winners were white people, just look at Brazil for example. The most prosperous states are predominantly settled by European descendants and they are still proud of their heritage (German/Italian/Polish) despite being uprooted from Europe.

  • @mrkings6639
    @mrkings6639 3 года назад

    That was incorrect with what she said.there are plenty of Indians who come from European colonies that still can speak there language. She does not even know what she is talking about. There are different dialects of Hindi the majority came from Bihar they speak bhojpuri every state in India has a dialect standard Hindi known as khariboli is the dialect of the capital of India and for those that do not speak the language and know anything about being Indian their families came before 1873. And for the Indians who still were able to retain their culture they came after 1873.

  • @direisthedevil3221
    @direisthedevil3221 3 года назад +1

    Hello indo-caribbeans I as a Indian person orginated in Guyana make me indo-caribbeans why I'm so related to Indo-European why I'm so related to Europe and Asia

  • @rosaramzan78
    @rosaramzan78 3 года назад +5

    How educational ☺️. As a fellow Indian Guyanese myself,. I completely understand that the older generation has no tolerance for the LGBTQ community. We are becoming educated and tolerant w the younger ppl coming up now. Change is a coming,. Stay hopeful and blessed 🤗💖.

  • @rakeshbhagola1068
    @rakeshbhagola1068 3 года назад

    West Indisch, the caribean,
    Gayana, Suriname, Trinidad & Tobego,

  • @eve3363
    @eve3363 4 года назад +4

    First the man said Indians returned to the Caribbean due to a more admirable social status, then he said blacks and Indians have the social issues. He just contradicted himself.

    • @shaktir5309
      @shaktir5309 4 года назад +3

      No he didn’t. You’re comparing two completely different things. He was explaining that the Indians returned because despite what was happening in Guyana with the indentureship, meaning it wasn’t ideal but at least they were comfortable. In his explanation of the info-Caribbean time line he THEN moves on to life in the Caribbean which unfortunately did/does include social issues

    • @natashadickson4819
      @natashadickson4819 2 года назад

      He meant their social standing in Guyana was not ideal but still better than returning to low caste status in India.

    • @eve3363
      @eve3363 Год назад

      @@shaktir5309 Exactly! When was slavery ever comfortable? Are you slow or purposefully being deceitful?

    • @romariowilliams7952
      @romariowilliams7952 Год назад

      ​@@eve3363 You are the slow one. The lady never even mentioned slavery. It's not Indians fault that blacks were slaves.

  • @vernicejillmagsino9603
    @vernicejillmagsino9603 Год назад +1

    For me Kamala Harris is not Indo Caribbean because her Caribbean roots is African and her Indian roots is Asian direct to the U.S. it’s not Indo Caribbean that one parent is Asian Indian American and another is Caribbean American (particularly Africans descents)

  • @86reyleon
    @86reyleon Месяц назад

    ♥️🇬🇾♥️🇬🇾

  • @shehzadchowdhury8327
    @shehzadchowdhury8327 3 года назад +5

    Why this video don’t talk about Afro carribean when majority of carribeans in the world are Afro not indo

  • @herbertpearson5665
    @herbertpearson5665 6 месяцев назад

    More the politics separated Black Afro and Indian Guyanese people racism is still alive and well in India. India was colonized by the Brits since which they've been brainwashed as a result the Indian Guyanese begave in like manner.

  • @bram992
    @bram992 3 года назад +2

    We light skin brahmins from reunion island. We are proud of our Indian root. We speak more french than hindi...

    • @maryamkim1281
      @maryamkim1281 2 года назад +2

      All thr brahmins I know are dark skinned. What is the significance of skin colour to you?

    • @golddust6771
      @golddust6771 2 года назад

      Brahmins❤❤❤❤,from india

    • @bram992
      @bram992 2 года назад

      @@maryamkim1281 puzzling to me
      Green eyes
      Red hair
      We are not franco indian either..

    • @maryamkim1281
      @maryamkim1281 2 года назад

      @@bram992 So? Did you "achieve" something to be proud of with your eye colour and red hair? Are you higher up, do you imagine, because you look Irish?

    • @bram992
      @bram992 2 года назад

      @@maryamkim1281
      Just puzzling...

  • @5FT6MAN
    @5FT6MAN 2 года назад

    22:34

  • @rajch1196
    @rajch1196 3 года назад +1

    Please establish contacts with INDIA - the mother land , a great , noble ancient civilization . Develop exchange programs and study programs , cultural programs .
    India will play an enriching role - a great country.

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 3 года назад +1

      yes we love the mother country-enjoy-ruclips.net/video/IZrJUMJ7SQs/видео.html

    • @Majestee.04
      @Majestee.04 3 года назад +4

      As an indo-caribbean, I speak for all indo-caribbeans when I say "Nah, we're good". You don't want us anyway."

    • @razeka62
      @razeka62 2 года назад +2

      @@Majestee.04 HaHa!!! So true. They look down on their own in their country if they are not the right caste. We don’t have that in Guyana. They can keep their caste shit with them.

    • @Majestee.04
      @Majestee.04 2 года назад +1

      @@razeka62 Exactly! In Guyana and Trinidad, we don't care about cast. We don't even follow the stupid system. We don't care about skin color and our music is better in my opinion. I love chutney. Who cares if they don't except us. At least we were able to create a culture that we can call our own and no one, not even them, can take it away from us. We don't force our kids to get married and we don't threaten to kill or take them away from people who they're genuinely in love with, it doesn't't even matter if they're indo/Afro Caribean. Heck, they don't even have to be caribbean. Heck we've been showing them how it's done for years. Man I love my culture.

