Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Indo-Caribbean Americans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ethnic group
Ethnic group
Indo-Caribbean Americans
Total population
232,817 (2007)[1]
300,000 - 400,000(2020 estimate)[2]
Regions with significant populations
Languages
Religion
Majority:Significant Minority:Other Minority:
Related ethnic groups

Indo-Caribbean Americans orIndian-Caribbean Americans orIndo-West Indian Americans, areAmericans who trace their ancestry ultimately toIndia, though whose recent ancestors lived in theWest Indies orCaribbean, where they migrated beginning in 1838 asindentured laborers. There are large populations ofIndo–Trinidadians and Tobagonians andIndo-Guyanese along with a smaller population ofIndo-Surinamese,Indo-Jamaicans and other Indo-Caribbean people in theUnited States, especially in theNew York metropolitan area andFlorida. TheWashington metropolitan area,Texas, andMinnesota also have small numbers ofIndo-Guyanese andIndo-Trinidadians. Indo-Caribbean Americans are a subgroup ofCaribbean Americans as well asIndian Americans, which are a subgroup ofSouth Asian Americans, which itself is a subgroup ofAsian Americans.

Migration history

[edit]

Since the 1960s, a large Indo-Caribbean community has developed inSouth Richmond Hill, a neighborhood in theNew York City borough ofQueens in the state ofNew York. The Indo-Caribbean population has also grown rapidly in the Floridian cities ofTampa,Orlando,Kissimmee,Poinciana,Fort Myers,Naples,Ocala,West Palm Beach,Lake Worth,Wellington,Boynton Beach,Loxahatchee,The Acreage,Fort Lauderdale,Miami,Homestead,Cutler Bay,Palmetto Bay,Miami Gardens,Port Saint Lucie,Coral Springs,Margate,Lauderdale Lakes,North Lauderdale (more than 1% of residents in the city were born in Trinidad and Tobago),Sunrise,Plantation,Parkland,Lauderhill,Pompano Beach,Hallandale Beach,Hollywood,Oakland Park,Tamarac,Cooper City,Miramar,Davie,Weston,Southwest Ranches, andPembroke Pines.Indo-Surinamese tend to migrate to theNetherlands, but have started to settle inFlorida and theNew York metropolitan area in small numbers.Indo-Jamaicans also live in moderate numbers throughout the New York metropolitan area and Florida. There are also smaller numbers ofIndo-Barbadians,Indo-Belizeans,Indo-French Guianese,Indo-Grenadians,Indo-Guadeloupeans,Indo-Martiniquais,Indo-Kittitian and Nevisian,Indo-Saint Lucian,Indo-Vincentian and Grenadinese in the New York metropolitan area and in Florida.

Culture and religion

[edit]

Majority of Indo-Caribbean Americans are followers ofHinduism, with a minority belonging toIslam,Christianity and other religions. Major holidays such asDiwali,Phagwah,Eid,Hosay,Indian Arrival Day,Easter, andChristmas are celebrated with a distinct flavor unique to theCaribbean.

The Richmond Hill Phagwah Parade is the largest Holi celebration in the United States. Thousands attend the parade annually each Spring in Queens, with thousands of attendees crowding Liberty Avenue and Smoky Oval Park.

South Florida has become a destination forroti shops,Indian clothing boutiques,threading,mandirs/kovils,masjids,Indianchurches, and annual Indo-Caribbean Hindu, Muslim, and Christian religious events. It is also a popular spot forIndo-Caribbean artists. The Florida Melody Makers are the most well known Indo-Caribbean American band for years and continue to perform around the Southeastern United States.WHSR 980 AM andWWNN used to host Indian musical and religious programming weekly every Saturday and featured community leaders likePandit Ramsurat K. Maharaj, Bhagwan R. Singh, Natty Ramoutar, Peter Ganesh, Al Mustapha, and Sam Subramani.

Most cultural shows continue to tie a cultural bond between theIndo-Caribbean andIndian-American communities, as well as inter-religious bonding betweenHindus,Muslims,Christians,Sikhs,Jains, andBuddhist especially those hosted at educational institutions with an Indian student association likeFlorida International University,Florida Atlantic University,Nova Southeastern University,Broward College,Palm Beach State College, and theUniversity of Miami.

