
Black
Cuba
" ...
Race relations in Cuba were/is a strange mix. The Spanish brutally crushed
slave revolts and executed noted free blacks for helping insurrections.
When Cubans began a revolt against Spain in 1868, free blacks and slaves
strongly supported the revolt. Spain anti-revolutionary strategy was often
contradictory but effective: they granted freedom to slaves who remained
Loyalists and scared white Cubans that black revolutionary generals like General Antonio Maceo was plotting
to drive all whites out of Cuba ... "
How
did it all start?
 |
History
Until
the last decades of the 18th Century, Cuba was a relatively underdeveloped
island with an economy based mainly on cattle raising and tobacco
farms. The intensive cultivation of sugar that began at the turn
of the nineteenth century transformed Cuba into a plantation society,
and the demand for African slaves, who had been introduced into
Cuba from Spain at the beginning of the 16th century, increased
dramatically. |
The
slave trade with the West African coast exploded, and it is estimated
that almost 400,000 Africans were brought to Cuba during the years
1835-1864. (That's roughly 1150 per month for 29 years!) As early
as 1532, the blacks formed 62.5 percent of the population. In 1841,
African slaves made up over 40% of the total population.
Fernando
Ortiz, Los negros esdovas, gives the following percentages (a few
points off here and there) from official sources |
| Year |
Percentage |
| 1532 |
62.5 |
| 1775 |
43.8 |
| 1792 |
43.6
(50.9 correct) |
| 1811 |
54.5 |
| 1817 |
55.0 |
| 1827 |
55.8 |
| 1850 |
56.0 |
| 1841 |
58.5 |
| 1846 |
52.6 |
| 1849 |
51.5 |
|
| Year |
Percentage |
| 1855 |
52.2 |
| 1859 |
47.8 |
| 1860 |
48.4 |
| 1861 |
43.1 |
| 1872 |
44.6 |
| 1877 |
32.2 |
| 1887 |
32.4 |
| 1899 |
32.1 |
| 1907 |
29.7 |
|
Toward the
end of 1912, Gómez authorized the United Fruit Company to bring
in 1,400 Haitians. Under Menocal, from 1913-21, 81,000 Haitians and 75,000
Jamaicans were admitted.
Thereafter,
the legal entries were:
| Year |
Haitians |
Jamaicans |
| 1921 |
12,485 |
12,469 |
| 1922 |
639 |
4,453 |
| 1923 |
11,088 |
5,844 |
| 1924 |
21,013 |
5,086 |
| 1925 |
18,750 |
4,747 |
|
In addition
it is estimated that from 1913 to 1927 40,000 negroes a year were smuggled
in. Since then and owing to the prolonged economic crisis, few have been
brought in even illegally.
The companies
which have brought in black people during the period of the Republic,
were supposed to send them back at the end of their yearly contract, but
this was evaded. As El Pais wrote: "The Haitian immigration comes
for the zafra, but soon is diverted toward the towns and never goes back
to the plantations of his own country, the result being that the following
year it is necessary to introduce another contingent."
Besides
...
The
late flourishing of the Cuban sugar industry and the persistence
of the slave trade into the 1860s are two important reasons for
the remarkable density and variety of African cultural elements
in Cuba. Fernando Ortiz Counted the presence of over one hundred
different African ethnic groups in 19th century Cuba, and estimated
that by the end of that century fourteen distinct "nations"
had preserved their identity in the mutual aid associations and
social clubs known as cabildos, societies of free and enslaved blacks
from the same African "nation," which later included their
Cuban-born descendants. Soon after Emancipation in 1886, cabildos
were required to adopt the name of a Catholic patron saint, to register
with local church authorities and when dissolved, to transfer their
property to the Catholic Church.
Paradoxically,
it was within the church sponsored cabildos that Afro-Cuban
religions and identities coalesced. Even after they were officially
disbanded at the end of the 19th century, many were kept up on an informal
basis, and were known popularly by their old African names. Some survive
to this day. The cabildos not only preserved specific African practices,
their members also creatively reunited and resynthesized many regional
African traditions, some, as in the case of the Yoruba, long separated
by migration and war.
 |
While
the formally organized cabildos were a primarily urban phenomenon,
individual and collective African practices also continued to flourish
at the sugar estates, known as ingenios or centrales. These were more
like small, self-contained industrial townships than "plantations."
