Hinduism in Suriname

Hinduism is the second-largest religion in Suriname. According to the 2012 census of Suriname, Hindus constitute 22.3% of the population.[1] Suriname has the second largest percentage of Hindus in the Western Hemisphere, after Guyana (24.8%).

Arya Dewaker Hindu temple in Paramaribo

History

Hindu woman festively dressed in Suriname in 1900

The story of Hindus in Suriname is broadly parallel to that in Guyana. Indian indentured labourers were sent to colonial Dutch Guiana by special arrangement between the Dutch and British.[2] The difference is that the Netherlands' more liberal policy toward Hinduism allowed a stronger culture to develop. Examples are the lack of a rigid caste system and the almost universal reading of the Gita and Ramayana.[3][4]

Demographics

According to the 2012 census, there are 120,623 Hindus in Suriname, constituting 22.3% of the population.[5]

Population by year

Year Percent of Hindus Change
1900 16.4% -
1916 19.8% +3.4%
1936 21.8% +2.0%
1946 19.5% -2.3%
1964 27% +7.5%
1971 29.5% +2.5%
1980 27.4% -2.1%
2004 19.9%% -7.4%
2012 22.3% +2.4%

The percentage of Hindus increased initially (1900 – 1930s), fluctuated slightly between the 1930s and 1980s, and remained stable in the 20s (20%).The demographic changes in the religious population in the first half of the 20th century can be explained by migration. In the second half of the 20th century, in particular after 1970s the decline of Hindus might be explained by large migration to the Netherlands during the independence (1975) and the military regime in the 1980-1987.[6]

Population by districts

Distribution of Hindus by district
DistrictPercent of Hindus
Saramacca44.6%
Nickerie43.2%
Wanica39.9%
Commewijne District24.5%
Paramaribo13.8%
Para4.9%
Coronie2.2%
Marowijne0.9%
Brokopondo0.4%
Sipaliwini0.3%

Hindu denominations

Hindu temple in Nickerie

According to the 2012 census, 18% of Surinamese are Sanatani Hindus, 3.1% are Arya Samaj, and the remaining 1.2% followed other forms of Hinduism.

ISKCON also have a presence in Suriname. The first Hare Krishna devotees to visit Suriname were devotees from Guyana way back in the early 1980s. The first Center was established about two decades ago, and now there is a vibrant preaching center in the country’s second city, New Nickerie. [7]

Ethnicity

Ethnicity[8]
Ethnicity Percent
Indian
95.7%
Mixed
2.6%
Javanese
0.75%
Creole
0.14%
Chinese
0.13%
Others
0.2%

Majority of the Hindus in Suriname are East Indians, both in absolute terms and in percentage. Hinduism has a considerable following among Mixed ethnic people (3210 people) and Javanese Surinamese (915 people). Hinduism is also practised among Chinese Surinamese (157 people), Creole (142 people), Maroon(84 people), Indigenous people (83 people) and Afro-Surinamese (59 people).[9]

Ethnic groupPercent of Ethnic group practising Hinduism
Indo-Surinamese78%
Mixed4.4%
Chinese2%
Afro-Surinamese1.5%
Javanese1.2%
Indigenous people0.4%
Creole0.17%
Maroon0.07%

Contemporary Society

Shri Vishnu mandir, Paramaribo

Language

In contrast to the neighbouring Guyanese Hindus who speak English, most of the Surinamese Hindus speak Sarnami Hindustani, a dialect of Bhojpuri. This is largely due to the fact that the Dutch did not force the Indo-Caribbean population to abandon their native languages, unlike in British colonies like Trinidad and Guyana, where English was imposed as a means of attempting to erase cultural and religious traditions.[10]

Festivals

Deepavali and Holi are national holidays in Suriname.[11]

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gollark: Yes, because they needed to add a bunch of code to *it* to handle that.
gollark: > journalctl is not greatWell, I can conveniently check "hmm yes what has this service outputted in the last few minutes", follow logs, and specify stuff like "dnscrypt-proxy should only start when the network goes up".
gollark: I don't think UK curricula cover them until A level.
gollark: Or... actually in most countries that I know of.

See also

References

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