New Homelands
Hindu Communities in Mauritius, Guyana, Trinidad, South Africa, Fiji, and East Africa
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redeeming feature of the system was that most of their workmates spoke their language and came from the same area of India. Because this allowed them to develop some sense of community, by the end of the initial five years most of the Indian laborers chose to stay in the land to which they had been taken.
In time that land became the place in which they joined with others to build a new homeland. In this fieldwork-based study, Paul Younger looks at the present day descendents of these workers and their post-indenture societies in Mauritius, Guyana, Trinidad, South Africa, Fiji, and East Africa. He finds that they still cling to the fact that it was an arbitrary British decision that took them there and made the society pluralistic. This plurality seems to require them to search their memory for
a distinctive religious tradition that they can pass on to their children. They know that there was a loss of culture involved in their move to these locations and consider it important to recover from that loss. But they are also intensely proud of their new identity, and insist that they have
established a new religious tradition in their new homeland. For generations, says Younger, these people had struggled in their situation and now they had come up with a sense of community and purpose and were prepared to make the historical claim that they had developed an appropriate religious tradition for their specific community.
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Utgitt:
2009
Forlag: Oxford University Press Inc
Innbinding: Innbundet
Språk: Engelsk
ISBN: 9780195391640
Format: 24 x 16 cm
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«Younger's new book provides muc-needed date and a useful analysis of some of the oldest Indian-oridin Hindu communities living outside of India.»