Sunday, March 24, 2024

My Grandfather: A Saga of a Ship Jumper, an Alien and an American Immigrant

Part 3

Illegal Alien: The Underground Railroad 


      I suspected Abdul Goni has jumped ship serval times, utilizing the 1920 and 1930 Census, I was able to locate him in upstate New York State and in New York City. His desertion was still a major issue, it was essential to keep moving and not to be taken into custody by immigration. One method he and others may have use to reduce capture some would change their names or alter the spelling slightly and change out of their seamen clothes to civilian garb of the era: wearing suits, tie, and hats. Along the docks recruitment for jobs in factories and services, outside of New York City would have aided grandfather to disappear and evade the immigrant officials.


       South Asian seamen - "Lascars" were vital to Britain's Merchant shipping for centuries. Wellington Trust & Maritime Foundation. 2022.

     With the connections of the Bengali community, he discovered work in 1930 in factory as a laborer in Lackawanna, Erie County. This factory work would provide higher pay and away from the docks. Lodgings with other seamen in a boarding house nearby, it was always an understanding seamen Bengali would combine their resources, money, food, housing, and clothing. To help everyone to stand on its own, to save, to provide for himself and to send money back home. In grandfather's case, I always heard stories of his charity with many friends, family, and a good provider of his own family. It is heartwarming to know he may have lacked tools but was full of heart.
        

1920 Census Lackawanna, Erie, New York. Abdul age 23 years old. Boarding at 119 Ridge Road other seaman. Working as a fireman at a steel plant. 


       I believe that grandfather may have witnessed and may have been an actor as a strikebreaker Lackawanna Railroad or in the Bethlehem Steel's clash with the pro-union white workers in the summer of 1922 marked a near conflict between the white workers, Hindus, and African American workers. 
  • Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Lackawanna Plant, Route 5 on Lake Erie, Buffalo, Erie County, NY
    In Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian American, Vivek Bald’s states, “recruit members of the Indian and Chinese crews of ships passing in and out of New York, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. 

Grandfather Abdul Goni name is spelled differently - Abdulkanie: line 29.
 Boarding at 413 Mellody Avenue with other East Indians. Working as a fireman at steel mill. 1930 Census, Lackawanna, Erie, New York.


In the years immediately following the war, as U.S. labor unions mounted a series of regional and nationwide strikes, factory owners continued this practice, hiring Indian and Chinese seamen off the docks and using them alongside African American workers as strikebreakers.”

Railroad managers bring in strikebreakers and unions leaders attempts to cripple rail service. Bethlehem Steel access to rail lines were vital in moving their supplies throughout the country.   

Bengali were often referred as one group, Hindus.

Grandfather certainly survive such event, desperate keep working. Perhaps his understanding of the English language was still being tested, the culture, adjusting the weather conditions, and the fear of being arrested and perhaps deportation was every present with him. If he deported, he would resume his life on a merchant marine ship and again in the trajectory to the United States for another offer of betterment. Where he went on to marry my grandmother and have my father. Abdul Goni clearly demonstrated his strength, resilience, ingenuity, and enthusiasm.

Citation:

Bald, V. (2013). Bengali Harlem and the Lost Histories of South Asian America. Harvard University Press.

Historic American Engineering Record, C., Lackawanna Iron And Steel Company, Lackawanna Steel Company & Bethlehem Steel Company. (1968) Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Lackawanna Plant, Route 5 on Lake Erie, Buffalo, Erie County, NY. Erie County New York Buffalo, 1968. Benz, S., O'Connell, K. & Christianson, J., trans Documentation Compiled After. [Photograph] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/ny1584/. 

The New York Times. (July 9, 1922). Hindu Strike Breakers. Newspapers.com. Retrieved March 24, 2024, from newspapers

Maritime Foundation

The Wellington Trust

United States Census, 1920. Database with images. FamilySearch. http://FamilySearch.org : 16 March 2024. Citing NARA microfilm publication T625. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.

United States Census, 1930. Database with images. FamilySearch. http://FamilySearch.org : 24 October 2022. Citing NARA microfilm publication T626. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2002.

 

Friday, March 22, 2024

My Grandfather: A Saga of a Ship Jumper, an Alien and an American Immigrant

 

Part 1

Runaway to Join the Ships: A Lascar Agreement

Growing up I heard numerous heartwarming stories about my grandfather, he was seaman, a ship jumper, an alien, labeled as a "Non-Resident Indian. He would live under the radar of immigration laws, agents, and his constant fear of deportation. He sought to become a part of the "New American" immigrant identity despite his challenges his attempts to acquire citizenship, he married twice, had a son, assisted in raising stepchildren, became a businessman, and helper to establish the Muslim Bengalis community, like the India League of America in Harlem during 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. A witness to the many historical events in New York City, like the arrest of 7 Hindus in the steel mills in Western Pennsylvania.

