Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
    Lifestyle
    Home / Lifestyle / People

    Film traces history of little-known Indian-Chinese group

    By Satarupa Bhattacharjya | China Daily | Updated: 2020-11-12 07:57
    Share
    Share - WeChat
    The film shows a mixed-lineage family.[Photo provided to China Daily]

    While some past associations of Chinese and Indians are recorded in history, there are stories that are relatively unknown and still fascinating.

    A recently released documentary aims to shed light on one such community-"Chinese Tamils"-by retracing the journeys of Chinese men who went to India in the 19th century, in many cases not voluntarily, and settled in the southern state of Tamil Nadu.

    India was then under British rule as were Hong Kong and Malaysia, the three locations where the film's director Joe Thomas Karackattu, head of the China Studies Centre at the Indian Institute of Technology in Chennai (previously Madras), scoured colonial archives and conducted interviews for Those 4 Years.

    The title refers to the 1865-69 period when prisoners from the Straits settlements (former British colonies in Southeast Asia) arrived in Madras presidency, an administrative unit of British India, to serve their sentences while doing civil works. Among them were those convicted in Hong Kong for offenses, ranging from piracy to watch theft, the film's citing of prison records shows.

    The film mentions that sometimes prisoners from Hong Kong, being transported to Bombay (now Mumbai) by British East India Co ships through Singapore and Penang in Malaysia, tried to escape en route. After the Bombay presidency stopped accepting settlement prisoners around 1863-64, they were sent to Madras.

    "The prison records relating to the Nilgiris bring out the distinct groups of Chinese who were there-those that spoke a dialect, which was not used in the Straits settlements," Karackattu told me.

    "Chinese were recorded as Chinese and Malays were recorded as Malay in the archival prison and shipping records."

    An interviewee in the documentary says a well-known school in Tamil Nadu was built by the prison workers.

    The Chinese men who continued to live in the southern Indian hills married local Tamil women and worked on tea and coffee plantations and sold dairy products, according to their third and fourth-generation descendants in India, as shown in the film.

    Karackattu, among a new generation of Indian Sinologists, said he self-funded the project. A screening by Hong Kong Baptist University is scheduled in January.

    Other than the "history of transportation", the film explores a "tea history" connecting Chinese people from Shanghai to Garhwal in northern India.

    "That brought tea-makers and pewterers from Shanghai to eastern Garhwal, following which they went on to stay back in India to work at private plantations, and some of the families I located, happened to recount histories of their forefathers having come thus for work at private plantations in the south," he said.

    An employee of the British East India Co, named Robert Fortune, collected tea in disguise in China from areas that are present-day provinces of Anhui, Zhejiang and Fujian, the film claims. He returned to India with eight workers from Shanghai who were asked to teach farmers in the Garhwal region how to grow tea.

    It is unclear whether the tea workers had willingly settled there. An interviewee says in the film "when the British left India, the Chinese people stayed back".

    Author and historian S. Muthian M.B.E. notes more archival evidence is needed to establish the history of Indian-Chinese lineage in the Nilgiris.

    "I'm only saying it is possible," he says in the film.

    Most Popular
    Top
    BACK TO THE TOP
    English
    Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
    License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

    Registration Number: 130349
    FOLLOW US
     
    久久亚洲中文字幕精品一区| 无码人妻一区二区三区精品视频| 亚洲精品97久久中文字幕无码| 影音先锋中文无码一区| 伊人久久大香线蕉无码麻豆| 亚洲大尺度无码专区尤物| 欧美麻豆久久久久久中文| 亚洲成?v人片天堂网无码| 无码h黄动漫在线播放网站| 中文字幕毛片| 最近免费字幕中文大全视频| 亚洲成a人无码av波多野按摩| 久久国产精品无码HDAV| 亚洲第一极品精品无码久久| 免费看成人AA片无码视频羞羞网| 人妻无码αv中文字幕久久| 亚洲伊人成无码综合网| 久99久无码精品视频免费播放| 无码精品人妻一区二区三区漫画| 日韩av无码免费播放| 中文字幕1级在线| 人妻精品久久久久中文字幕 | 国产激情无码一区二区三区| 亚洲爆乳精品无码一区二区三区| 中文字幕一区二区免费 | 精品欧洲av无码一区二区14| 中文字幕在线资源| 最近完整中文字幕2019电影| а中文在线天堂| 中文字幕精品视频| 中文精品一卡2卡3卡4卡| 中文在线最新版天堂8| 亚洲不卡中文字幕无码| 亚洲一区精品中文字幕| 最近最好最新2019中文字幕免费| 中文字幕在线看视频一区二区三区| 天堂8а√中文在线官网| 精品久久久久久久久久中文字幕| 国产高清中文欧美| 精品久久亚洲中文无码| 免费无遮挡无码永久视频|