How did the indentured labourers maintain their cultural identity in other parts of world ?
Answers
Answer: hey mate here is your answer
Explanation:
WHEN Anthony Carmona, the president of Trinidad and Tobago, showed up in a Carnival parade last month wearing a head cloth, white shorts and beads like those worn by Hindu pandits, he was not expecting trouble. Nothing seems more Trinidadian than a mixed-race president joining a festival that has African and European roots. But some Hindus were outraged. “[O]ur dress code has never been associated with this foolish and self-degrading season,” huffed a priest. Trinidad’s cultures blend easily most of the time; occasionally, they strike sparks.
The Hindu-bead controversy is not the only one ruffling feelings among Indo-Trinidadians. Another is caused by a proposal in parliament to raise the minimum age for marriage to 18 for all citizens. Currently, Muslim girls can marry at 12, girls of other faiths at 14. Muslim and Hindu traditionalists want to keep it that way.
I think its helpfull to you
Plz mark me brainliest
Answer:
The laborers who were enslave and taken to far lands struggled to maintain their culture within their new environment of confinement.
Explanation:
They never wanted to loose identity hence, they developed means through which they could keep it, below are some of them:
- Singing of songs during the evenings, the content in the songs carried their culture.
- Maintaining and squeezing to practice their cultural practices such as worshiping.
- Through teaching their children who acted as a bridge from generation to generation.