|    A 
romantic past 
Four 
hundred years ago when adventurers arrived from Europe they were following legends 
in search of a golden kingdom and its ruler, El Dorado - 'the golden man'.  The 
magic that makes modern Suriname is undiminished. Its highways are the sea and 
countless rivers. Behind a coastal strip of lowland facing the Atlantic an untamed 
wilderness stretches southward to a mountainous frontier with Brasil and the Amazon. 
The majority of just over 400,000 inhabitants live near the coast and have a remarkable 
history. The first settlers were English and arrived in 1650 backed by Lord Willoughby 
of Parham, a small village in Suffolk, a county of East Anglia in England.   
   A 
quick deal 'Willoughbyland' 
as it was known for a short while was traded by the English for the Dutch holding 
of New Amsterdam in North America. Later that piece of land became New York. Some 
deal ! The Dutch held on to this corner of South America until 1975 - the only 
breaks were short as French and then British settlers tried to take-over. The 
Dutch influence is seen in many of the grand streets of Paramaribo the 
capital and sometimes in the language- tho' many others are spoken.  
 | During 
the Dutch ownership sugar plantation owners brought black slaves from their homes 
in Africa, Asians from India speaking their own languages, Chinese, Javanese, 
Java (Jawa) part of the country that is now Indonesia. Jewish people arrived from 
Europe and other from the Portuguese island of Madeira. Traders came from the 
Mediterranean countries and suddenly a new nation was emerging. Independence from 
The Netherlands was achieved in 1975 and Suriname was born.  |   
   |   |   
  
 |    Suriname 
is a land of many languages, many different religions and a variety of food styles 
unequalled in any other South American country   |   
 |   Advertisments, 
the street and shop signs are clues to the original homes of many Surinamers 
  |    Some 
of the longtime residents of Suriname are the families of African slaves who escaped 
from Dutch plantation owners three hundred years ago. They are known locally as 
'Bush Negroes' , though the modern use of 'Bush Blacks ' is beginning to be accepted. These 
people live in virtual isolation often by rivers in the interior.  
Over the years the 'Bush Negroes' have adopted some of the ways of the forest 
dwelling Native American tribes they encountered in their flight from the Dutch 
but mostly they have retained their African traditions, especially religion. In 
recent years they have played an strategic rôle in the Suriname's emergence 
as an independent nation.     |