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Sarran Teelucksingh

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Sarran Teelucksingh (c.1890 – 8 March 1952)[1] was a Trinidad and Tobago businessman and politician. The first Indo-Trinidadian elected to the Legislative Council,[2]: 73  Teelucksingh represented the county of Caroni from 1925 until 1946 and was active in the leadership of the Trinidad Workingmen's Association (TWA) and the East Indian National Congress (EINC).

Early life and activism

Teelucksingh was a businessman and pioneer of the cinema industry in Trinidad and Tobago during the 1920s and 30s. Using a mobile cinema operated out of a tent he was able to screen movies in remote villages whose residents would not have otherwise had access.[1] He came from a Presbyterian Christian family.[3]: 151 

Around 1921 Teelucksingh partnered with Reverend Charles David Lalla to launch The East Indian Patriot,[fn 1] a magazine aimed at the Indo-Trinidadian community, which also served to promote Teelucksingh's political career.[3]: 106–134  In 1925 he was appointed Vice-President of the TWA.[2]: 41 

Teelucksingh served as president of the EINC[3]: 151  and, according to historical Kelvin Singh, "converted [it] into an electoral machine". After the establishment of the Sanatan Dharma Board of Control in the early 1930s, Teelucksingh created a rival Hindu group, the Santan Dharam Association with Teelucksingh as its president. He justified his leadership of a Hindu group "since the Hindu religion was that of his forefathers".[4]

Electoral career

1925 elections

In 1925, the Legislative Council was expanded from 21 to 25 members, including seven elected members. Voting was limited to literate men who were 21 or older, and came with property and income requirements. Property and income requirements for candidates were higher than those for voters. The elections took place on 7 February 1925. Only 5.9% of the population were eligible to vote.[5]: 126–127 

Teelucksingh contested the County Caroni seat in Central Trinidad against E.A. Robinson, a white planter, and won 491 votes to Robinson's 235.[2]: 180  A third candidate, A. Bharat Gobin, also entered the race but withdrew from the race under pressure from the EINC which was concerned that the presence of two Indo-Trindiadian candidates would split the Indian vote.[2]: 75 

Later elections

The 1928 and 1933 elections were rematchs between Teelucksingh and Robinson. Teelucksingh won both elections. In 1938 Teelucksingh defeated Clarence Abidh, a fellow Presbyterian Indo-Trinidadian, to win a fourth term on the Legislative Council.[2]: 180 

1946 election

The general elections in 1946 were the first to feature universal suffrage.[6] Teelucksingh competed against Clarence Abidh of the Trades Union Congress and Socialist Party and Simbhoonath Capildeo who ran under the banner of the United Front.[2] Teelucksingh, who expressed concern about the challenge of campaigning to an enlarged electorate,[6] lost the election, receiving 2,117 votes to Abidh's tally of 7,321 votes and Capildeo's 5,692.[2]

Activity in the Legislative Council

Teelucksingh's campaign for the Legislative Council in 1925 included promises of repatriation to India for former indentured labourers who desired it. For this reason, the East Indian Weekly (a successor publication to Teelucksingh's East Indian Patriot) considered Teelucksingh a "self–seeking opportunist"[3]: 135–180  and dismissed this platform as "wild promises" in an editorial in 1931.[3]: 106–134  Despite this, the East Indian Weekly was supportive of the three Indo-Trinidadian representatives — Teelucksingh, Timothy Roodal and F. E. M. Hosein — when they raised the concerns of the community.[3]: 135–180 

In the Legislative Council Teelucksingh formed a loosely-aligned group with fellow TWA members A. A. Cipriani (who was elected along with Teelucksingh in 1925) and Timothy Roodal who joined them on the council following the 1928 elections.[7] The three TWA-aligned council members, together with F. E. M. Hosein (the elected representative for St. George County), functioned as the representatives of the working class on the council.[2]: 84  After conflict with Cipriani over the divorce legislation in 1931, Teelucksingh broke his ties with the TLP ran in subsequent elections as an "Independent Socialist".[2]: 128 

Teelucksingh expressed support for self-governance and a federation of the West Indian colonies when a resolution in favour of federation was brought up in the Legislative Council in July 1945.[8]

Divorce legislation

In 1931 the government introduced a bill to legalise divorce. The bill pitted the Catholic French Creole elite against the Protestant British administrative class. Cipriani sided with Catholic Church in opposition to the bill and tried to rally the TWA to his cause. This caused a rift between him and his younger, more radical supporters. Teelucksingh, a vice-president of the TWA, voted to support the divorce legislation. This angered Cipriani who struck Teelucksingh in the legislative chamber.[9] Cipriani's actions resulted in his suspension for one day from the Legislative Council, and angered Teelucksingh's supporters. The EINC condemned Cipriani's actions and 850 Indo-Trinidadian members of the TWA resigned.[10][2]: 128 

Notes

  1. ^ According to Rampersad, the oldest-known copy of the Patriot is Volume 2, Number 10, dated to June 1923. From that, she deduced that first issue would probably have come out in September 1921.

References

  1. ^ a b Anthony, Michael (2001). Historical Dictionary of Trinidad and Tobago. Scarecrow Press, Inc. Lanham, Md., and London. p. 340. ISBN 0-8108-3173-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Teelucksingh, Jerome (2015). Labour and the Decolonization Struggle in Trinidad and Tobago. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9781137462329.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Rampersad, Kris (2002). Finding a place: IndoTrinidadian literature. Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Publishers. ISBN 976-637-078-8. OCLC 51049792.
  4. ^ Singh, Kelvin (1996). "Conflict and Collaboration: Tradition and Modernizing Indo-Trinidadian Elites (1917-56)". NWIG: New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids. 70 (3/4): 229–253. ISSN 1382-2373.
  5. ^ Luke, Learie B. (2007). Identity and secession in the Caribbean: Tobago versus Trinidad, 1889–1980. Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press. ISBN 978-9766401993. OCLC 646844096.
  6. ^ a b La Guerre, John Gafar (1972). "The General Elections of 1946 in Trinidad and Tobago". Social and Economic Studies. 21: 184–204.
  7. ^ Meighoo, Kirk (2008). "Ethnic Mobilisation vs. Ethnic Politics: Understanding Ethnicity in Trinidad and Tobago Politics". Commonwealth & Comparative Politics. 46 (1): 101–127. doi:10.1080/14662040701838068. ISSN 1466-2043.
  8. ^ Teelucksingh, Jerome (2019). "Confrontation and solidarity: Labor's fight for West Indian self-government and federation". Journal of Labor and Society. 22: 875–894.
  9. ^ Neptune, Harvey R. (2007). Caliban and the Yankees : Trinidad and the United States occupation. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 21–26. ISBN 978-0-8078-6811-9. OCLC 647832627.
  10. ^ "East Indians of Trinidad Protest Against Capt. Cipriani's Conduct". Daily Gleaner. 1932-01-05.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)