World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Suriname
Publisher | Minority Rights Group International |
Publication Date | 3 June 2008 |
Cite as | Minority Rights Group International, World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples - Suriname, 3 June 2008, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/4954ce5523.html [accessed 31 October 2019] |
Comments | In October 2015, MRG revised its World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples. For the most part, overview texts were not themselves updated, but the previous 'Current state of minorities and indigenous peoples' rubric was replaced throughout with links to the relevant minority-specific reports, and a 'Resources' section was added. Refworld entries have been updated accordingly. |
Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
Last updated: June 2008
Environment
Suriname, (a.k.a. Nederlands Guyana or Dutch Guiana) is located in northeastern South America. It is bounded on the north by the Atlantic Ocean, and shares borders on the east with French Guiana, on the west with the Republic of Guyana and on the south with Brazil. The country has an area of 163,265 sq km (63,037 sq mi). The southern part of the country along the border with Brazil consists of dense tropical rainforest and sparsely inhabited savanna.
History
Suriname, was originally inhabited by many distinct indigenous groups such as the Taino (Arawak), Kali'nago (Carib), Warrau Wayana and Akurio. The Dutch arrived in 1581, entering into colonial competition with the English who began settling during the first half of the 17th century. The Dutch subsequently acquired present-day Suriname from the English in 1667, in the exchange for what is now New York City.
Dutch settler control of the Guiana coast caused the indigenous groups to retreat into the interior to avoid extinction. Colonial policy included practices like transporting a selection of indigenous people of Suriname to the 1883 International Colonial and Export Exhibition in Amsterdam and displaying them in human zoos.
Dutch traders were among the first to establish slave forts and castles on the coasts of Western Africa and imported and enslaved over 300,000 Africans in Suriname including many of Akan and Ashanti origin.
Plantation conditions were brutal, and life spans short. Many slaves escaped into the rainforests of Suriname to avoid the very harsh conditions. These Maroons (also known as 'Djukas' or 'Bakabusi Nengre') often returned to attack the settlements.
After a half century of guerrilla warfare against colonial and European troops the African Maroons signed treaties with the Dutch government in the 1760s, enabling them to live a virtually independent existence until well into the 20th century.
Maroon communities formed an effective buffer between the coastal European settlements and the indigenous groups of the interior and also contributed significantly to the eventual abolition of slavery.
Post-abolition
The Dutch ended chattel slavery in 1863 but demanded obligatory but paid plantation labour from former slaves for another five years. Mostly Chinese labour was then imported from the Netherlands East Indies. Between 1873 and 1916 in an agreement with the British many East Indian labourers were also imported from north Indian states such as Bihar and Eastern Uttar Pradesh (see also Guyana and Trinidad). After 1916 labourers especially from Java were again imported from the Netherlands East Indies, (today Indonesia)
Until the introduction of universal adult suffrage in 1949, Suriname was ruled by a small group of wealthy Europeans and Creoles. Internal autonomy came in 1954 with an Electoral Act based on racially demarcated constituencies. Economic, cultural and linguistic factors already divided the ethnic groups; and this act encouraged ethnic divisions to extend into political organization.
In November 1975 Suriname was granted its independence by the Dutch Parliament. A number of people (approx. 40,000) chose to retain Dutch citizenship and immigrated to the Netherlands.
In 1986 the Surinamese Liberation Army (SLA), a group of Maroons who claimed that government resettlement policies threatened the autonomy of their society, began guerrilla activities against military posts on Suriname's eastern frontier. There were civilians deaths and 4,500 refugees fled to French Guiana.
In April 1990 France and Suriname agreed to provide for the repatriation of an estimated 10,000 Surinamese refugees from French Guiana. After alleged attempts at forcible repatriation some 6,000 refugees voluntarily returned.
Agreement was reached with the guerrilla movements in May 1992. Guerrillas were included in the amnesty previously extended to the military and the government promised that the interior would become a priority for social and economic development.
Peoples
Main languages: Dutch, Hindustani, Javanese, Sranan Tongo ('Negro English'), Chinese, English, French, Spanish, indigenous languages
Main religions: Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, indigenous and African-derived religions
Main minority groups: East Indians 147,000 (37%), Creoles (31%) Javanese 65,000 (15%), Maroons 40,000 (8%) indigenous (Arawaks and Caribs) 14,600 (2%) ethnic Chinese (2%) and Europeans. Source: 2000 Census.
