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This article has been nominated to be checked for its neutrality. Discussion of this nomination can be found on the talk page. (February 2011) |
Afro-Guyanese people are the inhabitants of Guyana of Black African origin (as, formerly, as the Afro-Guianese they were the inhabitants of British Guiana). When planters made land or passage home available to East Indians as part of the terms of indentured labour in the late 19th century, when they had denied land to the Africans as emancipated slaves several decades earlier, Afro-Guianese resentment of other colonial ethnic groups was reinforced. (Note, however, that the emancipation process had provided tutelage by way of compensation, and that indentured labourers released by the termination of the indentured labour system received nothing, according to V.S.Naipaul.)
By the early twentieth century, the majority of the urban population of the country was African Guianese. Many Afro Guianese living in villages had migrated to the towns in search of work. Until the 1930s, Afro Guianese, especially those of mixed African and European descent, comprised the bulk of the nonwhite professional class. During the 1930s, as the Indian Guianese began to enter the middle class in large numbers, they began to compete with Afro Guianese for professional positions.
[edit] Notable Afro-Guyanese people
- Akara, leader of the Berbice slave rebellion at Plantation Lilienburg
- John Agard, playwright, poet and children's writer
- Terrence Alli, former NABF light welterweight champion
- Clifford Anderson, former British Empire featherweight contender.
- Forbes Burnham, President of Guyana, 1980 - 1985.
- Basil Butcher, former Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer.
- Ashton Chase, Guyanese politician and legal scholar.
- Hubert Nathaniel Critchlow, father of the trade union movement in British Guyana.
- Colin Croft, former Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer.
- Cuffy, leader of the Berbice slave rebellion at Plantation Lilienburg
- Damon, leader of the Essequibo rebellion
- Adrian Dutchin, popular Guyanese Soca artist and one half of duo, X2.
- Roy Fredericks, former Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer. Highest average for Guyana.
- Lance Gibbs, former Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer.
- Jack Gladstone, leader of the 1821 Demerara Slave Rebellion
- Eddy Grant, popular musician.
- Roger Harper, Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer - Former Kenyan Cricket coach.
- Wesley Holder, political activist based in Brooklyn, New York.
- Desmond Hoyte, President of Guyana, 1985-1992.
- Sam Hinds, former President of Guyana, Prime Minister of Guyana.
- Carl Hooper, former West Indian Cricket Captain.
- Ezekiel Jackson, professional wrestler (real name Rycklon Stephens) who currently performs for World Wrestling Entertainment and was the final ECW Champion.
- Colin Klass, President of the Guyana Football Federation (GFF)
- Eusi Kwayana, former Guyanese cabinet member and veteran politician.
- Clayton Lambert, American, Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer. Scored the most runs for Guyana.
- Lincoln Lewis, trade union leader
- Clive Lloyd, former Guyanese and West Indian Cricketer.
- Quamina, leader of the 1823 Demerara Slave Rebellion.
- Ptolemy Reid, former Prime Minister of Guyana
- Walter Rodney, historian and political activist.
[edit] Notable people of Afro-Guyanese descent
- Red Cafe, Brooklyn rapper.
- Deborah Cox, Canadian R&B singer-songwriter and actress.
- Jason David, Canadian-born American football cornerback.
- Peter Davison, played the Doctor in Doctor Who, has a Guyanese father of mixed race.
- JDiggz, Canadian rapper with an Afro-Guyanese mother.
- Melanie Fiona, Canadian R&B singer-songwriter, also of Indo-Guyanese descent
- Eddy Grant, British reggae artist.
- Leona Lewis, British singer with a Guyanese father.
- Derek Luke, American actor.
- Maestro, Canadian rapper and actor.
- Nicole Narain, Playboy model, Afro-Guyanese mother and father was 1/2 Indo-Guyanese and 1/2 Chinese-Guyanese.
- Trevor Phillips, British politician.
- Rihanna, singer with an Afro-Guyanese mother.
- Saukrates, Canadian rapper/singer
- Simone Denny, former lead singer of Canadian based electro-dance pop trio, Love Inc.
- Eon Sinclair, bassist of Canadian rock/ska/reggae band Bedouin Soundclash
- Sean Patrick Thomas, actor (Save the Last Dance and Barbershop)
- Phil Lynott, the frontman of the rock band Thin Lizzy, with an Afro-Guyanese father.
[edit] References
| v · d · eEthnic groups in Guyana |
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| Indigenous |
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| Non-Indigenous |
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