About 80% of the newly-arrived (Africans) known as bozales, were sent
to them, and many centrales became centers of specific African "nations." |
Forged in
the cabildos and amidst the grueling labor at the sugar mills, four major
Afro-Cuban divisions (Lucumí, Arará, Abakuá, Kongo)
are represented in Cuba.
Struggle
White
and black, without regard to pigmentation, suffered and struggled side
by side during the independence wars. Black General Maceo and black General
Moncada, noblemen both, had more than loyal white officers; and no man
was more honored than the ex-slave Juan Gualberto Gomez, one of Cuba's
finest patriots and most brilliant journalists. "The war began in
Oriente" wrote Man de Ia Cruz, "because there the negro is loved,
not feared." And the independence assemblage at Guaimaro voted immediate
emancipation. The blacks struggled far more persistently for national
independence than did the whites.
 |
With
national freedom, the whites, though grateful to the black, were in
a superior economic and intellectual condition and controlled most
of the wealth. The black people, but recently lifted from slavery,
less educated, was kept in subordinate position. Although the average
white Creole hotly disclaims any such thing as color prejudices. A
little conversation with the white Cuban soon reveals the real barrier
that exists. |
In 1849 the
Cuban Economic Society used the phrase, "150 negroes produce 400
tons of sugar." And as Márquez Sterling adds nearly a century
later, "The slave served as the machine. Machines later freed the
slaves, but did not free the blacks; and this most miserable slavery which
weighs down the spirit of the country, from which both blacks and whites
suffer, spreads through the land, carpeted with sugar-cane, ignorance,
superstition and poverty."
Back
Grounds
Although here and there a bit generalised ... but to give an idea ...
Lucumis
Fernando Ortiz: "On the eastern part of the island, are found
the Lucumis, from the slave coast along the Calabar River, a people with
well-formed features, noses thin, not sunk as in other groups, a serious,
proud clan, less joyous than the ingrained melancholia leads to an exaggerated
number of suicides; but they are quick and sensitive. They believe faithfully
in brujo, black magic, and can do wondrous things either for good or ill,
with toe-nails, pieces of clothing. vindictive pins and other implements.
Occasionally a hill-billy still tattoos vertical slits down cheek and
arm."
Yoruba
Cuba's
transformation into a sugar-growing island is intimately linked via the
slave trade to African history. It coincided with the collapse of the
Oyo empire of Nigeria after decades of internal strife among the Yoruba
and warfare with their Fulani neighbors to the north and Dahomeans to
the west. Many Yoruba were taken to Cuba very late in the slave trade,
especially during the years 1820-1840, when they formed a majority of
(Africans) sent across the Atlantic from the ports of the Bight of Benin.
The included several Yoruba-speaking subgroups, including the Ketu, Ijesha,
Egbado, Oyo, Nago and others.
 |
In
Cuba, Yoruba speakers became known by the collective term Lucumí,
after a Yoruba phrase, oloku mi, meaning my friend. As a result of
slavery, the lineages and kin groups that had supported worship of
the various orisha were disrupted. A new religion called santería
arose, which grouped together many orisha, each of which became identified
with a Catholic saint on whose day festivals would be held. From the
ethnically-based cabildos of colonial Cuba, santería became
organized into individual "houses," known as casas de ocha.
It has since spread far beyond its original ethnic base, both within
and outside of Cuba. |
Entry into
santiería is through a long process of initiation, during which
an orisha is seated in the head of an iyawó, or initiate. As in
other African-based religions in the Americas, music plays a critical
role in bringing the orisha to dance in the heads of the initiates, and
in creating and sustaining the ritual setting. The most sacred instruments
among the Lucumí are the trio of batá drums, which when
consecrated are called fundamento and are said to hold an indwelling deity
called Añá. Batá are played at initiation ceremonies,
in the presentations of initiates to the drums, at funerals, in ceremonies
honoring the ancestors and in others that call for sacralized drums. Other
Lucumí styles include ensembles of beaded gourds, known as abwe
or chekeré, which are played, for example, in ceremonies celebrating
ritual "birthdays;" and sets of bembé drums, usually
cylindrical in shape, which may show non-Yoruba influences and are usually
found in rural areas.
 |
In
the 1950s there was an increased infusion of Lucumí ritual
styles and subject matter into the Cuban popular music mainstream.
