Friday, March 6, 2026
If you support the work of Guyana Graphic click here to : DONATE
HomeA great little India - 3

A great little India – 3

It’s not just Guyana that has a large population of Indians. Next door, in Suriname, around half the population are descended from those who came from India. In fact, there are 170,000 Hindus here (37% of the population) plus 18,000 ‘Indian’ Muslims. It’s not uncommon to hear the greeting ‘Salaam alay-kum!’


It’s not just Guyana that has a large population of Indians. Next door, in Suriname, around half the population are descended from those who came from India. In fact, there are 170,000 Hindus here (37% of the population) plus 18,000 ‘Indian’ Muslims. It’s not uncommon to hear the greeting ‘Salaam alay-kum!’

The Indians arrived here much later than the Guyanese Indians. In Suriname, the Dutch only finally abolished slavery in 1873, and that’s when the recruiting began. The Indians were enticed here in the belief they were coming to Shri Ram, the Land of Ram. Mohandas Gandhi regarded this traffic in people as ‘a new slave trade’, and agitated for its abolition, which finally happened in 1916. At that point, the Dutch brought in the Javanese.

Meanwhile, they’re ‘Hindustaten’ (as they’re known) had produced large families, initially to provide labour. Later, large families were about political survival. ‘We were told to make a lot of children,’ one Indian told, ‘so we wouldn’t be swamped.’

Today, Indian culture is kept alive with help of Indian Embassy – and there’s even a revival. But there’s no real sign of their ‘Indianess’ failing. The Hindustaten have their own newspapers, te,ples (see photo), TV stations (like Natraj TV) and political parties (e.g the United Indian Party). They even have their own dialect, Sarnami, a local version of Hindi, a form of Bihari.

But, make no mistake, the Surinamese Indians are fully part of this country and its culture. Just like the Afro-Surinamese, they know where the water mamma lives, and where it’s dangerous to swim …

Related Articles

Cheddi Jagan International Airport

Contact Information for Cheddi Jagan International Airport

Address: Timehri, Guyana

Call: +592 261 2281

Call: +592 699 9074

Call: +592 600 7022

Email: cjiac@cjairport-gy.com https://cjairport-gy.com/contact-us/

Most Popular

Recent Comments

Debra K. Lawrence on Hotels you’ll never forget
Leith Yearwood on Snake Cut
Georgina Lambert-Calvert on What has happened to some of our young folks
Caribbean C Live on John Gimlette’s Voyages
Rev. Adunnola Waterman-French on GAC 2012 Reunion – A perfect Take-off
Georgina Lambert-Calvert on Guyana Emancipation (Freedom) Day History
Althea Garraway on Tapir
Open chat
Hello
Can we help you?