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Indian Arrival Day

Indian Arrival Day is a holiday celebrated on various days in the nations of the Caribbean, Fiji, South Africa, and Mauritius, commemorating the arrival of people from the Indian subcontinent to their respective nations as indentured labours brought by European colonial authorities and their agents. In Guyana, Mauritius, Fiji, and Trinidad and Tobago, where it started, it is an official public holiday.[3][4][5][6]

Indian Arrival Day
Early Indian indentured arrivals in Trinidad and Tobago.
Observed by
SignificanceArrival of the first South Asian-Indian indentured laborers in each respective country.
CelebrationsCelebrates South Asian-Indian people and their contributions.
ObservancesParades, religious prayer services, and cultural shows
Date
  • 14 May (Fiji)
  • 1 May (Grenada)
  • 5 May (Guyana)
  • 10 May (Jamaica)
  • 2 November (Mauritius)
  • 6 May (Saint Lucia)
  • 1 June (Saint Vincent and the Grenadines)
  • 16 November (South Africa)
  • 5 June (Suriname)
  • 30 May (Trinidad and Tobago)
FrequencyAnnual
Related to

By country Edit

Fiji Edit

A resolution was passed in public discussion that every year on May 14 as to be Girmit Remembrance Day. May 14 is the day that the Leonidas (the first ship of indentured Indians) arrived in Fiji in 1879. Throughout the country each year there are celebration in memory of the Girmityas and Indian culture.[1]

Grenada Edit

The 100th anniversary of the first arrival of Indians in Grenada was commemorated in 1957. This was the first ever commemoration of the day in Grenada. The next commemoration would occur more than five decades later in 2009.[7][8] On 29 April 2009, the Government of Grenada declared that 1 May would officially be designated as Indian Arrival Day and observed annually alongside the existing Labour Day. The date was already a public holiday in Grenada, on account of Labour Day. The Government also announced that Boucherie Road, the road leading to the site of the arrival of the Maidstone, would be officially renamed Maidstone Road to honour the arrival of Indians in Grenada.[9] The renaming was officially carried out in a ceremony at 10:30 AM at La Fortune Junction, St. Patrick on 2 May 2009. Governor General Sir Carlyle Glean unveiled a granite plaque commemorating the arrival of the first Indians in Grenada. The plaque bears the inscription, "On 1st May 1857, in this bay the sailing vessel "Maidstone" anchored and landed 287 passengers having left India three months earlier, with 304 passengers. Between the years 1857 and 1890 other ships anchored in this and other bays bringing a total of 3,200 persons from India to work as agricultural indentured labourers in Grenada. This monument is dedicated to those who became the genesis of the Indo-Grenadian population of our nation".[10]

Guyana Edit

In Guyana the holiday is celebrated in May commemorating the first arrival of indentured labourers from India to the country, on May 5, 1838. On this day, the workers arrived in Guyana to work in sugar plantations. Their descendants today comprise 44 percent of Guyana's population of over 750,000.[11]

Jamaica Edit

In 1995, the Government of Jamaica proclaimed May 10, Indian Heritage Day, in recognition of the Indians' contribution to the social and economic development of the country. The arrival of the Indians more than 170 years ago is commemorated in stamps.[12]

Mauritius Edit

In Mauritius, the holiday is celebrated on November 2 to commemorate the arrival of Indian labourers. 65.8% of the total population is of Indian origins with Mauritius being the only African country with a Hindu majority.

Saint Lucia Edit

The Indian Diaspora of St. Lucia, an association promoting Indo-Saint Lucian heritage, organized the first Indian Arrival Day celebrations in Saint Lucia on 6 May 2013. The association is campaigning for the Saint Lucian government to officially declare 6 May as Indian Arrival Day.[13][14] Many other Caribbean nations observe Indian Arrival Day annually to commemorate the date when the first Indians arrived in their respective countries.[15]

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Edit

The Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines enacted an Act of Parliament on 26 March 2007 officially declaring 1 June as Indian Arrival Day. The first official commemoration of the event was held on 1 June that year.[16] The day is marked annually by a re-enactment of the landing of Indians at Indian Bay, Kingstown, followed by a procession to Heritage Square. Several Indian cultural events are also held to mark the occasion.[17] The first International Indian Diaspora Conference was held for the first time on 1–3 June 2012. It was organized by the St. Vincent and the Grenadines Chapter of the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin International (GOPIO-SVG), in partnership with the SVG Indian Heritage Foundation, and under the patronage of the SVG Ministry of Tourism and Culture. This was the first international conference for the Indian diaspora held in the country. Similar conferences had been held in other Caribbean nations since 1975.[18][19]

The Government of the Saint Vincent and the Grenadines officially designated 7 October as Indian Heritage Day.[20]

Suriname Edit

In Suriname, Indian Arrival Day (Prawas Din) is celebrated on June 5, 1873. On this day a ship named Lalla Rookh,[21] arrived in Paramaribo carrying the first batch of 399[22] Indian Indenture Labours.

Trinidad and Tobago Edit

In Trinidad and Tobago, Indian Arrival Day is celebrated on 30 May. It commemorates the arrival of the first indentured labourers from India in May 1845 on a ship named Fatel Razack after a journey of five months, carrying 275 Indians. Trinidad and Tobago was the first country to start this holiday.

History Edit

Indian Arrival Day was first celebrated in Skinner Park, San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago, as the East Indian Centenary on May 30, 1945[23] which marked the hundredth anniversary of the coming of Indians to Trinidad. The Acting Governor representing the Government of the United Kingdom attended indicating the significance of the observance. Other local dignitaries who addressed the large crowd included Timothy Roodal, George F. Fitzpatrick, Adrian Cola Rienzi, and Murli J. Kirpalani. Greetings were also read from Mahatma Gandhi, Lord Wavell, and Colonel Stanley, the Secretary of State for the Colonies.

After the 1945 Centenary extravaganza, however, the celebration of the anniversary of May 30 gradually declined. By the 1950s, the Indians who were on the Fatel Razack as immigrants to Trinidad and Tobago were brought as "coolie" indentured laborers. By the early seventies only the Indian group was the Hindu Divine Life Society of the Chaguanas was staging an annual procession and ceremony under the name Indian Emigration Day.

Indian Emigration Day, as it was called then, had been celebrated by various organizations after 1945 with limited success. By 1973 the latest was organized by the Divine Life Society, which had organized small annual processions in Chaguanas for Indian Emigration Day. By the late seventies even that small remembrance was dwindling.

In 1976 the Indian Revival and Reform Association (IRRA) was formed. They were concerned about racism against Indians and were interested in developing ideas, writing pamphlets to bring about an Indian revival and renewed pride in Indian heritage and Indian culture. The IRRA wanted to preserve the good things about Indian heritage and reform the ones that were no longer useful or relevant. The anniversary of the coming of Indians to Guyana was one of the good things that came to the IRRA notice.

In 1977 IRRA formed committee was established to revive the memory of the coming of Indians to Trinidad on May 30, 1845 – Indian Emigration Day. The initial historic Committee comprised Anand Rameshwar Singh, Khalique Khan, Ramdath Jagessar, Rajiv Sieunarine, Azamudeen "Danny" Jang, Michael Sankar and Rajesh Harricharan. The following year Rajnie Ramlakhan, Anand Maharaj and Ashok Gobin joined in the group's celebration.

The first active step was taken in early 1978, when they produced and distributed a one-page pamphlet with the title "Indian Emigration Day May 30, 1978". It gave a brief account of the coming of Indians in 1845, and the importance of the event. The names of the first pioneers on the Fatel Razack were listed, and there was a short description of the achievements of Indians in Trinidad since 1845. The Trinidad Express carried a press release, and the Trinidad Guardian printed an article by Kusha Haracksingh on the voyage of the Fatel Razack. Mastana Bahar dedicated a show to Indian Emigration Day. San Fernando Secondary School organized a celebration.

A major turning point occurred in 1979 when the group expanded by approaching the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha. The SDMS Secretary General Satnarayan Maharaj receptive to the idea, agreed to organize a major celebration at Lakshmi Girls College on May 27, 1979. IRRA and the SDMS in discussions agreed that Indians were no longer emigrants to Trinidad and Tobago, but citizens who had arrived 134 years before. Coming out of this discussion the name was then changed to Indian Arrival Day.

The 1979 celebration was a great success and included the presence of some of the original immigrants born in British India. Government ministers Sham and Kamal Mohammed were there, as was the Indian High Commissioner and Presbyterian Church moderator Idris Hamid. The event was widely covered by the local media and immediately knew about the event. In fact it took just two years and an idea to revive the memory of the Arrival of Indians in Trinidad and Tobago to awaken the entire Indian community in Trinidad and Tobago.

Subsequent years the Hindu Seva Sangh and other smaller groups approached the IRRA for guidance in developing in various communities throughout Trinidad and Tobago. By 1980 Indian Arrival Day celebrations were held at the Spring Village, Cedros, Couva, Penal, San Juan, Chaguanas, and many other parts of the country. The National Joint Action Committee, the Catholic Church, other churches, libraries, masjids, mandirs, and schools at this point joined in the observances. In a remarkably short time, Indian Arrival Day was sweeping through the country. By 1985 there were more than 10 significant Indian Arrival Day celebrations taking place. The Hindu community took the lead in the development of the celebrations.

In 1991 Members of Parliament Trevor Sudama and Raymond Pallackdarrysingh first introduced to the House of Representatives the concept that Indian Arrival Day should be made a national public holiday. This call to make Indian Arrival Day a public holiday continued to be unheeded until 1995 Prime Minister Patrick Manning declared that the 150th Anniversary would be a public holiday called Indian Arrival Day, but thereafter the holiday will be called Arrival Day. The 1995 celebrations surpassed the 1945 celebrations with the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha having major celebrations in Trinidad and Tobago

In 1996 Prime Minister Basdeo Panday declared that 30 May would be known as Indian Arrival Day and not Arrival Day. However, in the birthplace of Indian Arrival Day – Trinidad and Tobago – there is a lobby to remove the word 'Indian' from the name. In the 1990s the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha expanded the Indian Arrival Day celebrations and dubbed May as "Indian Heritage Month" which ends on Indian Arrival Day.