One important event was the release of an LP called Santero, which
featured batá drummers from the Havana area and such popular
singers as Mercedes Valdes, Celia Cruz and others, all singing in
Lucumí. Celia Cruz and Gina Martin also recorded songs in
conjunto format that were homages to different orisha. |
More recently,
the Cuban group Mezcla, featuring the great akpon (Lucumí song
leader) Lázaro Ros, has been recording a new ritual-popular music,
some in the style of French Caribbean zouk, some influenced by jazz and
rock.
Batá
are a set of three double-headed, hourglass-shaped drums. The largest
iyá (mother), (E-Yah), is the master drum. The iyá calls
the rhythms in, calls changes and conversations. Next in size, the itótele
(means: follows completely), (E-Toe-Teh-Lay), follows the direction of
the iyá answering the conversation calls and rhythm changes. The
smallest drum okónkolo (O-Kon-Ko-Lo), sometimes referred to as
Omele (O-May-Lay (strong child)), , for the most part plays ostinato patterns,
also changing rhythms from the calls of the iyá.
| Iyesá |
 |
The
Iyesá are a Lucumí "nation" still recognized
as having a distinct musical style. Iyesá drums are played
with sticks, usually in groups of three, with a fourth drum added
for certain toques. Their combined rhythmic patterns are more unified
than the three-way conversation among the batá drums. Agogó,
or dance gongs, of different pitches that play interlocking patterns
accompany these drums.
The
last surviving Iyesá cabildo in Cuba is San Juan Batista,
which was founded in 1854 in the City of Matanzas. |
Carabali
Ortiz stated: "The Carabali, also from the Calabar River, is
below medium height and cuivrée, i.e., less black, in complexion.
He is industrious, faithful, economical and independent. Originally worshipers
of the shark, they were the originators in Cuba of the religious system
of ñañigo, an offshoot of voodooism, involving in Africa,
perhaps, human sacrifice, but changed in the New World to goat or cock
sacrifice. Their ancient song, dance and sacrifice have been pre served
in secret benefit associations, logias, the inner rites of which could
be successfully screened from prying whites and the authorities."
And: "These
logias spread to all the black groups in Cuba. Rival organizations developed;
gradually they became maffias, produced feuds, slave revolts and other
difficulties. On the lower social fringes whites, coming in contact with
ñañigo, formed their own logias, taking over the black rites.
These Carabalí lodges played their part in the independence movement
and have had frequent political importance."
 |
Also
Ortiz's words: "Up until the present Machado government, the ñañigo devotees performed part of their
ceremonies in public; they dressed up in odd costumes, with flowers,
fiber collars, royal headdresses and, carrying enormous lanterns,
danced and sang through the streets. These harmless and joyous demonstrations
are now forbidden as indecent by white officials, dwarfed by the black
people greater vitality and honest joy; even the lodges, though still
existing, are illegal." |
Ortiz's words
are of course oudated you have to see them in his time frame, we see things
differently today ...
In the first
place it was part of a process of making the Africans hate each other,
so they wouldn't rise up against slavery and kill the whites.... the "divide
and rule" tactic. Secondly this kind of anthropology is now VERY
out of date and seen as so stereotypical it verges on racism... it is
no more possible to look at a black Cuban and say "they are a Carabali
or a Kongo or Lucumi" than it is to look at a black African and say
"they are definitely Mozambican" ... all racial groups have
people who are 'typical' of their group, but ALSO has people who don't.
These kinds of description are not only stereotypes - sometimes insulting
- they are also tied in with a very long and shameful history of using
physical anthropology (describing the way people look) as the basis for
discriminating against them. (Think of the Darwin-era scientists like
Francis Galton, who spent his life measuring black people's noses to "prove"
they were closer to apes than humans ... or the Nazis photographing the
"typical" wonderful Aryan or the "typical" Jewish
nose or the "typical" degenerate Pole or Slav. This sort of
description is not
always WRONG ... after all, it is safe to say, for instance, that afro-cubans
are normally darker-skinned than "euro-cubans" ... but it is
VERY TAINTED with bad associations of highly racist, pseudo-science.
