Tuesday, June 16, 2026
ADVT 
International

'Indian Diaspora Should Move Beyond Culture'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 May, 2015 10:22 AM
    The Indian diaspora must move beyond culture, heritage and traditions into present day areas of sustainable development, according to a well-known academic here.
     
    Clement Sankat, principal of the St. Augustine Campus, University of the West Indies, said at the opening ceremony of the International Indian Diaspora Conference at the university on Tuesday evening that there must also be co-operation in such areas in science, technology, innovation, medicine, entrepreneurship and agriculture. The conference ends Friday.
     
    Trinidad and Tobago celebrates 170th anniversary of the arrival of East Indians from India, principally from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar on May 30, a public holiday here since 1992. The first batch of East Indians numbering 238 came on the steam ship, "Fatal Razack" in 1845 and several ships came until 1917, bringing the stock of East Indians to approximately 148,000. They were brought here by the then colonial government to enhance the decaying agricultural capacity in cocoa, coffee and sugar cane.
     
    "We must build a new impetus towards a direction for sustainable development that is mutually beneficial to India and its global diaspora," Sankat said.
     
    East Indian culture is now interwoven into Trinidad and Tobago society easily identifiable in its food, language, music, dress, names, art and other forms of cultural assets.
     
    Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Dookeran said that there was a need for a Caribbean identity which could become the basis for the development of a Caribbean civilization. "Through scholarship and conferences, the Caribbean could develop a Caribbean civilization, and this must enrichen a global civilization."
     
    Dookeran recalled that approach was started in the 1975 conference to search the pathway for the Indian diaspora here. 
    Indian High Commissioner Gauri Shankar Gupta hailed the Indian diaspora for their strength and resilience in the global community, adding that the names of people of this extraction are found at all levels of society politics, culture, religion, academic and sports.
     
    The four-day conference has assembled delegates from several countries with strong diaspora populations such as Fiji, Suriname, USA, UK, the Netherlands and, of course, India.
     
    Areas of focus include: Indians in the Caribbean, literary representations of the Indian diaspora, religion and spirituality in the Indian diaspora, historiography of the Indian diaspora, cross cultural exchanges and art, music and aesthetics.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian-American jumps into US Congressional race

    Indian-American jumps into US Congressional race
    Anil Kumar, an Indian-American surgeon and small business owner in Michigan has filed papers as a Democratic candidate in the race for the US House of Representatives from the state's 11th Congressional district.

    Indian-American jumps into US Congressional race

    At last New York Police ends spying on Muslims

    At last New York Police ends spying on Muslims
     New York Police Department has disbanded a controversial surveillance unit started after the September 11, 2001, attacks to catalogue information on Muslim businesses and mosques across the New York region.

    At last New York Police ends spying on Muslims

    US Airways tweets explicit image, apologises

    US Airways tweets explicit image, apologises
    After facing embarrassment over posting a obscene pornographic image on Twitter in response to an unhappy customer Monday, US Airways finally apologised for the error later in the day.

    US Airways tweets explicit image, apologises

    Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria

    Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria
    More than 100 teenage girls were abducted Monday in northeastern Nigeria by suspected Boko Haram members, local sources and police said.

    Over 100 teenage girls abducted in Nigeria

    Ukraine crisis amplifies need for defense cooperation: NATO

    Ukraine crisis amplifies need for defense cooperation: NATO
    NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen Tuesday said that the Ukraine crisis has amplified the need to strengthen cooperation between NATO, the European Union and other partners.

    Ukraine crisis amplifies need for defense cooperation: NATO

    Miss America Nina Davuluri to join White House Easter Egg Roll

    Miss America Nina Davuluri to join White House Easter Egg Roll
    Nina Davuluri, the first Indian American and second Asian American to be chosen as Miss America, will be one of the readers on Storytime Stage at this year's White House Easter Egg Roll.

    Miss America Nina Davuluri to join White House Easter Egg Roll