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Carols and Caparo - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Culture Matters

Old-time Christmas

Dara E Healy

Silent night, holy night

All is calm, and all is bright

Round yon Virgin Mother and Child

Holy infant so tender and mild

Sleep in heavenly peace

Sleep in heavenly peace

- Silent Night by Joseph Mohr

WHAT DO Silent Night and a Hindu pundit have in common? Why would Ravi Ji's memories of Christmas be tinged by reflections on the damaging effects of colonialism on traditional sociocultural values?

This week, our journey takes us to the village of Caparo, where Ravi Ji spent his early years. In this rural community, Christmas was an important part of his coming of age, but not all of it made sense. Eventually, the answers would come, as he viewed the Christmas of his childhood through the eyes of an adult.

Indian immigration to TT was not originally viewed as a permanent arrangement. Members of the local African or Creole community were still employed on the estates 'for heavy field work and factory labour.' To save money, the colonial government offered land instead of return passage to indentured workers who had completed their contracts.

Indians came from Hindu and Muslim belief systems; the majority were Hindu. However, as Uncle Ravi recalls, Christianity was considered the national religion, while traditional beliefs were scorned. Bridget Brereton notes that 'Christianity and Western culture were accepted by virtually all groups as the norm to be aspired to…the superiority of Christianity to all other creeds was hardly questioned…'

The influence of missionaries helped deepen suspicion towards non-Christian beliefs. One missionary described Hinduism as unclean and accused Hindus of low moral standards. Schools based on Christian teachings ensured further indoctrination.

Uncle Ravi attended Caparo RC School.

'My first song was not a bhajan, it was Silent Night. Imagine that, from a staunch Hindu background. But I still love it. It belongs to my childhood.'

Carols became more significant than bhajans because they were taught in school. Children looked forward to Christmas. By contrast, Divali was viewed almost like punishment, because of the mandatory fasting.

Christmas was seen as an escape from tradition.

'This was one time you were sure to get meat. That time, people had goat and other kinds of curry.'

Sadly, Christmas warped traditional values in other ways.

'We had a table out in the gallery. Every Christmas, they would buy a tablecloth with plenty pictures of fruits. Not local fruits, foreign, like grapes, apples and all of that. My father, who never ate meat, never drank or smoked - on top of the table he would put a bottle of rum and some kind of soft drink…

"The children of the village would go from house to house singing songs and there was an expectation that every household would have alcohol, meat and cake. I think my father was sensitive to the children who would feel embarrassed if their friends came over and they didn't have anything to give them. Christmas forced

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