The Waning Economic Power of the Garinagu
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Description: Text of a conference presentation noting the roles of earlier Garifuna in Belize as business and property owners, in comparison to modern aspirations as wage earners.
(January 01, 2003)
Francis B. Arana: The Waning Economic Power of the Garinagu The Waning Economic Power of the Garinagu The Garinagu, descendants of male Africans slaves and Carib Indian women, were exiled by the English from the islands of St. Vincent and the Grenadines to the island of Raton off the cost of Honduras in March of 1797. They arrived at the latter on April 12 of that year. They were later invited by the Spanish authorities in Trujillo to join them on the mainland. After a few years, they began to establish settlements along the north cost of Honduras, in Nicaragua, and further south in Guatemala and Belize then known as the "Settlement of Belize in the Bay of Honduras."
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Date | activated: 01-Oct-1998 last updated: 20-May-2013 expires: 31-Jul-2014 |