Observances in different countries Edit

Since its establishment in Trinidad and Tobago, Indian Arrival Day has given rise to similar celebrations in Fiji, Grenada,[24] Guyana, Jamaica, Mauritius, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, South Africa, Suriname, the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia. However, there is no similar celebration in Malaysia, Singapore, Réunion, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda, or Kenya, which are also home to somewhat large Indian-origin populations.[citation needed]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Historic Girmit Day Marked with Tears". 10 February 2016.
  2. ^ "Indian Arrival Day November 16, 1860, Tracing Your Roots". 16 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Guyana Public Holidays 2022". Publicholidays.gy.
  4. ^ https://www.fiji.gov.fj/About-Fiji/Public-Holidays
  5. ^ "National Holidays and Festivals | the Office of the President of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago". Otp.tt.
  6. ^ "GENERAL NOTICE NO 897 OF 2021 REPUBLIC OF MAURITIUS PUBLIC HOLIDAYS--2022" (PDF). Pmo.govmu.org. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  7. ^ Singh, Shubha (3 June 2015). "Indians in Grenada celebrate Indian Arrival Day". The Indian Diaspora. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  8. ^ Bell, S. A. (2012). Out of Evil, Cometh Good. Lulu.com. ISBN 9781105697616. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  9. ^ "L'ARRIVEE INDIENNE COMMEMOREE A GRENADE ET SAINTE-LUCIE". Montray Kréyol (in French). 25 May 2009. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  10. ^ Ferguson, Michael (1 May 2010). . belmontestate.net. Archived from the original on 30 November 2020. Retrieved 18 April 2017.
  11. ^ "Overseas Indian - Latest Science & Technology Updates". Overseasindian.in. 31 January 2023.
  12. ^ "Jamaica: Indian Heritage Day is May 10th". Repeatingislands.com. 7 May 2009.
  13. ^ . St. Lucia News Online. Archived from the original on 28 March 2014. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  14. ^ . Newsreporter.in. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  15. ^ Singh, Shubha. "Across the West Indies, melas and dances celebrate the contributions of pioneering Indian girmityas". Scroll.in. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  16. ^ Haynes, Abigail (6 June 2016). "Indian Arrival Day Celebrated Today". NBC SVG. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  17. ^ "Indian Arrival Day to be significantly different". thevincentian.com. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  18. ^ "Diaspora conference marks St Vincent's Indian Arrival Day". Antigua Observer Newspaper. 3 June 2012. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  19. ^ "St Vincent celebrates Indian Arrival with cultural show". The Trinidad Guardian. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  20. ^ "India - Saint Vincent and the Grenadines" (PDF). Ministry of External Affairs (India). December 2016. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  21. ^ Murphy, Janet (30 April 2016). "Lalla Rookh- Marking the Indian Arrival in Suriname". NewsGram. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  22. ^ Gupta, Jayanta (26 November 2017). "Suriname envoy at Kolkata ghat from where ancestors set sail". Times of India. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  23. ^ "Thousands Expected to Attend East Indian Centenary Today." Trinidad Guardian, May 30, 1945.
  24. ^ . The Nomadic Gourmet. 1 May 2008. Archived from the original on 28 May 2009. Retrieved 2 November 2016.