    • @kanishkkumar5431
      @kanishkkumar5431 2 года назад +1

      @@Majestee.04 so r not indian anymore so don't try to create a relationship with india despite u git indian ancestery ........ u live like black africans.....u don't have indian value anymore...so don't even try to disrespect my great. country. ....

  • @5FT6MAN
    @5FT6MAN 2 года назад

    22:23

  • @ifuseekamy2482
    @ifuseekamy2482 4 года назад +4

    Very similar to how African Americans feel

  • @MyNatasha73
    @MyNatasha73 3 года назад +4

    So why is it that Guyanese Indians are separated from Afro-Guyanese in Brooklyn!
    Again you said it! You all don't want to be Caribbean or considered Caribbean, unless it serves a purpose. Labour Day you are mostly absent! Sad!

    • @rudeboy2502
      @rudeboy2502 3 года назад +9

      Maybe because most live in Queens? While many Afro-Guyanese reside in Brooklyn. Not sure why, but lots of Indo-Guyanese at Caribana in Toronto. I consider myself 100% Caribbean, and very proud of my Guyanese heritage, shouldn't paint everyone with the same brush.

    • @mamashabana1732
      @mamashabana1732 3 года назад +4

      @@rudeboy2502 Thanks. I've been to Guyana, Trinidad, Toronto & Brooklyn's "carnivals". Love is love stop trying to divide us. I'm Muslim & I've also attended Phagwah several times.

    • @razeka62
      @razeka62 2 года назад +1

      Lived in Brooklyn for many years and never went to the Labor Day parade. Shooting every time. I like to stay ALIVE.

    • @marlene97280
      @marlene97280 Год назад

      But this division dont exist in your french neighbourhood in Martinique and Guadeloupe, they live together into mix creole culture without impact of british racialism

  • @amazonwarrior7126
    @amazonwarrior7126 2 года назад +1

    hay zendaya Marie, if you can find one Guyanese speaking any of the indian Langauges I will pay you, oviously not people who studied in india or hindu priest,but ordanary Guyanese of indian desent. what fooled you is Guyanese singing in an Indian langauge, well they can sing but dont understand what they are singing about,unless of course its transalated,and for sure they cant speak it,so dont tell a man about his own country.

    • @Majestee.04
      @Majestee.04 2 года назад

      I take it you don’t know your own culture.

    • @amazonwarrior7126
      @amazonwarrior7126 8 месяцев назад

      @@Majestee.04 aviously you are an arrogrant crabdog, who thinks he knows every thing

  • @rjs4705
    @rjs4705 3 года назад

    Lovely dance on ding dong Susane Mahadev,I Love you.

    • @rjs4705
      @rjs4705 3 года назад

      I m also from Indian decent Hindu.

  • @marilynr409
    @marilynr409 2 года назад

    Micah and Kaim to go to college so be careful how you speak in young lady

  • @devonthompson9081
    @devonthompson9081 2 года назад +1

    I had to watch this for UWI FOUD 1001 into to Caribbean civilization. Being gay cannot truly be accepted by society due to the fact if everyone was gay it would affect the birthrate negatively, so until we have the technology to replicate birth it should not be accepted of obvious reasons.

    • @devonthompson9081
      @devonthompson9081 2 года назад +1

      dont believe the big rock was necessary tho

    • @trini2DBone134
      @trini2DBone134 2 года назад +1

      Not everything is about having kids you know

    • @Majestee.04
      @Majestee.04 2 года назад +2

      Not everything is about making kids. getting married and having babies is not the top priority in life. We need to start being more, excepting of others, rather than being caught up in our own delusions.

  • @5FT6MAN
    @5FT6MAN 2 года назад

    16:53 gg

  • @YellowSynth
    @YellowSynth 3 года назад +2

    that fruity dance though lol

  • @mrkings6639
    @mrkings6639 3 года назад

    The problem is identity she should identify as European/ American with south Asian ancestry.! Her family chose to go to the USA so I don’t understand why people still hold on to their nationalities especially if the country does not share good values or even the values of the country her family asked to be apart of I notice this a lot with people from third world countries my family went straight to the mainland USA 🇺🇸 Canada 🇨🇦 Britain 🇬🇧 so no one in my family has this problem and this whole idea of Caribbean culture is rubbish there are only four continents in the world 🌍 Asia,America,Africa,Europe so pick one people who are not Indian from America have a European American culture with Asian influences that is it. Period

    • @sparkleramsey9502
      @sparkleramsey9502 3 года назад +3

      Caribbeam culture is different

    • @sharonmahabir7150
      @sharonmahabir7150 3 года назад +3

      You can shut up, because people like you create problems. We are Indo-Carribean, as for me I'm Indo-Carribean American, not Asian Pacific Islander. I still visit Trinidad . I don't care about your senseless 2 cents!!!

  • @RajDas-ob4mp
    @RajDas-ob4mp 10 месяцев назад +2

    Please ask PM modi to visit , all the Caribbean islands which has people of Indian origin.India is now ,the fastest growing economy the fifth largest over took the UK soon to be the 3rd largest, in the world. Even cars , trucks buses scooters , and consumer goods are cheaper, made in india. They are the best IT Time to reunite the family.

  • @ronniesamaroo1775
    @ronniesamaroo1775 2 года назад +2

    Fire bun dem battybwoy.