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Dr. Kumar Mahabir 02/03/2022 At a webinar on Zoom recently, I presented part of a
research paper I had originally delivered at a conference at the University the
West Indies (UWI) in 2017 entitled “The Marginalisation and Exclusion of Indians by the
Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) in the CSEC and CAPE History and
Literature Syllabiâ€. I was later given an opportunity to do the same
presentation to the CXC Board at its headquarters in Barbados. CSEC and CAPE
are equivalent to the O- and A- Level exams of long ago. In the Zoom and CXC
Board presentations, I focused on the history syllabi. I argued that Indians constitute about half of the
population in Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana and Suriname, and form the largest
minority in Jamaica, St Lucia, St Vincent, Grenada and Belize. I emphasised
that we must adopt socially-just educational practices and cited the
recommendations by UNESCO, the World Forum in Dakar, and the World Conference
on Education-for-All in Thailand, that minority ethnic groups should not be
disadvantaged in receiving an education, or excluded from the content of the
curriculum. The CXC CSEC Caribbean History syllabus consists of
ten Core Topics and nine Themes. I said that the ten (10) Core Topics outlined
for the 2011 to 2017 examinations range from “The Indigenous Peoples of the
Americas†to “Regional Integration up to 1985â€, but that only two (2) of those ten
Core Topics partially address Indo-Caribbean History (Indentureship).
These are Core Topic F: “Coming of the Chinese, Europeans, Indians and Africansâ€
and Core Topic G: “The Establishment of the Peasantry 1838 to 1900â€. Arriving in the Caribbean after Emancipation under the
indentureship scheme, Indians constituted 82.4% (430,300) of all indentured
immigrants, whereas the Chinese, Portuguese, German, French and liberated
African indentured immigrants together amounted to just 17.6% (91,600). Despite
this huge disparity in numbers, Indians are lumped together with all the other immigrant
ethnic groups under one heading. Accordingly, there should be a Core Topic on
the subject of Indian immigration by itself if the impact that Indian immigrants
have had on shaping the region is to be fully understood. Indian Indentureship virtually excluded The Core Topic regarding the establishment of the
peasantry deals with the period 1838-1900. However, that period cannot
adequately document the establishment and development of Indo-Caribbean
Peasantry because the majority of Indians acquired their own land, on which
they cultivated sugar cane, cocoa, rice and vegetables and reared cattle, after
the abolition of indentureship (1917), and so their history and experiences are
not sufficiently represented in this Core Topic. As for the CAPE History syllabus, the marginalisation
of Indian history is even more egregious Unit 1: “The Caribbean in the Atlantic
World†consists of three modules: Module 1 – “Indigenous Societiesâ€; Module 2 –
“Slave Systems: Character and Dismantlementâ€; and Module 3 – “Freedom in Actionâ€.
The topics of settlement and citizenship of Chinese, Indian and Portuguese
immigrants constitute just one portion of Theme 1, Module 3, with (i) “their
social and economic experiences during indentureship and post-indentureshipâ€,
and (ii) “resistance†forming sub-topics. Module 1 focuses on Indigenous
Peoples and Module 2 concentrates on African Peoples, rebellions and
revolutions. Practically no attention is given to Indian Indentureship which
has been described as a new system of slavery by Hugh Tinker and other
historians. This module should have at least addressed the Indian
Hosay/Muharram Massacre in October 30, 1884 which has been described as the
bloodiest massacre in Trinidad and Tobago under British rule. Unit 2 focuses on the Atlantic World and its global
interactions (the interconnections among Europe, Africa and the Americas).
There are, again, 3 Modules: “Atlantic World: Interactionsâ€; “Atlantic
Development: Identity and Industryâ€; and “International Relations: Conflict and
Liberation†Apart from the topic of Gandhi and the nationalist movement, the
Indian/Asian world and its long-standing presence and influence on Caribbean
history is completely ignored. Let us not forget that it was European explorer
Christopher Columbus’s search for a shorter trade route to India to acquire
more tea, silk, cotton and spices that resulted in the discovery and occupation
of the Americas which, in turn, led to the African slave trade. In its day, the
spice trade was the world’s biggest industry. It established and destroyed
empires, led to the discovery of new continents, and in many ways, helped lay
the foundation for the modern world. Unit 2 of the CXC CAPE History syllabus
should have also included a theme on the Silk Road or Silk Route which was a
network of trade routes that connected China, India, Persia, Arabia, the Horn
of Africa and Europe for thousands of years. Using content analysis as my main methodology, I
concluded that the CXC History syllabus was Afrocentric and that standards at
the institution were beneath UNESCO’s requirements. Not one of the topics,
whether core or theme, does justice to the subject of Indo-Caribbean history and
Indian immigration to the region. You may also access this article through our web-site http://www.lokvani.com/ |
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