indian, arrival, also, prawas, holiday, celebrated, various, days, nations, caribbean, fiji, south, africa, mauritius, commemorating, arrival, people, from, indian, subcontinent, their, respective, nations, indentured, labours, brought, european, colonial, aut. See also Prawas Din Indian Arrival Day is a holiday celebrated on various days in the nations of the Caribbean Fiji South Africa and Mauritius commemorating the arrival of people from the Indian subcontinent to their respective nations as indentured labours brought by European colonial authorities and their agents In Guyana Mauritius Fiji and Trinidad and Tobago where it started it is an official public holiday 3 4 5 6 Indian Arrival DayEarly Indian indentured arrivals in Trinidad and Tobago Observed byFiji celebrated as Girmit Day 1 Grenada Guyana Jamaica celebrated as Indian Heritage Day Mauritius celebrated as Arrival of the Indentured Labourers Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines South Africa 2 Suriname celebrated as Prawas Din Trinidad and TobagoSignificanceArrival of the first South Asian Indian indentured laborers in each respective country CelebrationsCelebrates South Asian Indian people and their contributions ObservancesParades religious prayer services and cultural showsDate14 May Fiji 1 May Grenada 5 May Guyana 10 May Jamaica 2 November Mauritius 6 May Saint Lucia 1 June Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 16 November South Africa 5 June Suriname 30 May Trinidad and Tobago FrequencyAnnualRelated toPrawas DinIndian Heritage DayIndian Emigration DayIndian Heritage MonthGirmit DaySouth Asian Heritage MonthPravasi Bharatiya DivasAsian American Heritage Month Contents 1 By country 1 1 Fiji 1 2 Grenada 1 3 Guyana 1 4 Jamaica 1 5 Mauritius 1 6 Saint Lucia 1 7 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1 8 Suriname 1 9 Trinidad and Tobago 2 History 3 Observances in different countries 4 ReferencesBy country EditFiji Edit A resolution was passed in public discussion that every year on May 14 as to be Girmit Remembrance Day May 14 is the day that the Leonidas the first ship of indentured Indians arrived in Fiji in 1879 Throughout the country each year there are celebration in memory of the Girmityas and Indian culture 1 Grenada Edit The 100th anniversary of the first arrival of Indians in Grenada was commemorated in 1957 This was the first ever commemoration of the day in Grenada The next commemoration would occur more than five decades later in 2009 7 8 On 29 April 2009 the Government of Grenada declared that 1 May would officially be designated as Indian Arrival Day and observed annually alongside the existing Labour Day The date was already a public holiday in Grenada on account of Labour Day The Government also announced that Boucherie Road the road leading to the site of the arrival of the Maidstone would be officially renamed Maidstone Road to honour the arrival of Indians in Grenada 9 The renaming was officially carried out in a ceremony at 10 30 AM at La Fortune Junction St Patrick on 2 May 2009 Governor General Sir Carlyle Glean unveiled a granite plaque commemorating the arrival of the first Indians in Grenada The plaque bears the inscription On 1st May 1857 in this bay the sailing vessel Maidstone anchored and landed 287 passengers having left India three months earlier with 304 passengers Between the years 1857 and 1890 other ships anchored in this and other bays bringing a total of 3 200 persons from India to work as agricultural indentured labourers in Grenada This monument is dedicated to those who became the genesis of the Indo Grenadian population of our nation 10 Guyana Edit In Guyana the holiday is celebrated in May commemorating the first arrival of indentured labourers from India to the country on May 5 1838 On this day the workers arrived in Guyana to work in sugar plantations Their descendants today comprise 44 percent of Guyana s population of over 750 000 11 Jamaica Edit In 1995 the Government of Jamaica proclaimed May 10 Indian Heritage Day in recognition of the Indians contribution to the social and economic development of the country The arrival of the Indians more than 170 years ago is commemorated in stamps 12 Mauritius Edit In Mauritius the holiday is celebrated on November 2 to commemorate the arrival of Indian labourers 65 8 of the total population is of Indian origins with Mauritius being the only African country with a Hindu majority Saint Lucia Edit The Indian Diaspora of St Lucia an association promoting Indo Saint Lucian heritage organized the first Indian Arrival Day celebrations in Saint Lucia on 6 May 2013 The association is campaigning for the Saint Lucian government to officially declare 6 May as Indian Arrival Day 13 14 Many other Caribbean nations observe Indian Arrival Day annually to commemorate the date when the first Indians arrived in their respective countries 15 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Edit The Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines enacted an Act of Parliament on 26 March 2007 officially declaring 1 June as Indian Arrival Day The first official commemoration of the event was held on 1 June that year 16 The day is marked annually by