Stevie Wonder

mmmmmmmMONDAY!

Today is Girmit Day in Fiji. It is a public holiday celebrated on the Monday nearest May 14. This holiday was established to honor the settlers from India who began arriving in Fiji on May 14th 1897. In announcing this new holiday, Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka said: “They were starting a new life in an unknown land and stayed to become an integral part of our country. I reconfirm my promise to inaugurate a new national holiday in 2023.”

The word girmit represented an Indian pronunciation of the English language word “agreement” – from the indenture “agreement” of the British Government with Indian labourers. The agreements specified the workers’ length of stay in foreign parts and the conditions attached to their return to the British Raj.

The colonial authorities promoted the sugar cane industry, recognizing the need to establish a stable economic base for the colony, but were unwilling to exploit indigenous labor and threaten the Fijian way of life. The use of imported labor from the Solomon Islands and what is now Vanuatu generated protests in the United Kingdom, and the Governor Sir Arthur Hamilton-Gordon decided to implement the indentured labor scheme, which had existed in the British Empire since 1837.

The Leonidas, a labor transport vessel, disembarked at Levuka from Calcutta on May 14th 1879. The 498 indentured workers who disembarked were the first of over 61,000 to arrive from South and East Asia in the following 37 years. The majority were from the districts of eastern and southern provinces, followed by laborers from northern and western regions, then later south eastern countries, they originated from different regions, villages, backgrounds and castes that later mingled or intermarried hence the “Fijian Indian” identity was created. The indentured workers originated mostly from rural village backgrounds. 

After five years of work in the cane fields, the British freed the girmits from bonded labor but did not offer them a passage back. So, most of them stayed back and by the mid-1980s their descendants through hard work and education have made a mark in Fiji dominating business and professional fields.


Lily’s surprise…

Mother’s Day??

Today is the birthday, in 1950, of American musician, singer, songwriter, record producer, and multi-instrumentalist Stevie Wonder. A child prodigy who developed into one of the most creative musical figures of the late 20th century. Wonder who has been blind from shortly after birth, signed with Motown’s Tamla label at the age of eleven and continues to perform and record for Motown to this day. Wonder has scored over 40 US & UK Top 40 singles. Albums include Talking Book, Innervisions and Songs in the Key of Life. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxoBaEQGMPo

Posted by Tom in eighties music, Humor, Music

WEDWEDNESNESDAY

Today is St. Wenceslas Day in the Czech Republic. Also known as ‘Czech Statehood Day’, it is a national holiday in the Czech Republic and has been a public holiday since 2000. It is the feast day of St. Wenceslas, the patron saint of Bohemia, and commemorates his death in 935.

Medical stuff….

On this day in 1976, Stevie Wonder released his eighteenth studio album Songs in the Key of Life, an ambitious double LP with a four-song bonus EP. It debuted at No.1 on the Billboard Chart on October 8, 1976, becoming only the third album in history to achieve that feat and the first by an American artist. It had this song.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies

THURSDAY – getting there…

marchmadness
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A few weeks later…

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Lots of birthdays today but I thought I’d post something by Stevie Wonder who was born this day in 1950.

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies