“It’s like We’re Still in Slavery”: Stress as Distress and Discourse among Jamaican Farm Workers in Ontario, Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methodology and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedure
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Family
One active way I saw Jamaican workers parent from a distance was sourcing books, electronics, and school supplies to ship home to their children. However, this often proved stressful if they were not able to locate or understand what their child was looking for.School in Jamaica is expensive, the parents have to buy everything like paper and books and everything. I come here so I can pay for my kids’ tuition, and I make sure that I send the money home on time. My kids work hard at school, they want a future.
He went on to say his time in Canada would be improved “if the boss would realize we are people, that we have families”.I miss my family. I worry about the family back home, especially my son, because he is young, and I want him to know his father and give him things I never had.
During phone calls back home, marital conflict can worsen the stress of homesickness. Trevor emphasised the importance of a supportive partner:While we are here, we are away from our wives and girlfriends, so the men have to handle big phone bills. And being lonely with no wife, no sex, is very stressful. It would be nice to see my wife, the farmer should allow our spouses to visit.
Working in Canada, you have to have a strong family back home. If you have a girlfriend or a wife, they have to be supportive of what you are doing. You have to get support from your family. You have to be able to maintain your family from here, you have to make your family back home feel happy, so they give you the support. If they’re not happy, it don’t make no sense to come here cause if you have a family back home giving you trouble, while you’re in Canada dealing with the stress from the boss, it’s too much pressure.
The real reason why we come to Canada is to work [so] that we can maintain our family, but how can we maintain our family under certain pressures that we face? You are married, and you are here from eight months, and within that eight months you don’t know what can happen in Jamaica while you’re in Canada working so hard.
Similarly, at a mental health workshop in Niagara Region, some Jamaican workers in attendance brought musical instruments and sang ‘nine night’ songs, traditional Jamaican funerary songs that are known across the island. Other Jamaican workers joined in and collectively the group sang with pensive emotion. I asked Jacob what this meant to him, and he told me:Things are not good. I lost my uncle back home on Wednesday…it’s hard…things are getting worse by the day here. I am dying to get home and see my kids.
My sister died three years back when I was up here working in Canada. It was hard, I never got to be with my family at that time. Today, I sang and remembered her.
3.2. Work Environments and SAWP Relations
Farm work it’s not good, the farm owner is no good, he’s not polite and he treats workers like slavery. We are supposed to work all day, with no breaks. It’s not right, we Jamaicans are not used to this.
When the later season crops were ready for harvesting, Trevor explained workers were expected to put in twelve-hour days:You get up at 5 a.m., and you work right through the day. You only get fifteen minutes break in the morning, half hour for lunchtime, and fifteen minutes break in the evening. Within that time you have to always be bending your back and working, right through the day. So, it’s very hard for you to be comfortable in the environment, because we in Jamaica think that everything is gold in Canada, you come here and you say ‘oh, everybody loves Canada because Canada is so quiet and Canada is so nice’. But, yet still it’s like we’re still in slavery, cause you come here and the boss gonna tell you that you can’t get up for two seconds, just to stand up and look around. You can’t do that… you know?
For Trevor, the intensity of work demands was exacerbated by a sense of powerlessness over his own body and concern for his health:While the field boss coming by saying faster, faster, and the boss wanted us to be picking so early in the morning when it was dark, and we told him we can’t see in the dark, but it didn’t matter…start at 7!
Then you know what they do? The supervisors are Black, and they use them to put the pressure on the we [Jamaican workers]. We have sometimes guys feel pain right through, and they have a pain in their back for months and can’t do anything about it because they don’t want to go to the boss’ wife and tell her ‘I’m feeling a pain’, she’ll like take a guy to the hospital, and tomorrow morning she sends for that guy to come and do work in the field.
The liaisons don’t care about their own kind, and they don’t protect anybody but the bosses. I think it should be white people caring over Blacks, because the white people in Canada have power to really force things [to get better]. The liaison should protect my rights, but instead I have to come to you. The liaison makes it no good, it makes things much worse for me because he says he can’t help, I have to go back home. My wife is upset, she doesn’t understand. The liaison said he knows this is an injustice, but he can’t do anything. I hope I can come back next year, but not to this farm.
