Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Ramin Ganeshram, author of the forthcoming CURRY CHRONICLES, featured in Forbes

Trinidad: The America Of The Caribbean

With a three-year economic lag behind the U.S., Trinidad should be preparing for the worst.


By Ramin Ganeshram
April 20, 2009; Forbes

PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad -- When I was a child visiting my father's country of Trinidad, where progress, it was often said, was roughly about 20 years behind the States, I could see this was true. By 1980, we had two color television sets in our home in New York, but the small 12-inch black and white TV my father brought to his family in Chaguanas was the only one on the block. The cases upon cases of beer and soda he bought to stock the kitchen when we visited were a wonder of excess to the neighbors, and our American clothes and shoes were a source of endless fascination to the local kids. Except for Coca Cola, Pepsi and some Nestle products, there were few American conveniences to be had at the local supermarket, which was little more than what would be called a corner shop in New York.

By the 1990s, progress had leaped to being just 10 years behind the States. My father's village had become a bustling metropolitan area in its own right. American jeans, T-shirts and sneakers jammed shops vying for space with locally made Panama suits and East Indian clothes. Major American health and beauty companies peddled their locally branded lotions and cosmetics on the shelves of the local chemist shops. Bootlegged CDs sold on the street featuring both American pop music and as-yet-unreleased soca and calypso tracks.

When I was there in 2005, the gap had reduced to five years. Malls had popped up around the country, mostly featuring Trinidadian versions of American products. "Bling" abounded: cellphones, baggy pants and thick gold chains on young men; girls with belly shirts and cleavage, a far cry from the socially conservative society I knew, influenced by Hindu, Muslim and conservative Christian mores, carnival-time being the only exception.




To read the full article, click here.

1 comment:

ADY said...

Attention Mrs. Ganeshram

I am an American-Trintobagen, from Longdonville Trinidad. I found your lack of knowledge
disgusting. I have no idea what backroad your family may live in: or if they are
uneducated squatters; or illegal Indians from Guyana? Every family that I know of in
Trinidad has as much; if not more luxuries as their neighbors in the United States of
America. How dare you belittle "The Big Brother To The Caribbean!" Your
article has hit the Trinidadian community like a blow. You need to asses your families
world of poverty to the average people that live in Chaguanas, Trinidad. My family is
made up of African Trinidadians that have CAREERS; THAT MEANS THAT THEY'RE ALL EDUCATED.
Ask for your fathers "village" I have never felt that I visited a backwards
community or an American copycat "village." Don't blame your families poverty
or your lack of cultural appreciation on the Trinidad government.

Thank you,
A True Trinidadian