The Shiva Mandir inOakland Park (first Hindu Mandir inSouth Florida, built in the 1980s by the Florida Hindu Organization led by Pt. Ramsurat K. Maharaj and hosts one of the largest annualDiwali shows inFlorida), the Shree Saraswati Devi Mandir inOakland Park, Krishna Mandir inHollywood, Arya Samaj Mandir inRiverland, Shiva Lingam Mandir (Shiv Shakti Hanuman Mandir) inMargate, Palm Beach Hindu Mandir inLoxahatchee, Sanatan Sansthan Mandir in Loxahatchee, Shri Lakshmi Mandir inWest Palm Beach, Florida Sevashram Sangha inLake Worth, Lakshmi Narayan Mandir inPalmetto Estates, the Amar Jyoti Mandir inPalmetto Bay, and the Devi Bhavan Mandir inSouth Miami Heights are largely attended by Indo-Caribbean people.Plantation High School, a school where most Caribbean people and Asians are of Indian descent, hosted an annualDiwali show from 1993 to 2008. Starting as a one-day event in 2008 and expanding to a three-day event since 2009, theDivali Nagar USA entertains the local community with musical and religious performances, food, and vendors.

Music is a large part of the Indo-Caribbean American community, which includes the tunes ofBollywood,Indian classical music (especiallytaan,dhrupad,thumri,kajari,chaiti,hori,sawani, andghazal),Indian folk music (especiallybiraha,chowtal, and otherBhojpuri folk songs),bhajans,kirtan,quwwalis,quaseedas,chutney,baithak gana,chutney parang,chutney soca,tassa,soca,parang,steelpan,pichakaree,calypso,dancehall, andreggae.Bharatnatyam andkathak are respected classical traditional dances, and dance items fromHindi films,Bhojpuri films,Tamil films, andTelugu films have grown in favor as well. With the increasing emphasis on partying, Bollywood, chutney, chutney-soca, and soca music are preferred by the young crowd. (seeIndo-Caribbean music)

Politically, Indo-Caribbean Americans tend to favor theDemocratic Party, with aAALDEF exit poll indicating that a majority (86%) of Indo-Caribbean American voters backed the Joe Biden and Kamala Harris ticket in the2020 presidential election.[3]

Notable people

[edit]
Lists of Americans
By U.S. state
By ethnicity

Indo-Guyanese Americans

[edit]

Indo-Jamaican Americans

[edit]

Indo-Surinamese Americans

[edit]

Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonian Americans

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Indo-Caribbean Times December 2007 - Kidnapping - Venezuela".Scribd. Retrieved17 August 2018.
  2. ^"From the Whitby to the White House: How Indo-Caribbean Americans are Changing the Political Map".YouTube. 2 October 2020.
  3. ^"AALDEF Exit Poll: Asian Americans Favor Biden Over Trump 68% to 29%; Played Role in Close Races in Georgia and Other Battleground States".AALDEF. 2020-11-13. Retrieved2021-11-16.
  4. ^Chan, Sewell (June 18, 2009)."Hindu Priest From Guyana Is Mourned in Queens".