3.3. Living Conditions and Isolation
You don’t think that Jamaican people have homes? Do you think we live in shacks? We have quality houses back home, so when I look at the bunkhouse, and how offshore workers live here, I wonder, how is it Canada is a First World country when things are so backward?
There’s like one machine has to serve twelve guys. Even the bathroom system, you have a heating system that whenever you turn on the machine the water in the bathroom get hot until there’s steam coming out from the water. If you flush a bathroom, the water gets burning up. We bring it up to the boss and tell him, guys are getting burned, but there’s nothing they do about it. Every year we come back and it’s the same. And right now, the heating in the house is not working, and we cannot adjust the heat because the farm owner installed it [the thermostat] and took the remote and the key to his office. That alone brings stress on you.
During one of our weekly meetings, I asked Trevor if he feels socially isolated at the bunkhouse, and he told me:Simcoe is too isolated, [which is] more than stressful for a Kingston guy who is used to things. There is nothing here.
In Jamaica, we’re not used to living in a cage like we’re an animal or something, we are used to freedom.
One farm that employed nearly one hundred Caribbean workers experienced frequent conflicts between Jamaican workers and their co-workers and supervisors from Barbados that went on throughout the season. Often, the situation was exacerbated by excessive alcohol consumption. At another farm in the same area, conflicts between senior Jamaican workers and young men from Kingston were recurring, as Clifton told me:It is stressful [living] on the farm because you have like one hundred and ten guys live on the main farm, how can you survive? Or, how can you be happy? No privacy. You’re used to having your wife at home, or your girlfriend at home, you can sit down and talk and feel comfortable, with kids running up and down, you feel nice about it. But when you’re living in a bunkhouse with a hundred and twenty guys, all of those guys come from different parishes, and they are not the same. So, you must feel stressed, and then by [the time] you lie down to sleep, it’s morning again and you have to get up and work.
These inter-Caribbean and inter-Jamaican dynamics were often exploited by employers in ways that ignited competition and prevented solidarity between workers.Those guys [Kingston youth] come here for the wrong reason, they come for bling and girlfriends, they don’t have a good plan. They aren’t used to hard work, so they complain and cause fights. Last year the Kingston guys stole items from the bunkhouse and now the boss knows you can’t trust those guys.
3.4. Racism and Social Exclusion
I concluded surveys by asking workers what changes in the community or local services would improve their time working in Canada, and one of the most common requests by Jamaican workers was to address the racism and lack of friendliness in the community.We know you have racists here in Canada, and that people don’t like Black people. When we go into downtown, it’s obvious. The cashiers at the grocery store won’t even look up at you, but if it is a white person they say hello, and they smile. I’ve seen it many times.
Notably, Randall worked on a farm where the living and working conditions were the worst I personally ever witnessed, and there was also a great deal of competition among the workers in his bunkhouse. As a result, Randall regularly told me he was having a tough time coping.I don’t like this place, there’s nothing in this town. Why don’t they give us guys what we need? I miss things back home.
The lack of friendship with Canadians was a tremendous source of stress and sadness for workers, and they regularly expressed sincere gratitude to me for my friendship and support.It’s different here. In Jamaica, if people don’t notice you in the community for a day or two, someone is gonna come looking for you to make sure you are ok. Everybody watches out for each other.
3.5. Illness and Injury
Trevor went on to say that drinking coconut water replenishes the body and brings the pressure back down. In this way, there is a dual meaning of “pressure” among Jamaican workers, social pressure as well as biological pressure within the arteries. In my experience, Jamaican workers who experienced prolonged psychological stress embodied several symptoms (i.e., fatigue, difficulty sleeping, trembling, anger, fear, desperation, and lack of concentration) that they understood to be a manifestation of nerves/nervousness brought on by stress.The stress of work brings up your blood pressure and that can kill you. If you are in the field, you have pressure from the work and pressure from just bending your back, you got the pressure from the boss, and the heat from the sun alone. All this pressure [will] make your blood pressure go up, this can kill you.
I’m in a bad luck mood, not wanting to think too much about the accident, but I’m shaken up because there was like blood springing up in my mouth in the morning, and it’s traumatizing to have blood in my urine. I’ve never taken a lick so hard in my life that I have peed blood clots. That accident mashed up my body, how can the doctor say I am going to be ok? I know this is a lifelong injury, I can feel it.