Suriname has a small indigenous population descended from the first inhabitants of the region. East Indians now form the largest group, constituting more than one-third of the total population, and Creoles, who are mainly of African descent, about another third. Another African-descended group, the Maroons or 'Bush Negroes', make up nearly 10 per cent and there are also ethnic Chinese, Europeans and Indonesian- descended Javanese who together account for about 15 per cent. Most indigenous people and Maroons live in the forest.
Governance
In 1987, the Front for Democracy and Development, which represents Javanese interests, won the elections and brought in a new constitution.
Legislation regarding indigenous peoples is still lacking. Some villages have titles to land but all ownership rights belong to the government. During the second half of the 1980s Taino (Arawaks), Kalinago (Caribs) and Wayanas were relocated by government and guerrilla forces.
The economy of Suriname is dominated by the bauxite industry, which accounts for 70 per cent of export earnings. Other main exports include sugar and wood products.
Minorities
Resources
Minority based and advocacy organisations
Indigenous
National NGO Forum of Suriname
Tel: +597 422 610
Email: [email protected]
Organization of Indigenous Peoples of Suriname (OIS)
Tel: +597 465 618
Email: [email protected]
Website: http://www.oisur.org
Maroon
Maroon Community Support Initiative
Tel: +597 404 978
Email: [email protected]
Sources and further reading
General
Colchester, M., Forest Politics in Suriname, Utrecht, International Books, 1995
East Indian
Singaravelou. East Indian immigration and the plantation system in the French Caribbean. (in World Plantation Conference, 1st, Baton Rouge, La., 1984. Plantations around the world. Edited by Sue Eakin and John Tarver. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State Univ. Agricultural Center, 1986
Speckmann, J.D., The caste system and the Hindustani group in Surinam In Caste in overseas Indian communities. Edited by Barton M. Schwartz. San Francisco, Chandler Pub. Co.; Science Research Associates, Chicago, distributors [1967].
Chinese
Emmer, P. C. Immigration into the Caribbean: the introduction of Chinese and East Indian indentured labourers between 1839 and 1917 Itinerario [Netherlands] 1990
Indigenous
Kalina, Berend J. The languages of the Indians of Surinam and the comparative study of the Carib and Arawak languages. (Bij Taal Land Volk [Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde. The Hague, Netherlands.], 111:4, 1955
Scott, Rebecca J., Palmer Colin A. Pérotin-Dumon Anne, Silvestrini Blanca G., Universidad de Puerto Rico, The Caribbean, The Guianas And The Spanish Borderlands.
Maroon
Dark, Philip J.C. Bush Negro art; an African art in the Americas. London, Tiranti, 1954
Dubelaar, Cornelius N - Surinam Negro Folktales. (Groningen: Privately Printed) 66 pages, 1973.
Hoefte, Rose Marie Adelheid Leonie Plantation labour after the abolition of slavery: the case of Plantation Marienburg (Suriname), 1880-1940
Hurault, Jean. Etude demographique comparee des Indiens Oayana et des noirs refugies Boni du Haut-Maroni (Guyane Francaise) [Comparative demographic study of the Oyana Indians and the Boni refugee blacks of the Upper Maroni (French Guiana)]. Population, 14 (1959):
Kobben, Andre J. F. Participation and quantification; field work among the Djuka (Bush Negroes of Surinam). In D. G. Jongmans and P.C.W. Gutkind, eds. Anthropologists in the Field. Assen, Van Gorcum, 1967.
Kobben, Andre J. F. Review of Jean Hurault 1961, Les Noirs Refugies Boni de la Guyane Francaise. Caribbean Studies, 5/3 (1965):
Price, Richard. The Guiana Maroons: a historical and bibliographical introduction. Baltimore and London, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1976.
Price, Richard. The Guiana Maroons: changing perspectives in 'Bush Negro' studies. Caribbean Studies, 11/4 (1972)
Rens, L.L.E. The historical and social background of Surinam Negro-English. Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam, Bureau for Linguistic Research in Surinam, 1953.