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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Yoshina Hurgobin Department of History\, Syracuse University Fr
 om Migration to Citizenship: Indians in Mauritius\, 1896 - 1946 Historians
  of pre-independence Indian diaspora have written much on Indian migrant l
 abor within the confines of the British Empire. However\, much less is kno
 wn about how these Indians settled in their new lands of adoption and soug
 ht to create identities and sites of belonging. This paper traces how Indi
 an indentured laborers migrated to Mauritius in the late nineteenth centur
 y to work on sugar cane plantations. It tracks their quests to transform f
 rom diasporic subjects to Mauritian citizens. It further explains how the 
 Indian nationalist movement provided political\, religious\, and cultural 
 influences to their project.
DTEND:20111011T173000Z
DTSTAMP:20260512T030450Z
DTSTART:20111011T163000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:South Asia Center presents: Yoshina Hurgobin
UID:RFCALITEM639141374904341663
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Yoshina Hurgobin Department of History\, Syrac
 use University From Migration to Citizenship: Indians in Mauritius\, 1896 
 - 1946 Historians of pre-independence Indian diaspora have written much on
  Indian migrant labor within the confines of the British Empire. However\,
  much less is known about how these Indians settled in their new lands of 
 adoption and sought to create identities and sites of belonging. This pape
 r traces how Indian indentured laborers migrated to Mauritius in the late 
 nineteenth century to work on sugar cane plantations. It tracks their ques
 ts to transform from diasporic subjects to Mauritian citizens. It further 
 explains how the Indian nationalist movement provided political\, religiou
 s\, and cultural influences to their project.<br>
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