The Gujarati Merchants of the Deep Blue Sea

Like beads in a string… for a thousand years the Darialal (sea) has played a fundamental role in the history of Gujarat.

Gunvantrai Acharya

For us Gujaratis, the sea speaks many stories. The sea is the thread that ties us and our histories together. It is a disordered blur of tidal comings and goings. The waves that came upon our shores. The waves that took us with them to foreign lands. The sea is the pulsating heart of Gujarati commerce.

India’s extensive littoral splendour stretches 7,517 kms from the mouth of the Ganga to the Gulf of Kutch. Coastal Indians have for millennia looked to the sea to provide with them with their livelihood. From salt production, fishing, trade, shipping and even piracy–the sea has been Mother, Father, Grandmother and Grandfather–providing for generations upon generations of the inhabitants of Gujarat.

The inhabitants of coastal India, vis-a-vis their location, have always played a pivotal role in the larger currents of Indian ocean commerce. Over time, they were initiated into the tides of the monsoonal movement which tattooed itself into the collective memory of the people who found themselves buoyed onto its shores. Among all the major coastal zones of India, it is Gujarat that stands out for initiating and participating in an incredibly long history of international exchange.

When these flows and exchanges were interrupted by climate change and geopolitics, they were eventually reshaped by both Indian and foreign forces. Gujarat is blessed with numerous safe harbours, accessible ports and a rich hinterland. The northwestern state was central to the maritime exchange that involved not only goods, but also people and their ideas.

As merchants travelled across the waters of the Indian ocean by the very nature of their seasonal monsoon, they acquired habits and made friends in the ports where they dropped their anchor. This proximity was not always comfortable, but it did, over time, result in a sort of ‘shared intimacy’. People of different cultures and creeds learned to deal and you could even say ‘cope’ with one another, even if they did not always get along.

By allowing the tides to carry them to and fro, the Gujaratis of the deep blue sea emerged as longtime merchants for whom international trade was not just a central economic activity, but also the blood that flowed through their veins.

The Coastline of Singapore

2 responses to “The Gujarati Merchants of the Deep Blue Sea”

  1. […] people that crew it are referred to as its merchant navy or merchant marine. Merchant shipping is the lifeblood of the world economy, carrying 90% of international trade with 102,194 commercial ships worldwide. On rivers and canals, […]

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  2. […] a fifth generation Singaporean of Gujarati descent. My forefathers come from Surat: a port city on the western coast of India in the state of Gujarat. Prior to self-proclaimed […]

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Dipa Sanatani | Publisher at Twinn Swan | Author | Editor | Illustrator | Creative entrepreneur dedicated to crafting original works of Modern Sacred Literature.