Mapping free Indian migration to Natal through a biographical lens, 1880-1930.
Abstract
The history of indentured Indians has been well documented in South
African historiography in terms of migration and settlement. Shipping lists,
which meticulously recorded the biographical details of each labourer, together
with Indian immigrant reports, provide a wealth of information on the early
migratory and labour experiences of indentured Indians. Regrettably, similar
documentation regarding passenger or free Indian migration to Natal is
absent in the South African archival records. This article adopts a biographical
approach as a methodological tool to map the identification practices involved
in the migration of passenger or free Indian immigrants to Natal between
1880 and 1930. Both the colonial and Union governments sought to regulate
the entry of these immigrants through a system of identity documents. Passage
tickets, domicile certificates, affidavits, Certificates of Identity and passports
not only facilitated and hindered both individual and family migration, but
also show how citizenship was defined, and migration controls were instituted
and administered to free immigrants. Thus, as British subjects, free Indian
immigrants were not really free but had to constantly, defend and reclaim
their civic rights, and attest and verify their identity as the colonial and later
the Union government sought new and creative ways to restrict and prohibit
their entry. This article illustrates the usefulness of a biographical approach to
migration studies, in not only highlighting individual but collective immigrant
experiences, which provide a way of capturing the diversity, complexity and
the transformational nature of free Indian migration to Natal.