Wednesday, September 20, 2017

HUNDRED YEARS OF LULL

Labours from Bengal and its adjoining states of Bihar and UP in India were coaxed and duped by middlemen ( locally called aarkatis) or even forced to act as bonded labours  on the other side of the globe ( at West indies, French Guyana, etc) more than one hundred and fifty years back. To keep the mills running, they were treated inhumanly.
This poem tries to catch the by-gone era.

 HUNDRED YEARS OF LULL

They landed in Demerara or French Guiana-
We know not, with little hopes in their eyes
As en-route, they saw their dead mate
Being thrown in the turbulent seas .

On a contract, their left thumb impressions
Had Indelible ink, that changed their fate-
And that of their children and later generations
As the contents they knew not – they were not adept.

On board MV Whitby* or some other ship unknown
 As sugarcane plantation labours they went
And landed in the barbed open prison
Into a glorified concentration camp they were sent.

They were brown slaves, somewhat better than cattle
Who squeezed juice from canes to fill the coffers-
of “White men”, who tortured and fed them forbidden meat ,
and lodged them in jails for some minor blunders.

Five years of contract, they toiled in bondage
The child of disgruntled fate rotted in loogy**
Those that were vacated by the African counterparts,
-who were set free from the clutches of slavery.

  
They survived the torture by the skin of their teeth
Sugar’s bitterness made them strong,
Masochism seeped in their nerves, they could breathe-
when their resistance was whipped as wrongs.

They took the “ white – whips” in their stride,
Their beloved Indian culture almost gone-
They stayed back after years of torment
 That robbed their language and their religion.

But their resolve sustained, their children thrived,
Their progeny after hundred years of lull
Gave Nobel Laureates, Cricketers or Businessmen-
Who, today gracefully employ the needy White men.

*Its probably the first ship that took the Indentured labours to South America from Port of Calcutta.
**loogies are the quarters of the African slaves that were later used by the Indian counterparts, post abolition of Slavery act in 1834 in British Guiana and British west Indies. New form of slavery was introduced by the authorities by taking hapless Indian labourers from the opposite side of the globe.