By 1830, the British abolished African slavery in their colonies, so they needed cheap labor for their plantations. To fill this gap, East Indians came as indentured laborers between 1845-1917. Ironically, they earned less than former slaves. Their commitment as indentured laborers lasted between one to five years. During this time, they were not allowed to leave the plantation. Upon their release, they usually found the cost of travel to India to be prohibitively high, so they remained in Jamaica. Most moved to Kingston where they became iron workers, barbers, shopkeepers, jewelers or fishermen.
There were no Hindu priests among them, so people took these roles on an informal basis. During this time the East Indians gave up the practice of naming their children after Hindu gods and goddesses. These East Indians took on British surnames.
East Indians introduced a number of new crops to Jamaica including betel nut, mango, jackfruit, coolie plum and tamarind. They tended their own gardens after working long hours on the plantation.
East Asians and people who are partially East Asian have made their mark on Jamaican culture. They have been in the arts, music, and in beauty pageants. Others have been political activists.
Though there are Hindus among them, a high percentage of Jamaican East Asians are Christian.
Like people everywhere, the East Indians in Jamaica need to put Jesus Christ first in their lives.
Pray for a Holy Spirit directed revival in Jamaica, leading East Asians to put all their trust in Jesus Christ.
Pray for East Asian disciples to make more disciples.
Scripture Prayers for the East Indian in Jamaica.
http://www.jnht.com/disndat_people.php#:~:text=The%20East%20Indians%20are%20the,better%20life%20back%20in%20India.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-Jamaicans
Profile Source: Joshua Project |
People Name General | East Indian |
People Name in Country | East Indian |
Pronunciation | eest IN-dee-un |
Alternate Names | Ceylon Tamil; Tamil |
Population this Country | 93,000 |
Population all Countries | 114,000 |
Total Countries | 7 |
Indigenous | No |
Progress Scale | 3 ● |
Unreached | No |
Frontier People Group | No |
GSEC | 1 (per PeopleGroups.org) |
Pioneer Workers Needed | |
People ID | 11678 |
ROP3 Code | 102818 |
Country | Jamaica | ||
Region | America, North and Caribbean | ||
Continent | North America | ||
10/40 Window | No | ||
National Bible Society | Website | ||
Persecution Rank | Not ranked |
Country | Jamaica |
Region | America, North and Caribbean |
Continent | North America |
10/40 Window | No |
National Bible Society | Website |
Persecution Rank | Not ranked |
Primary Religion: | Christianity |
Major Religion ▲ | Percent |
---|---|
Buddhism |
0.00 %
|
Christianity (Evangelical 2.00 %) |
75.00 %
|
Ethnic Religions |
0.00 %
|
Hinduism |
10.00 %
|
Islam |
3.00 %
|
Non-Religious |
0.00 %
|
Other / Small |
12.00 %
|
Unknown |
0.00 %
|
Primary Language | Hindi (93,000 speakers) |
Language Code | hin Ethnologue Listing |
Language Written | Yes ScriptSource Listing |
Total Languages | 1 |
Primary Language | Hindi (93,000 speakers) |
Language Code | hin Ethnologue Listing |
Total Languages | 1 |
People Groups | Speaking Hindi |
Primary Language: Hindi
Bible Translation ▲ | Status (Years) |
---|---|
Bible-Portions | Yes (1806-1962) |
Bible-New Testament | Yes (1811-1998) |
Bible-Complete | Yes (1818-2022) |
Bible-NT Audio | Online |
Possible Print Bibles | |
---|---|
Amazon | |
World Bibles | |
Forum Bible Agencies | |
National Bible Societies | |
World Bible Finder | |
Virtual Storehouse |
Photo Source | RVA - Pixabay |
Profile Source | Joshua Project |
Data Sources | Data is compiled from various sources. Learn more. |