Afro-Trinidadian people

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Afro-Trinidadian people or Afro-Trinidadians refers to people of African descent who are citizens or nationals of Trinidad and Tobago. They are also referred to simply as African, black, Negro or Creole. Afro-Trinidadians account for 39.5% of the population of Trinidad and Tobago as of 2000. An additional 18.4% of the population described themselves as being of Mixed Race; most of them are also of African descent.

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[edit] Origins

The ultimate origin of all Afros in the Americas is in Africa. Ancestors from the west coast of Africa, which now includes Nigeria, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone, Togo, Guinea, Cameroon, Angola and Guinea-Bissau, among others. Many of them were from tribes such as the Yoruba, Ashanti, Kru, Mandinka, Rada and Itsekiri. All of these tribes, among others, were affected by the Transatlantic Slave Trade The majority of Afro-Trinidadians were the descendants of immigrants from other islands of the Caribbean, especially Grenada, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Barbados. Other Afro-Trinidadians trace their ancestry to American slaves recruited to fight for the British in the War of 1812 or from indentured labourers from West Africa.

[edit] Religious Groups

Most Afro-Trinidadians are Christian, with the largest group being Roman Catholics, Anglicans and (in Tobago) Methodists. Smaller numbers follow Afro-Caribbean syncretic faiths like the Spiritual Baptist Church and the Rastafari movement. Non-Christians include ahderents of Islam, the Orisha faith, the Bahá'í Faith, Hinduism or are followers of Sai Baba.

See also: Religion in Trinidad and Tobago

[edit] Notable Afro-Trinidadians

[edit] See also