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Lured by the promise of easy money in the faraway land of hope, Adhiyaman Dorassamy embarks on a formidable crossing of two turbulent oceans so as to not end up like his parents in the jackals belly. As the ship docks at the harbours of the French colony of Martinique, the Dorassamys soon realize their predicament: like the thousands of Coolies before them, they are to now replace the freed Negro slaves in the sugarcane plantations. Ostracized by the former slaves and blindly subjected to the whims of the white planters, these Coolie Indians swiftly learn the art of survival and plunge into an unfamiliar world where just like their forgotten deities, their language too has faded amongst the Creole words.
InThe Cane-Cutters Song, originally published in French as La panse du chacal, award-winning Martinican author Raphaël Confiant illuminates the lesserknown side of the West Indian identity—the Indian side of the Creole, and within it the story of thousands of lost Indians who longed to return home. Available for the first time in English, this impeccable translation by Vidya Vencatesan is an immersive and riveting read.