Over the next few months, I accompanied Clayton to the migrant worker health clinic each week and helped arrange for him to see medical specialists in other areas of the province for more comprehensive testing. During one of our many trips to the clinic, Clayton told me:I’m here now, depressed and distressed…one side of my body is not working right since I got the lick. I worked tirelessly around the clock, why can’t the farmer take responsibility? I don’t understand. The boss keeps telling me that I’m not injured… what am I, a piece of wood? A two-thousand-pound bin crushed my body, iron on iron, how am I ok? I am rejection over here.
During this time, Clayton’s mental health further deteriorated as he struggled with physical pain, a hostile living environment, and financial difficulties made worse by his inability to access adequate workers’ compensation. Physicians at the clinic remarked on Clayton’s poor mental health and suggested he receive psychological counselling to help him manage the trauma and depression that resulted from the injury. Because Clayton had no transportation and was unfamiliar with the area, this was not possible. Despite his persistent injuries, Clayton returned home to Jamaica without having resolved his issues with workers’ compensation.Sometimes I feel mad at white people, because they have been violating my rights, and they don’t care that I am injured because they say ‘he’s just a Black guy, he can go home and die.
Clayton continues to access health care in Kingston, Jamaica through the health care channels that are approved by the Jamaican Ministry of Labour. The doctor in Jamaica referred Clayton to a psychiatrist to help him deal with the stress and memory loss.Since I’ve been home with no money, I have to borrow it from family. My girlfriend is stressed out, nothing is ok, she is worried about everything because my kids go to bed without enough food. When my kids ask “Daddy, why did you come home?” I tell them that farmer is a wicked person. I’m stressed out, can’t sleep because I’m worrying about my kids while the WSIB people are sitting back in chairs saying “ok, that’s just another Black guy, he can go away and die”. If I die, it will be WSIB’s fault.
In a phone call from Jamaica in 2016, Clayton told me:Some injured guys go crazy, because most of those guys go back and they don’t have much things to live off. When they leave this job because they injured, they don’t have another job, and ain’t nobody gonna employ somebody that’s injured. They gonna stay home, not doing anything, and that’s stress. That would make you go crazy. You know, your mind can only take certain things. After a while it’s like…you know, there are some people we call ‘clean clothes mad people’, they’re clean but when you sit down and they talk to them, it’s like you wonder, whoa, that person is gone. Sometimes you see them on the bus talking to themselves, and then they get up and do something crazy, and then you ask them [and] they tell you they used to work in Canada or America doing this job.
I left Jamaica as a worker, but I came home as a patient. Injured workers are those guys who suffer a lot. Now I can’t feed my children, and nobody cares. What kind of a system is this? This is a slavery system that breaks bodies.
4. Discussion
5. Policy Recommendations
6. Study Limitations
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | |
2 | In 2023, amendments were made to the SAWP Employment Contract with the Caribbean. https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/services/foreign-workers/agricultural/seasonal-agricultural/apply/caribbean/agreements.html (accessed on 26 October 2023). |
3 | Information sourced from Employment and Social Development Canada’s (ESDC) LMIA System. The LMIA System only tracks approved TFW positions. Not all positions approved result in a work permit or a TFW entering Canada. For the number of work permits issued, see Immigration Refugees and Citizenship Canada’s (IRCC) Facts and Figures: http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/resources/statistics/menu-fact.asp (accessed on 26 October 2023). |
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Mayell, S. “It’s like We’re Still in Slavery”: Stress as Distress and Discourse among Jamaican Farm Workers in Ontario, Canada. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13010016
Mayell S. “It’s like We’re Still in Slavery”: Stress as Distress and Discourse among Jamaican Farm Workers in Ontario, Canada. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(1):16. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13010016
Chicago/Turabian StyleMayell, Stephanie. 2024. "“It’s like We’re Still in Slavery”: Stress as Distress and Discourse among Jamaican Farm Workers in Ontario, Canada" Social Sciences 13, no. 1: 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13010016
APA StyleMayell, S. (2024). “It’s like We’re Still in Slavery”: Stress as Distress and Discourse among Jamaican Farm Workers in Ontario, Canada. Social Sciences, 13(1), 16. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13010016