Grandfather was instrumental in establishing one of the early mosques in New York City, now one of the largest on the Upper East side today. Part of seamen ex-pats who occupied his own immigrant neighborhood at laundry shops, Ceylon Indian Restaurant, boardinghouses, employment maritime agents, tenement homes in Harlem, on the Lower East Side and steel mills in upstate New York. In addition, his participation in the process of the Luce-Celler Act of 1946.

          My focus is the biography of my grandfather, Abdul Goni. He journeys and experiences as a merchant seaman. Why did he jumped ship, become an alien and later an immigrant in the United States from 1920s to 1950s? How did the British Empire and the United States influence his life decisions? And finally, to understand the roles he took on in shaping his national identity.

Map of India, 1903. Outline is the city of Calcutta, it spills into the Bay of Bengal.


Map of Calcutta. Bird's eye view of the city center adjacent to the Hooligy River, which spills out to the sea. 1893. 

Abdul Goni or Ibrahim Abdul Goni was born July 15, 1898, or 1900 in Calcutta of the tribe of the Bengali, more likely his first name was Ibrahim and not Abdul Goni. For this blog I will refer to him as Abdul Goni or Grandfather.

Lascar Transfer Agreement between the masters of the Rewa and the Oolobaria. Forcing lascars back to British India did not require permission from the lascar crew.

What is a "lascar agreements"

The British East India Company recruited seamen or lascar, as Bengali Muslims were often referred to as derogatory term, from areas around its factories in Bengal, Assam, Gujarat, and outskirts of Calcutta villages.

Lascars would serve on British Merchant Navy ships under "Lascar Agreements", giving captains more control. The sailors could be transferred from one ship to another and retained in service for up to three years at one time. Captains would withhold payments, which grandfather would receive his payment consisting of 1/3 or 1/5 of what the white seamen would receive.

Three lascars crew of the P & O liner RMS Viceroy of India. 1930-1939. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lascar#/media/File:Three_Lascars_on_the_Viceroy_of_India.jpg


My uncles and other relatives often informed me grandfather was a longshoreman working in the bottom of the vessel with the heat and fire. In Jesse Ransley’s Blacks and Asian Seamen of the Forgotten Wrecks of the First World intensely describes, “Muslim Asian seamen worked in the engines room or ‘stokeholds’ (greasing machinery), trimmers (moving coal around to keep the ship balanced) and donkeymen (tending the auxiliary boilers).”  What vivid description, I am imagining grandfather slaving in herculean conditions, coupled with fewer rations, inadequate berths, ever threats of injury, illness, or worst death. Along with draconian policies, British ships in port, maintain strict orders of seamen to stay on ships in part due to racist attitudes and immigration fears about hygiene, disease, and cultural differences.  

Lascar crew members aboard P&O liner the Kampala. Photo: Getty Images

    Recently, thirty- nine Indian workers of the Bethlehem Steel Company were arrested without warrants at the gates of the factories in Bethlehem, Pa. . . . were taken to Ellis Island. . . . At this gate of America, they were lodged in filthy cells full of vermin. . . .  The British Captain of the Lucerus appeared on the scene and the Hindusthanees were summarily ordered to follow him to the boat, and there [return to] work as seamen. But when they came to know it was a British ship . . . they flatly refused to obey the order. Asked the reason, they said that to work on board a British ship was worse than working in “hell.”
-Basanta Kumar Roy, The Independent Hindusthan, October 1920

    Next post I write how my grandfather, Abdul Goni became a ship jumper.

Citations

Bald, V. (2013). Desertion and Sedition: Indian Seamen, Onshore Labor, and Expatriate Radicalism in New York and Detroit, 1914–1930. In The Sun Never Sets (pp. 75-). NYU Press.

Ransley, J. (n.d.). Blacks and Asian Seamen of the Forgotten Wrecks of the First World War. The Maritime Archaeology Trust, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton. SO 143ZH2022, 1–44. Maritime Archaeology Trust.org

Roy, B. (1930). Doing England’s Dirty Work. The Independent Hindustan, 1(2). https://www.saada.org/item/20120111-575

Map of Calcutta from Constable's 1893

https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-magazine/short-reads/article/3044306/who-were-lascars-where-did-they-come-and-where

https://mha.mun.ca/mha/mlc/seafarers/lascars/remainder-of-crew.php

https://www.pandosnco.co.uk/lascars-two.htm

Three Lascars

My Grandfather: A Saga of a Ship Jumper, an Alien and an American Immigrant

Part 5  Indian Born, America Made In the last post I wrote about grandfather's carved life, his status as an alien within the confin...