INDIAN MIGRATION TO NEW ZEALAND
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Keywords
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Abstract
Migration of Indians to New Zealand from the Navsari and Surat regions of Gujarat province in western India and Jalandhar and Hoshiarpur from Punjab commenced on a mild scale about a hundred years ago. The reasons for migration grew from economic, political, and demographic considerations. The economic decline of the region of Gujarat under British rule in the nineteenth century was the major factor responsible for encouraging Indians to leave the area. The result of the worsening economic situation and the growth of population was "increasing poverty, rural underemployment and the decline of village industries. The response of the Indian peasant was either acceptance and increasing poverty or movement away from the area. Many chose the second alternative and amongst these were the Indians who came to New Zealand. The people of the Navsari and Surat regions had always been in close touch with the people of the Western world and with the increasing pressures of the British colonial rule, the desire for prosperity was more intensely felt among these people. New Zealand seemed to provide them with an opportunity to improve their economic and material status.
References
2. Mc Leod, W.H. Punjabis in New Zealand Amritsar , Guru Nanak Dev University 1986 , page 33.
3. ibid . p38
4. ibid .
5. Arvind V. Zodgekar, "Demographic Aspects of Indians in New Zealand," in Kapil N. Tiwari (ed.), Indians in New Zealand: Studies in a Sub-culture, p.184.