Suriname sits on the South American mainland, but it is a Caribbean nation. Like Guyana, it belongs to the Caribbean by language, history, and people, not by its coastline, which faces the Atlantic.
It is one of the three Guianas. Where Guyana was British, Suriname was Dutch Guiana, and it is the only Dutch-speaking country in South America. It became independent in 1975 and is a full member of CARICOM, the Caribbean Community.
Most of the country is rainforest. Suriname sits on the Guiana Shield, and more than ninety percent of its land is forest, the highest share of any country on Earth. That interior belongs to the continent, not the Caribbean. The Caribbean in Suriname is its people.
That story runs in order. The Dutch built sugar plantations on the coast and worked them with enslaved Africans. Many escaped into the forest and built free societies there, the Maroons, who still govern parts of the interior under their own law. After slavery ended, the Dutch brought indentured labourers from India and from Java in Indonesia to work the same plantations.
The result is one of the most mixed societies in the world, with no group a majority. Surinamese are Indian, African, Javanese, Maroon, Chinese, Indigenous, and more, the same plantation and indenture history that shaped Guyana and Trinidad, with the Javanese its own thread. The capital, Paramaribo, holds the result: a historic centre of Dutch wooden architecture, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, where mosques, synagogues, and churches stand close together.
So Suriname is Caribbean by culture and politics, not by its shore. It shares the language of empire, the plantation past, and the mixed society of the rest of the Caribbean, while it faces the Atlantic.
