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Arrival Day Message from the Alliance For Change

Admin by Admin
May 5, 2025
in News
Stabroek News Photo

Stabroek News Photo

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Today, as Guyana observes Arrival Day, the Alliance For Change joins with all Guyanese in  commemorating this important occasion. It is a day that marks the arrival of the first East Indian  indentured labourers to British Guiana on May 5, 1838 — a date that holds deep meaning,  particularly for the East Indian community whose ancestors began their journey on the Whitby  and the Hesperus. 

We celebrate and honour the immense contributions of East Indians to every facet of our  national development — in agriculture, education, politics, religion, business, and culture. Their  story is one of resilience and determination, of survival and success in the face of hardship. It is  a story that helped shape the soul of this nation and continues to influence our society in  powerful ways. 

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But Arrival Day, while rooted in a specific historical moment, must be understood within the  wider context of all those who came to these shores — and those who were already here. We  cannot mark this day meaningfully without also acknowledging the other peoples who  contributed so significantly to the making of Guyana. 

Long before the arrival of indentured labourers, enslaved Africans were brought to these lands  under one of the most brutal systems known to humankind. They built the foundations of this  country with their blood, their sweat, and their stolen freedom. Their suffering was unique in its  total denial of personhood, and the legacy of slavery still lives with us today. 

We also remember the Indigenous peoples — the first inhabitants of this land — whose  existence predates colonisation and conquest, and whose stewardship of these lands stretches  back centuries. Their presence was never an arrival; it was an origin. Their rights, cultures, and  lives must be continuously honoured and protected. 

In the decades that followed emancipation, the Portuguese, Chinese, and free Africans came  under the system of indentureship, each bringing with them their own languages, traditions,  skills, and hopes. Their labour and their contributions became essential threads in the fabric of  our shared national identity. 

It is important, especially today, to make a clear and honest distinction: while indentureship was  exploitative, coercive, and deeply unjust, it cannot and must never be equated with slavery.  Slavery was a system of total ownership of human beings, passed down from generation to  generation, denying even the most basic rights. 

Indentureship, by contrast, though oppressive, functioned within a different structure, often  under contractual terms, and did not carry the same permanence or absolute dehumanisation. To acknowledge this difference is not to diminish anyone’s pain or sacrifice. It is to respect the  truth of each people’s journey and to ensure that our history is told with accuracy, dignity, and  clarity. 

Arrival Day, then, is not just about the commemoration of one group’s presence in Guyana. It is  a moment to celebrate the full spectrum of our ancestry — to honour the many who arrived, the few who remained, and the many more who endured. It is a day to reflect on how far we have come as a people forged in the crucible of migration, labour, injustice, endurance, and ultimately  — hope. 

As we move forward, the Alliance For Change remains committed to building a nation that respects the contributions of all its people and works tirelessly to ensure equity, inclusion, and justice for all. 

Happy Arrival Day to all Guyanese. May we continue to walk together on this journey of unity  and national renewal. 

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