Abakuá
In
Cuba, peoples from southeastern Nigeria and southwestern Cameroon were
known as Carabalí or Bríkamo, and they included the Ejagham,
Efik, Ibibio, and others.
The Ngbe
society became known as Abakuá, after the word Abakpa, a term by
which the Ejagham of Calabar were designated. It took root in the Havana
area and in Matanzas, where it became a considerable force in local politics.
In eastern Cuba, two Carabalí cabildos still exist in the city
of Santiago de Cuba, and play an important role in that city's carnival.
The Abakuá leopard-masker, the íreme, has practically come
to symbolize Afro-Cuban folklore.
Mandingás
Fernando Ortiz: "The most intelligent, but not the most interesting,
of the black people are the Mandingás, in northern Cuba, originally
from between the tenth and twentieth latitudes in Africa. One wing, especially
the Fulas, had considerable cultural interchange with the neighboring
Arabs; the music of both shows mutual borrowings. The Mandingás
are a tall, muscular folk, amiable and faithful; but if ill-treated, they
prove fierce and rebellious. The Yalofes, a war-like division, caused
so much trouble, their further importation as slaves was forbidden. Like
the Lucumis, the faces of the Mandingás are not so typically negroid,
nose less flat, lips less prominent; the facial angle, even by western
European standards, can be considered quite handsome."
How is it
possible to know the Mandingàs where the most intelligent? And
again Ortiz is generalising a group of human beings. To accept slavery
for me is brave and morally strong. The words: "even by European
standards" is very insulting and shows Ortiz felt himself superior
and above the black people.
Congos
& Haitians
Fernando Ortiz: "The Congos and Haitians are the blackest. The
Haitian immigrant is atrociously backward. The Congo is the best built
of all the black people, despite his clumsy facial features—sturdy,
lusciously shaped bodies quite too elegant for clothes. Both sexes display
phenomenal grace in walking and in all their movements. The Congo has
great perseverance, courage and dignity, but is refractory to education.
Sleepy and lazy, he shrugs off insults easily, and though often quickly
treacherous, is never rancorous."
Ortiz writes
that Haitians are backwards, you can ask yourself by whom's standards
and if it could be possible a white society with slaves was backwards.
Second doubtfull saying from Ortiz in this alinea is if the Congo really
was refractory to education. One can ask himself it might be possible
that Congo people under slavery didn't want their white masters' education.
Besides is it not a bit weird to say a slave was sleepy and lazy ... did
Ortiz meant the Congo-black wasn't quick enough to obey whites ...
Congo
Of
all the collective terms used to specify Afro-Cuban origins, "Congo"
encompasses the greatest diversity of peoples brought to Cuba during the
years of slavery. The names of the myriad Cuban Congo cabildos reflect
the geography of the slave trade or else include African ethnic designations.
Sometimes they bore the names of slaving ports (Loango, Benguela and Cabinda,
the last also very important for Brazil), and sometimes they specified
clan origins, such as the Nsobo (Bazombo) and Mayombe (Yombe),who also
gave their name to a Cuban-Congo religion.
 |
Members of one surviving Congo cabildo, San Antonio de los Congos
Reales in the old colonial city of Trinidad, are still performing
such archaic pantomime dances as the Danza de la Culebra (Serpent
Dance), which was well known in colonial Havana as Matar la Culebra
(Killing the Snake), and was performed by Kongo comparsas on January
6, the Day of the Kings. Many forms of contemporary Cuban music, including
many of the rumba and carnival styles, are full of Kongo references
and influences and display continuity with older Kongo forms. |
The most
common form of secular Kongo music during the 19th century incorporated
the use of Yuka drums. Played in groups of three, they were made by hollowing
out tree trunk sections of various sizes and nailing on cowhide heads.
The largest and master drum is called the caja (Kah-Hah), which in typical
Kongo fashion is held between the legs of the drummer. Another musician
plays a pair of sticks against the body of the caja, often on a piece
of tin that has been nailed to the base of the drum. This stick is called
the guagua or cajita, which may also be played on a separate instrument.
The middle drum is called the mula (Mu-Lah), and the smallest is the cachimbo
(Kah-Cheem-Bo). A guataca is played as a time-keeper, and the caja player
often wears a pair of wrist rattles.Yuka dancing featured the vacunao,
a pelvic movement also found in Kongo-derived dance styles elsewhere in
the Americas.
 |
During
the years of slavery, sugar estate owners would often sponsor Sunday
festivals, called conguerías, and invite slaves from neighboring
centrales to participate. Besides yuka drumming, which can still be
found in some parts of rural Cuba, they featured song contests between
competing soloists, called gallos, as well as makuta dances and maní,
a now obsolete combat dance roughly similar to Brazilian capoeira. |
After the
Haitian revolution, many refugees, including French planters and their
slave, fled across the narrow Windward Passage to eastern Cuba, where
they established coffee plantations in the highlands around Santiago de
Cuba. In that city and in Guantánamo, some of their former slaves
and their descendants, who had clung to their Afro-Haitian culture, established
their own cabildo-like associations, known as tumba francesa, or "French
drum." There they played Haitian-style drums and performed dances
with names such as masón and yubá (juba), similar to those
found in Haiti today, and sang in Creole.
Rumba
The
rumba is a set of rhythms and their associated dances, with three main
divisions: the yambú, the guaguancó, and the columbia. According
to some Kongo Elders, the modern rumba grew out of older rhythms that
had been played on the yuka drums, with which there are some stylistic
carry-overs: the rumba stick part is also called guagua; the wrist rattles
worn by yuka drummers also appear in some forms of rumba; and the rumba
song leader and chorus are called gallo and vasallo, respectively. The
main stylistic difference is that the lead rumba drum is always the high-pitched
quinto, the two deeper-toned support drums having taken over the ostinato
patterns. The passage of the master drum from lowest to highest pitch
may be considered an influence of European music on rumba drumming.
The three
varieties differ in instrumentation, vocal style and choreography, but
are all mimetic to some degree. The yambú is performed in slow
tempo and is often thought of as an old people's dance. The dancer's gestures
may mimic old age and/or the difficulty of daily tasks. And in yambú,
you don't perform the pelvic movement.
The guaguancó
is the modern, urban form of rumba. Its opening section, usually wordless
vocal flourish reminiscent of southern Spanish singing, is called la diana,
the Spanish word for reveille. After an elaboration of the text, called
decimar, a chorus enters with a repeated refrain in the section called
the capetillo, and here the dance element "breaks out": a couple,
dancing apart, simulates the man's pursuit of his female partner, and
her attempts to turn away and cover herself. The vacunao symbolizes his
sexual conquest.
The columbia
began in the rural areas of Matanzas, and is a male solo dance that features
many acrobatic and mimetic movements. This may be the most complex form
of rumba. In it, the dancer imitates ball players, bicyclists, cane-cutters,
and a variety of other figures. He may also reproduce steps of the Abakuá
íreme.
| Batá-rumba |
 |
The
Batá-rumba was developed in a big band setting by Los Irakere,
who added batá drums to their rhythm section. The new genre,
called son-batá or batá-rock, entered the Cuban musical
mainstream in the 1970s. Cuba has often demonstrated the gift of
developing new genres by combining or crossing pre-existing ones.
The
mozambique, for example, one of the major new rhythms to emerge
in post-revolutionary Cuba, is the result of crossing mambo with
conga. Batá-rumba creates a new kind of rhythmic complexity
by "crossing" rumba and batá drums, and by combining
Congo-based and Lucumí approaches to percussion and pulsation
patterns. |
Carnival
In
Santiago de Cuba, cabildos and neighborhood groups took to the streets
in June and July in Masked celebrations known as fiestas de mamarrachos,
which extended from St. John's Day (June 24) to St. Ann's Day (July 26).
In Havana, the cabildos held public celebrations on the Dia de los Reyes,
or Epiphany (January 6), thus creating that city's first Black carnival.
In both cities, these Catholic holidays were opportunities for the public
display of African dress, dance and musical instruments.
 |
Carnival
has of course expanded from these beginnings, adding such elements
as floats, allegorical dances, figures from contemporary popular culture,
and dance bands. Yet there is a constant re-historicizing of the event,
with reminders of its African roots. In the Havana carnival, for example,
one can still see carved guardian figures similar to those that appeared
in old cabildo processions described by Fernando Ortiz. |
In another
sort of historical reminder, carnival in Cuba now coincides with July
26, St. Ann's Day. It was on that date in 1953 that Fidel Castro and his
troops attacked the Moncada barracks in Santiago while the city was absorbed
in celebration. Cuban carnival now commemorates that event nationally.
Arará
The
people known in Cuba as the Arará came from Dahomey, what is today
the Benin Republic. They included Fon, Popo and Ewe groups, as well as
some conquered peoples to their north. Arará cabildos were founded
in Cuba as far back as the 17th century, and their names reflect regional
and ethnic differences - hence the denominations Arará Dajomé,
Arará Sabalú and Arará Magino. The second is a reference
to Savalu, a town in northern Dahomey that was conquered by the Fon. It
was inhabited by the Mahi people, recalled in the cabildo name "Magino."
Many members of the Mahi priesthood were sent into slavery in the Americas,
and they had an especially strong impact on Haiti vodun.
 |
The
name Arará is derived from the Dahomean city of Allada, and
is related to the term Rada found in Haiti and to Arrada on the
tiny island of Carriacou in the Grenadines. In both cases the name
refers to Dahomean styles of drumming. Other outposts of Dahomean
culture in the Americas include houses in the Brazilian cities of
Sáo Luis do Maranháo, Salvador, Recife and Porto Alegre.
In
Cuba the Arará were always a minority overshadowed by the
Lucumí, and their distinctive cultural identity is now in
danger of disappearing. Arará centers are still to be found
in Ciudad de Matanzas, Jovellanos, Máximo Gomez and el Perico,
all in Matanzas.
One
characteristic of Arará music is the use of hand clapping
and body percussion. |
Minas
and Gangás
Fernando Ortiz: "The Minas and Gangás are lighter in color.
The Mina is small, with a low brow, deep-set flat nose, prominent jaw
and pronounced lips. He is delicate, impressionable, rather cowardly.
The Gangás, from the Calabar slave coast, though usually considered
very inferior, are most interesting. They are a long-headed, large-breasted
Teople with vigorous physiques. Among them are still found traces of the
old Majá, or snake-worship cult."
The history
of slavery and racism against blacks is so long and so ugly - and it has
always relied to much on seeing & describing black people only in
terms of their bodies, not their minds - as machines for working rather
than as people with feelings, families, memories, skills, intelligence
and so on - that it is a very sensitive point which you must realise when
reading Ortiz's views.
Today
According
to official statistics, 30 percent of Cuba's population is now black,
the rest white. However, that will say; there is a difference in approaching
what is black. When living in the USA with 1 drop black blood in your
body, one used to say "thats a back person", living in Cuba
with 1 drop white blood in your body, one used to say "He/she is
a mulato/a" and for Cuban standards, in that case you are not black.
I think in this case we beetr say 30% of the Cuban population is 100%
white, the other 70% is black or mulato/a.
 |
Today's
Cuban Black Culture
Much of Cuban culture is definitely negro in origin-music, folklore,
dancing, some of the food. Music is a golden net which entangles the
feet of every Cuban; the negro has given Cuban music a cachet recognized
the world over. Father of our modern jazz, Cuban music has reached
refined interpretation for both Cuban and Paris concert hall and operetta
in the work of Moises Simón, who also has written some of the
best danzón tunes, based on negro melodies, and is best known
in this country for his Peanut Vender |
In the plastic
arts, negro influence, though as yet twice removed, also enters. The Cuban
intelligentsia took up fevently the vanguardista movement in sculptoring;
this has influenced the work of such artists as Sicre but especially Navarro.
Many of the vanguardistas who might not have been so receptive of the
new tendencies had they been derived directly from African-Cuban sources,
unwittingly hailed with enthusiasm African forms delivered via Paris;
but the basic black inspiration in them has perhaps caused such work to
be more intelligible, hence more at home in Cuba, than in other New World
Latin countries.
The Afro-Cuban
possesses little literary tradition. In Africa literature was monopolized
by a special class which carried on the group traditions. This protected
class naturally never fell into the hands of the slave-traders, hence,
the negro was brought to the New World shorn of his literary heritage,
though popular song and dance and many old memories have been preserved.