External links

[edit]
Africa
Southeast
Elsewhere
Americas
Caribbean
North America
South America
Asia
South
Southeast
East
West
Europe
Eastern
Northern
Southern
Western
Oceania
See also
Ethnic diasporas
Other related articles
Anglo-Caribbean
Americo-Caribbean
Franco-Caribbean
Hispano-Caribbean
Dutch Caribbean
Ethnic groups
Central Asian
Map showing the United States in blue, and the nations where Asian Americans originate from in shades of orange
East Asian
South Asian
Southeast Asian
Other
History
Topics
Regions
Socioeconomic status
Christianity
Eastern Orthodox
(Main article)
Eastern Orthodox Church
Constantinople
Antiochian
Bulgarian
Serbian
Russian
Romanian
Macedonian
American
True Orthodox
Independent
Oriental Orthodox
(Main article)
Assyrian
Eastern Catholic
Armenian
Alexandrian
Byzantine
East Syriac
West Syriac
Eastern Protestant
Catholic
Latin Church
Old Catholic[b]
Independent[b]
Proto-Protestant
Hussite
Protestant[c]
(Main article)
United
Lutheran
Confessional
Pietistic
Laestadianism
High church
Calvinist
Continental
Reformed
Dutch[f]
German[f]
French[f]
Hungarian[f]
Presbyterian
(Main article)
Congregationalist
(Main article)
Anglican
Communion
Continuing[h]
Anglo-
Catholic
Realignment
Anabaptist
Mennonites
Schwarzenau
Brethren
River Brethren
Amish
Mennonite
Apostolic
Unorganized
Unitarian
Radical Pietism
Baptist
(Main article)
Fundamentalist
General
Free Will
Calvinistic
Regular
Primitive
Holiness
Independent
  • Those are independent congregations with no denominational structure
Quakers
(Main article)
Methodist
(Main article)
Adventist
(Main article)
Trinitarian
Sabbatarian
First-day
Nontrinitarian
Sabbatarian
First-day
Pentecostal
Trinitarian
Holiness
Finished
Work
Oneness
Neocharismatic
Non-
denominational
Community Churches
Other[j]
Restorationism[k]
Swedenborgian
Stone-Campbell
Disciples
Churches of Christ
Independents
Holiness[l]
Higher Life
Irvingism
Latter Day Saint/
Mormon
Reorganized
Fundamentalist
Bible Student
Armstrongism
  1. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahPart of theNational Council of Churches
  2. ^abNot incommunion with the rest of theCatholic Church
  3. ^Those are traditions and denominations that trace their history back to theProtestant Reformation or otherwise heavily borrow from the practices and beliefs of theProtestant Reformers.
  4. ^This denomination is the result of a merger betweenLutheran,German Reformed,Congregational andRestorationist churches.
  5. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakPart of theNational Association of Evangelicals
  6. ^abcdThis refers to the denomination's heritage and not necessarily to the language in which the services are conducted in.
  7. ^This is a reformed synod within theUnited Church of Christ that is distinct in heritage, doctrine and practice from the rest of the denomination.
  8. ^abOutside theAnglican Communion
  9. ^abcdefThis is more of a movement then an institutionalized denomination.
  10. ^Denominations that don't fit in the subsets mentioned above.
  11. ^Those are traditions and denominations that trace their origin back to theGreat Awakenings and/or are joined together by a common belief that Christianity should be restored along the lines of what is known about the apostolic early church.
  12. ^The Holiness movement is an interdenominational movement that spreads over multiple traditions (Methodist, Quakers, Anabaptist, Baptist, etc.). However, here are mentioned only those denominations that are part of Restorationism as well as the Holiness movement, but are not part of any other Protestant tradition.
Judaism
Other Abrahamic
Dharmic
Native Religions
ritual dances
African-American
Afro-derived
Abrahamic
Hotep Thought
New Religious Movement
Other
Topics
General ethno-racial classifications
General groups
Alaska Natives
Arawakan
Algonquian
Eastern
Central
Plains
Iroquois
Northeastern
Carolinian
Siouan
Plains
Eastern Woodlands
Caddoan
Southeastern
Muskogean
Southwestern
Dené
Puebloans
Yuman
Plains Indians
Great Basin
Numic
Uto-Aztecan
Salish
Interior
Coast
Lushootseed
Pacific Northwest
Chinook
Sahaptin
Coast
Plateau
Californian
The Americas (by region and country)
Caribbean
North America
South America
Multinational
Central Africa
East Africa
Southern Africa
West Africa
Central Asia
East Asia
South Asia
Southeast Asia
Europe (by region and country)
Multinational
British Isles
Central Europe
Eastern Europe
Northern Europe
Southern Europe
Southeast Europe
Western Europe
Multinational
North Africa
West Asia
Australasia
Melanesia
Micronesia
Polynesia
Multiethnic and settler groups
Broadly European
BroadlyMestizo/Latino
BroadlyAfro/Mulatto
Broadly Asian
Miscellaneous
Related subjects
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Indo-Caribbean_Americans&oldid=1334618072"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp