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BLACKBIRDING


'Blackbirding' refers to the recruitment of people through trickery and kidnappings to work on plantations, particularly the sugar cane plantations of Queensland (Australia) and Fiji[1] They were recruited from the indigenous populations of nearby Pacific islands or northern Queensland. In the early days of the pearling industry in Broome, local Aboriginal people were blackbirded from the surrounding areas. Some were from desert areas.

Contents
Etymology
Blackbirding in Australia
Blackbirding in Fiji
See also
Bibliography
External links
References

Etymology


The term may have been formed directly as a contraction of ''blackbird catching''; ''blackbird'' was a slang term for the local indigenous people. It might also have derived from an earlier phrase, ''blackbird shooting'', which referred to recreational hunting of Australian Aboriginal people by early European settlers.[2]

Blackbirding in Australia


Queensland was a self-governing British colony in northeastern Australia until 1901 when it became a state of the Commonwealth of Australia. Over a period of 40 years, from the mid-19th century to the early 20th century, native non-European labourers for the sugar cane fields of Queensland, were "recruited" from Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and the Loyalty Islands of New Caledonia.[3] The "recruitment" process almost always included an element of coercive recruitment (not unlike the press-gangs once employed by the Royal Navy in England) and indentured servitude. Some 62,000 South Sea Islanders were taken to Australia.
These people were referred to as Kanakas (the French equivalent ''Canaques'' still applies to the autochthonous Melanesians in New Caledonia) and came from the Western Pacific islands: from Melanesia, mainly the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, with a small number from the Polynesian and Micronesian islands such as Samoa, Kiribati, Tuvalu and Loyalty Islands. Many of the workers were effectively slaves, but since the Slavery Abolition Act made slavery illegal, they were officially called "indentured labourers" or the like. Some Australian Aboriginal people, especially from Cape York Peninsula, were also kidnapped and transported south to work on the farms.
The methods of blackbirding varied. Some labourers were willing to be taken to Australia to work, while others were tricked or even forced. In some cases blackbirding ships (which made huge profits) would entice entire villages by luring them on board for trade or a religious service, and then setting sail. Many died during the voyage due to unsanitary conditions, and also in the fields due to the hard manual labour.[4]
The question of how many Islanders were actually kidnapped or "blackbirded" is unknown and remains controversial. Official documents and accounts from the period often conflict with the oral tradition passed down to the descendants of workers. Stories of blatantly violent kidnapping tended to relate to the first 10–15 years of the trade. The majority of those abducted to Australia were repatriated between 1906-08 under the provisions of the ''Pacific Island Labourers Act 1901'' ([1]); but there are ~20,000 descendants of the blackbirded labourers living in Queensland coastal towns.

Blackbirding in Fiji


The blackbirding era began in Fiji in 1864 when the first New Hebridean and Solomon Island labourers arrived in Fiji to work on cotton plantations. Cotton had become a profitable business because of the cession of supplies from the United States because of the civil war. Since, Fijians were not interested in regular sustained labour, the thousands of European planters who flocked to Fiji, sought labour from the Melanesian islands.
Attempts were made by the British and Queensland Governments to regulate this transportation of labour. Melanesian labourers were to be recruited for three years, paid three pounds per year, issued with basic clothing and had access to the company store for supplies. Despite this, most Melanesians were recruited by deceit, usually being enticed abroad ships with gifts and then locked up. The living and working conditions in Fiji were even worse than those suffered by the later Indian indentured labourers. In 1875, the chief medical officer in fiji, Sir William MacGregor, listed a mortality rate of 540 out of every 1000 labourers. After the expiry of the three-year contract, the labourers were required to be transported back to their villages but most ship captains dropped them off at the first island they sighted off the Fiji waters. The British sent warships to enforce the law (Pacific Islanders' Protection Act of 1872) but only a small proportion of the culprits were prosecuted.
With the arrival of Indian identured labourers in Fiji from 1879, the number of Melanesian labourers decreased but they were still being recruited and employed, off the plantations in sugar mills and ports, until the start of the First World War. Most of the Melanesians recruited were males and after the recruitment ended, those who chose to stay in Fiji, took Fijian wives and settled in areas around Suva. Their descents still remain a distinct community but their language and culture cannot be distinguished from native Fijians.
Descendants of Solomon Islanders living at Tamavua-i-Wai in Fiji received a High Court verdict in their favour on 1 February 2007. The court refused a claim by the Seventh-day Adventist Church to force the islanders to vacate the land on which they had been living for seventy years.[5].

See also



Slavery

South Sea Islander

Coolies

Mal Meninga

Kanakas

Shanghaiing

Impressment, the formal term for pressganging

Bibliography



★ Docker, E. W., (1981), ''The blackbirders : a brutal story of the Kanaka slave-trade'', London, Angus & Robertson ISBN 0207140693

★ Gravelle Kim, ''A History of Fiji'', Fiji Times Limited, Suva, 1979.

External links



Background and history of the South Sea Islanders Queensland Department of Premier and Cabinet

References


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