There are two facets of this new publication that was introduced to mark the 170th and 163rd anniversary of the arrival of East Indians to British Guiana and T&T respectively in 2008. Firstly, the book reveals the agony, the desperation, the psychological trauma of the first set of East Indian labourers on the voyage from India to the then British Guiana (Guyana). Secondly, it revisits the departure of some 243 East Indian who went back to India in as recent as 1955. It recounts the diary of Theophilius Richmond on board the Hesperus (1837-38) as the surgeon who was appointed by Sir John Gladstone, father of the British Prime Minister.
The ship set sail from Liverpool in June 1837 for India via Mauritius to collect the first batch of Coolies to be shipped to Gladstone's former slave estates in Demarara, British Guiana. Richmond, who was recently qualified as a medical doctor, tells of his mischievous exploits at sea, his infatuation with the Creole beauties of Mauritius, and his escapades in India where, disdainful of Moslem and Hindoo customs, he pokes fun at the natives; finally it testifies to his resourcefulness and compassion in the face of tragedy when cholera breaks out among his human cargo, bound for Demarara.
Edited by Dr David Dabydeen, Jonathan Morley, Professor Brinsley Samaroo, Amar Wahab and Brigid Wells, The First Crossing epitomises the whole gamut of the Indian indentureship system, particularly in the Caribbean islands, among them Trinidad and Tobago, British Guiana, Suriname, Jamaica, Grenada and Martinique. Besides chronicling the depression on board, the editors gave an interesting overview of the state of Indian immigration to the Caribbean. Little is known about the desire and the eventual return of hundreds of indentured labourers back to Bharat Mata, from where they were sourced.
The question of repatriation was a hot issue, a diplomatic row emerged. The First Crossing is a well-researched book with a rich bibliography and very academic and accountable editors. After reading the book, readers and thinkers would expect to endure similar literary materials and researches on sojourns to other parts of the Caribbean. It is hoped that this would not be too long in the waiting.