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06/08/2010 Coming up in Kolkata, memorial for Indian indentured   workers     Kolkata, Aug 6 (IANS) An abandoned dock on the Hooghly river,   once known as Demerara dock, is being spruced up to act as a link between the   descendants of Indian indentured workers in the 19th and early 20th centuries   and their ancestral homeland. The memorial will be a pilgrimage point for those   persons of Indian origin (PIOS) around the world who cannot trace their   ancestral homes in India.  This was the last point of contact for the migrants   before they set sail for the sugarcane plantations of British Guiana, which is   today Guyana.
 
 Though the dock in the Kidderpore area is no longer in   use, it has a clock tower that is in good physical condition with a relatively   fresh coat of paint. A memorial plaque is to be installed at the Demerara Clock   Tower to commemorate the over one million indentured workers who sailed from   similar depots.
 
 Edged along by the keen interest shown by a group of   Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs) as well as the governments of Mauritius, Guyana   and Trinidad and Tobago, the Indian government and the West Bengal state   government have speeded up efforts to locate sites for a museum of indenture.   The museum will relate the history of indenture and the stories of the people   who left home to work in distant lands.
 
 The memorial and museum proposal   will be a joint project of the central and West Bengal governments. The Demerara   Clock Tower memorial would be an emotional and physical connection for the   descendants of the indentured workers.
 
 Once the area around the clock   tower is cleared up and landscaped, the memorial would be inaugurated at a   special function with high level representation from Mauritius, Trinidad and   Tobago and Guyana.
 
 A team of the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs,   the West Bengal government, its archaeology department, historian Leela Sarup   and GOPIO vice president Ashook Ramsaran toured the area in a motorised launch   last month to identify the sites which are linked to the migration of indentured   workers.
 
 The team travelled down the Hooghly river and inspected the   sites from where the indentured workers began their journey across the seas. The   officials used old maps, local information and details provided by Sarup to   identify the Demerara Depot, the Garden Reach Depot and the Surinam Jetty at   Kidderpore.
 
 The team also visited Alipore and Bhawanipore in Kolkata to   identify the site of the barracks where the indenture recruits stayed while they   underwent a medical examination that would certify their fitness for   agricultural labour. The team was looking for sites that were free from legal   encumbrances.
 
 Each of the labour importing colonies had to appoint an   agent and set up a depot where the indentured recruits stayed while they waited   for the ship to take them across the sea. There were separate depots and jetties   for each colony.
 
 Demerara was the name of the region where sugar was   planted in British Guiana; it gave its name to high quality natural brown sugar,   Demerara sugar, which was produced in the region.
 
 The governments of   Guyana, Mauritius and Trinidad and Tobago have expressed a keen desire to have a   memorial in India for indentured workers who came to their country.
 
 The   descendants of indentured workers, now citizens of Guyana, Mauritius, Fiji,   South Africa, Trinidad, the US, Canada and Britain, who come to visit India are   often deeply disappointed to find nothing that can be associated with that phase   of India's history.
 
 Many of them discover that ordinary Indians have no   knowledge of the great migration that took place in the 19th and early 20th   century.
 
 "We are the forgotten children of mother India. Mauritius,   Trinidad, Suriname, Guyana and Fiji celebrate Indian Arrival Day and have   memorials for the Indian workers. But in India no one remembers them," said   David Sheoraj of Trinidad, a visitor to the annual Pravasi Bharatiya Divas   function.
 
 There is a strong emotional connection between PIOs and their   ancestral homeland. Prime Minister Navin Ramgoolam of Mauritius, former prime   minister of Trinidad Basdeo Panday and President Bharrat Jagdeo of Guyana are   proud descendents of indentured workers. Each of them sought Indian government   assistance to locate their ancestral villages and paid an emotional visit to the   villages while on official visits to India.
 
 In 2008, Ramgoolam had   touched a chord with the hearts of the villagers gathered to welcome him when he   bent down and reverentially touched the soil of his ancestral village, Harigaon,   in Bihar.
 
 
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