Referring to the hardships that the indentured labourers faced in their months-long journeys by sea, India's Consul General in San Francisco Venkatesan Ashok said the lack of medical, food and living conditions were no different from slavery.
Despite the hardships, the indentured Indian labourers showed a remarkable resilience and became successful, he said at an event marking the centenary of the abolition of indentured labour from India to Fiji, Mauritius and the Caribbean.
Antar Rashtriya Sahayog Parishad (ARSP) general secretary Shyam Parande termed the journey of this diaspora as a journey from struggle to a success.
Noting that the migration started when the British needed workers after the end of slavery in around 1840s, Parande said the recruiter tricked Indians into this system, promising gold in the land of Sri Rama (Surinam) but in reality exploited them as bondage workers.
"Similarly this Indian diaspora who are also called as Girimityas also carried India's culture in the form of Tulsi Ramanaya, Hindi language, food and practices," he said.
Ex-Consul General of Fiji Narayan Raju said that the Fijian Indian community was proud of their heritage and India.
He emphasised that the Indian government should do more efforts to connect better with the diaspora countries and people.
The Indian indenture system was a system of indenture, a form of debt bondage. As many as 3.5 million Indians were transported to various colonies of European powers to provide labour, mainly for sugar plantations.
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