a re enactment of the landing of Indians at Indian Bay Kingstown followed by a procession to Heritage Square Several Indian cultural events are also held to mark the occasion 17 The first International Indian Diaspora Conference was held for the first time on 1 3 June 2012 It was organized by the St Vincent and the Grenadines Chapter of the Global Organization of People of Indian Origin International GOPIO SVG in partnership with the SVG Indian Heritage Foundation and under the patronage of the SVG Ministry of Tourism and Culture This was the first international conference for the Indian diaspora held in the country Similar conferences had been held in other Caribbean nations since 1975 18 19 The Government of the Saint Vincent and the Grenadines officially designated 7 October as Indian Heritage Day 20 Suriname Edit In Suriname Indian Arrival Day Prawas Din is celebrated on June 5 1873 On this day a ship named Lalla Rookh 21 arrived in Paramaribo carrying the first batch of 399 22 Indian Indenture Labours Trinidad and Tobago Edit In Trinidad and Tobago Indian Arrival Day is celebrated on 30 May It commemorates the arrival of the first indentured labourers from India in May 1845 on a ship named Fatel Razack after a journey of five months carrying 275 Indians Trinidad and Tobago was the first country to start this holiday History EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Indian Arrival Day news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Indian Arrival Day was first celebrated in Skinner Park San Fernando Trinidad and Tobago as the East Indian Centenary on May 30 1945 23 which marked the hundredth anniversary of the coming of Indians to Trinidad The Acting Governor representing the Government of the United Kingdom attended indicating the significance of the observance Other local dignitaries who addressed the large crowd included Timothy Roodal George F Fitzpatrick Adrian Cola Rienzi and Murli J Kirpalani Greetings were also read from Mahatma Gandhi Lord Wavell and Colonel Stanley the Secretary of State for the Colonies After the 1945 Centenary extravaganza however the celebration of the anniversary of May 30 gradually declined By the 1950s the Indians who were on the Fatel Razack as immigrants to Trinidad and Tobago were brought as coolie indentured laborers By the early seventies only the Indian group was the Hindu Divine Life Society of the Chaguanas was staging an annual procession and ceremony under the name Indian Emigration Day Indian Emigration Day as it was called then had been celebrated by various organizations after 1945 with limited success By 1973 the latest was organized by the Divine Life Society which had organized small annual processions in Chaguanas for Indian Emigration Day By the late seventies even that small remembrance was dwindling In 1976 the Indian Revival and Reform Association IRRA was formed They were concerned about racism against Indians and were interested in developing ideas writing pamphlets to bring about an Indian revival and renewed pride in Indian heritage and Indian culture The IRRA wanted to preserve the good things about Indian heritage and reform the ones that were no longer useful or relevant The anniversary of the coming of Indians to Guyana was one of the good things that came to the IRRA notice In 1977 IRRA formed committee was established to revive the memory of the coming of Indians to Trinidad on May 30 1845 Indian Emigration Day The initial historic Committee comprised Anand Rameshwar Singh Khalique Khan Ramdath Jagessar Rajiv Sieunarine Azamudeen Danny Jang Michael Sankar and Rajesh Harricharan The following year Rajnie Ramlakhan Anand Maharaj and Ashok Gobin joined in the group s celebration The first active step was taken in early 1978 when they produced and distributed a one page pamphlet with the title Indian Emigration Day May 30 1978 It gave a brief account of the coming of Indians in 1845 and the importance of the event The names of the first pioneers on the Fatel Razack were listed and there was a short description of the achievements of Indians in Trinidad since 1845 The Trinidad Express carried a press release and the Trinidad Guardian printed an article by Kusha Haracksingh on the voyage of the Fatel Razack Mastana Bahar dedicated a show to Indian Emigration Day San Fernando Secondary School organized a celebration A major turning point occurred in 1979 when the group expanded by approaching the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha The SDMS Secretary General Satnarayan Maharaj receptive to the idea agreed to organize a major celebration at Lakshmi Girls College on May 27 1979 IRRA and the SDMS in discussions agreed that Indians were no longer emigrants to Trinidad and Tobago but citizens who had arrived 134 years before Coming out of this discussion the name was then changed to Indian Arrival Day The 1979 celebration was a great success and included the presence of some of the original immigrants born in British India Government ministers Sham and Kamal Mohammed were there as was the Indian High Commissioner and Presbyterian Church moderator Idris Hamid The event was widely covered by the local media and immediately knew about the event