These have been recorded by, among others, that indefatigable folklorist,
Dr. Fernando Ortiz, forced into exile because of the intolerance of the
Machado regime.
The first
notable negro in Cuban belles-lettres was the ill-fated Gabriel de Ia
Concepción Valdès, who besides flaming love-poems and proletarian
cantos, which made him the idol of all Cuba and carried his fame to far
Hispanic lands, was a salty political critic. His biting polemics landed
him in a prison cell, from which he continued to pour forth plaintive
lyrics. Finally he was executed at the early age of thirty-five in the
year 1844.
A group
of modern younger negroes has recently become literary conscious and are
turning out interesting work. The journalist, Gustavo E. Urrutia, for
the first time, has turned public attention to basic facts in the black
problems of Cuba. The poems of Regino Pedroso, though inspired by the
modern proletarian movement, have definite black roots, form and phraseology.
Of them all, the most outstanding is Nicolás Guillén, whose
slim but brilliant book of verse, Sóngoro Coson go, is a violent,
singing, lilting outburst of the black's heart. The lines swing to the
rhythm of the rumba, of ñañigo dancing, to the beat of drums
and rattles and dusky hands pounding out jungle music. Guillén
represents a complete rupture with traditional Castilian verse-forms and
a definite attempt to express black sentiments, thoughts and life in typical
Afro-Cuban Spanish. Though not prolific, he has written the most vital
poetry of modern Cuba.
Wilfredo
Lam
1902,
Sagua la Grande, Cuba; d. 1982, Paris
Wifredo
Oscar de la Concepción Lam y Castilla was born December 8,
1902, in Sagua la Grande, Cuba. In 1916, his family moved to Havana, where
he attended the Escuela de Bellas Artes. During the early 1920s, he exhibited
at the Salón de la Asociación de Pintores y Escultores in
Havana. In 1923, Lam moved to Madrid, where he studied at the studio of
Fernando Alvarez de Sotomayor, the Director of the Museo del Prado (and
a teacher of Salvador Dalí). In 1929, Lam married Eva Piriz, who
died of tuberculosis two years later, as did their young son. This tragic
event may have contributed to the dark and brooding appearance of much
of Lam’s later work.
Fernando
Ortiz
July 17, 1881
Ethnologist, folklorist, and historian Fernando
Ortiz was born in Havana. He graduated in 1900 with a degree
in law from the University of Barcelona. He founded several societies
and magazines. He has written numerous books including Contrapunteo cubano
del tabaco y el azúcar (1940), and La africana de la música
cubana (1950) among others. The University of Havana gave him the title
of Doctor Honoris Causa. He died in Havana on April 10, 1969.
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Fernando
Ortiz was the first person to write using the term "afrocubano".
He was a prolific writer on many aspects of African Cuban culture
but has very little of his writings in English, with the exceptions
noted in his bibliography and a new book of studies on Ortiz which
includes a biography in English and French and a complete bibliography:
Miscelánea II. This is a very well made book, worth getting,
and the product of a NY - Havana collaboration we need to see more
of. If you read Spanish, get Ortiz's other books! |
Ortiz, born Fernando
Ortiz Fernández, is known as the Tercer Descubridor (Third
Discoverer) of Cuba for his groundbreaking writings and research exploring
all aspects of Cuban politics and culture, in particular the deeply-rooted
traditions of the island's Afro-Cuban population, which had been ignored
by previous scholars. Although Ortiz published hundreds of articles and
dozens of books in his lifetime, little of his work is available in the
United States or in English translation. By publishing Miscelánea
II, InterAmericas offers a compendium of carefully selected and edited
texts intended to inspire further research into Ortiz's impressive body
of work. As Jane Gregory Rubin, director of InterAmericas, writes in her
introduction: "There is an urgent need to broaden the public's knowledge
of the Ortiz materials, particularly through translation into English
of the major works on the culture of the African diaspora."
| Quote |

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The
patriotic mulato Maceo
said on being asked if he resented being classed as a negro:
"'When the black man is not ashamed to be black,
there'll be no shame in being black." |
Interesting
Links:
Sources:
Recommended
Books:
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