|
Bolton is a unique town when you compare the make up of its
visible minority communities to other similar towns and cities.
Certainly in Greater Manchester it is the only town where there is a
larger Indian population than there are other Indian sub continent
communities.
If you were to break this Indian community up into the various
religious and regional factions you would find that contrary to
popular belief there are a massive number of Gujerati Muslims living
in Bolton. And they have been living in Bolton since the mid to late
1950s. If you were to break up the Gujerati Muslims into their
places of origin you would find a startling number of Muslims from
the Surat (city in Gujerat) area.
You need to break this down even further to understand this
booklet. About nine miles from Surat is a village called Barbodhan
and it is about the people from this village that I am going to
portray in the booklet. In the mid to late 1950's and early 1960's
non-white migrants or visible members of the minority communities
were very small in number in England. They numbered perhaps a few
tens of thousands and that was all.
This included Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Africans,
Jamaicans and so on. This figure rose considerably over the years
and the 1991 census quoted the number of visible minority
communities to be around 5% of the population. The forecast for the
year 2100 is that white people will be a minority in England.
According to local folklore the name Barbodhan comes from the term
"Babul Aden" or translated into English this would mean
"Gateway to Aden".
It is known that in the early days Muslims traveling to Mecca on
pilgrimage passed through this small village through to the seaport,
hence the name. More recently though the village Barbodhan was known
as the "Golden Village". So the village is very old, with
a lot of character and history and the graveyard suggests that
Muslims were buried there some 3 to 4 hundred years ago. Remembering
that it was in Surat that Britain established its first foothold in
India in 1612, when the newly formed East India Company got
permission from the Moghul Emperor, Jahangir, to set up a trading
"factory".
Surat was then, as it is now, a very prosperous city, a centre of
trade between India, Arabia and beyond. It remained Britain's chief
settlement on the West Coast until 1687 when Bombay succeeded to the
title. The purpose of the booklet is to inform the present and
future generations of communities about when and where members of
the Barbodhan Muslim communities settled in Britain. I hope that it
will be the catalyst for further research and more in depth
interviews.
This must be done quickly before the entire generation of first
arrivals pass away. One must do this quickly whilst they are still
alive and relatively young and active. Barbodhians ended up in
Burma, Mauritius, Africa, Madagascar, Canada but it is about those
who ended up in Bolton that I will focus upon. It is estimated that
some 80 to 90 % of Barbodhians are living in England with the vast
majority living in Bolton.
|