In fact it took just two years and an idea to revive the memory of the Arrival of Indians in Trinidad and Tobago to awaken the entire Indian community in Trinidad and Tobago Subsequent years the Hindu Seva Sangh and other smaller groups approached the IRRA for guidance in developing in various communities throughout Trinidad and Tobago By 1980 Indian Arrival Day celebrations were held at the Spring Village Cedros Couva Penal San Juan Chaguanas and many other parts of the country The National Joint Action Committee the Catholic Church other churches libraries masjids mandirs and schools at this point joined in the observances In a remarkably short time Indian Arrival Day was sweeping through the country By 1985 there were more than 10 significant Indian Arrival Day celebrations taking place The Hindu community took the lead in the development of the celebrations In 1991 Members of Parliament Trevor Sudama and Raymond Pallackdarrysingh first introduced to the House of Representatives the concept that Indian Arrival Day should be made a national public holiday This call to make Indian Arrival Day a public holiday continued to be unheeded until 1995 Prime Minister Patrick Manning declared that the 150th Anniversary would be a public holiday called Indian Arrival Day but thereafter the holiday will be called Arrival Day The 1995 celebrations surpassed the 1945 celebrations with the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha having major celebrations in Trinidad and TobagoIn 1996 Prime Minister Basdeo Panday declared that 30 May would be known as Indian Arrival Day and not Arrival Day However in the birthplace of Indian Arrival Day Trinidad and Tobago there is a lobby to remove the word Indian from the name In the 1990s the Sanatan Dharma Maha Sabha expanded the Indian Arrival Day celebrations and dubbed May as Indian Heritage Month which ends on Indian Arrival Day Observances in different countries EditSince its establishment in Trinidad and Tobago Indian Arrival Day has given rise to similar celebrations in Fiji Grenada 24 Guyana Jamaica Mauritius Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines South Africa Suriname the United Kingdom the United States Canada New Zealand and Australia However there is no similar celebration in Malaysia Singapore Reunion Seychelles Tanzania Uganda or Kenya which are also home to somewhat large Indian origin populations citation needed References Edit a b Historic Girmit Day Marked with Tears 10 February 2016 Indian Arrival Day November 16 1860 Tracing Your Roots 16 November 2020 Guyana Public Holidays 2022 Publicholidays gy https www fiji gov fj About Fiji Public Holidays National Holidays and Festivals the Office of the President of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago Otp tt GENERAL NOTICE NO 897 OF 2021 REPUBLIC OF MAURITIUS PUBLIC HOLIDAYS 2022 PDF Pmo govmu org Retrieved 24 July 2022 Singh Shubha 3 June 2015 Indians in Grenada celebrate Indian Arrival Day The Indian Diaspora Retrieved 18 April 2017 Bell S A 2012 Out of Evil Cometh Good Lulu com ISBN 9781105697616 Retrieved 18 April 2017 L ARRIVEE INDIENNE COMMEMOREE A GRENADE ET SAINTE LUCIE Montray Kreyol in French 25 May 2009 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Ferguson Michael 1 May 2010 Indian Arrival Day Celebrations belmontestate net Archived from the original on 30 November 2020 Retrieved 18 April 2017 Overseas Indian Latest Science amp Technology Updates Overseasindian in 31 January 2023 Jamaica Indian Heritage Day is May 10th Repeatingislands com 7 May 2009 Indian Diaspora of Saint Lucia aims to keep Indian heritage and culture alive St Lucia News Online Archived from the original on 28 March 2014 Retrieved 21 April 2017 Caribbean island of St Lucia observes Indian Arrival Day NewsReporter in Newsreporter in Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 21 April 2017 Singh Shubha Across the West Indies melas and dances celebrate the contributions of pioneering Indian girmityas Scroll in Retrieved 21 April 2017 Haynes Abigail 6 June 2016 Indian Arrival Day Celebrated Today NBC SVG Retrieved 23 April 2017 Indian Arrival Day to be significantly different thevincentian com Retrieved 23 April 2017 Diaspora conference marks St Vincent s Indian Arrival Day Antigua Observer Newspaper 3 June 2012 Retrieved 23 April 2017 St Vincent celebrates Indian Arrival with cultural show The Trinidad Guardian Retrieved 23 April 2017 India Saint Vincent and the Grenadines PDF Ministry of External Affairs India December 2016 Retrieved 23 April 2017 Murphy Janet 30 April 2016 Lalla Rookh Marking the Indian Arrival in Suriname NewsGram Retrieved 23 January 2021 Gupta Jayanta 26 November 2017 Suriname envoy at Kolkata ghat from where ancestors set sail Times of India Retrieved 11 May 2021 Thousands Expected to Attend East Indian Centenary Today Trinidad Guardian May 30 1945 I came I saw and I cooked it Indian Arrival Day The Nomadic Gourmet 1 May 2008 Archived from the original on 28 May 2009 Retrieved 2 November 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indian Arrival Day amp oldid 1179106517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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