Our ancestors were from a rich civilisation
- By HABEEB ALLI
- Published 05/21/2009
Having
lived in India I got the distinct feel that no matter what kurta you wear
and which qaseeda you sing you are an outsider. However, the continued
yearning to know one’s roots never ceases, apart from Bollywood
desires!
Among
the first batch that arrived on the Whitby were 94 Musalman, enriched with
their Mughal culture- Urdu language, Persian cuisine, art of reciting
Ghazals and the Holy Quran and experts artisans. Learned men among these
Asian tigers appeared, even in the second batch, aboard the Hesperus, who
maintained their Faith, despite the brutal policies of the Gora - white
slave masters.
Interestingly,
I was fortunate in my three years of roots-searching-escapades in the
1980’s, during my student days, to travel in some of the areas our
ancestors originated from- Lucknow, Ghazipur, Allahabad, Agra, Gorakpur,
Murshidabad, Azamgarh, Mirzapur, Shahabad, Sultanpur, Faizabad, Patna and
Alighar. As I started speaking Urdu, one gentleman actually commented that
my accent smells of a Ghaziabad background! One friend from Guyana was
lucky to have correspondence with his returned great grandfather and found
them in Azamgarh. I later travelled in Ramadan to their home to have
breakfast with cold sherbet and learn of their Shia heritage. The Two Eids
were well celebrated in Guyana as well as Youman Nabi, but the Tazia
ceremonies that happened until the late 1960’s was evidence that the
Muslims that came were from both Sunni and Shia traditions, except that
division did not survive.
I
must say that the diligence the mosques and madressa provided in educating
the growing Muslim masses from since 150 years, have been the key of this
community’s establishment.
While
the conversion to Christianity was no easy feat, with converts gaining the
better jobs and educational opportunities, those who remain steadfast to
their dharma were better off, eventually, as they too did business, went
to school and travelled but with self dignity and “coolie”
pride.
The
first mosque stands at Vergenogen as an emblem that the Muslims built
their wooden structure for prayer and while their is a monument
representing that history on the West Coast of Demerara, the fulfillment
of the rebuilt mosque is still to be done. As a matter of fact the next
early mosque at No. 78 Corentyne, still stands; renovated and active,
another symbol that early Muslims were accustomed to being community
oriented as they had already lived that experience as a Minority in India
during the British Raj.
Recently
a famous gentleman passed away in Pakistan whose domicile was Toronto for
many years. Many heard the name Queenstown Masjid in his eulogy only
because his wife’s grandfather is buried in the capital’s landmark mosque-
he being an Afghan Pathan who along with others built that early
structure.
It
was a British sailor that remarked upon seeing the first mosque facing
West that the Kabba in Arabia is positioned East from Guyana, moreso
Northern, and not West as the case in India.
Muslims
joined their counterparts of the African community as speakers of Arabic
and while the return to Islam by then was slow and painful, over the years
that understanding and solidarity have grown, giving obvious optics that
these two communities can naturally co-exist.
With
several rebellions marking the sore sojourn of Indian arrival in Guyana
and fatal quest for freedom being etched on their altar of pride- the call
for same was being reechoed every where and India itself was ablaze in
this self determination struggle. Maybe it was the harmony around the fire
in the logies, reciting Hanoman Chalisa and Milad Akbar that made the
winds of courage raged. Such has been the pride of Guyana- that Hindus and
Muslims are seen as Bhai-Bhai until this hour.
According
to Raymond Chickrie: Hindustani Muslims in Guyana have had a long history
of resistance dating back to October 11,1838, when two Muslims – Jummun
(Juman) and Pultun escaped the clutches of the gora sahibs (white
masters). The bodies of two strange men were discovered shortly afterwards
at Mahaica, in the bushes who were believed to be the two “runaway
coolies” Jummun and Pultun. We also saw the Rosehall uprising of 1913
where mainly Muslims were at the forefront “battling” imperialism - Moula
Bux, Jahangir Khan, Dildar Khan, Chotey Khan, Aladi, and Amirbaksh stood
up to the injustices on the plantations.
Others
were named in West Coast Demerara and those who joined other leaders in
the forefront as workers union activists, etc. Later in politics and
parliament and until today in business and all fronts of life those names
resound, although at times the names do not necessarily denote
Islam.
When
you compare today’s migration to North America by Indians from Guyana, you
see the parlance of a better life, however a reality or delusion that
maybe. Calcutta in those days stood as the recruiting ports for laborers
with gold and land as the prize. That a child may see an abundant
opportunity of education and well being, parents leave their comfortable
abodes and migrated away from Guyana. There too they have maintained a
strong semblance of community and faith, while enjoying the new
citizenship of giving and respect of diversity.
Maybe
its time that the remittance and the reputation be held for once and the
question asked- if we love foreign things so much, how about also
accepting some foreign ideas of religion that will make the social life
much more rewarding and the spiritual much more alluring – as much as
Western Union and US TV does for those living faraway from loved
ones.