| #11 - Posted 14 April 2009, 6:23 PM | |
Location: United States, ø„¸¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨¸„ø¤º°¨ Join date: June 2008 Member #: 926 Posts: 2244 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture David Basil discuss African History David Basil discuss African History ø„¸¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨¸„ø¤º°¨ ¨°º¤ø„¸INFINITY„ø¤º°¨ „ø¤º°¨FOREVER`°º¤ø |
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| #12 - Posted 14 April 2009, 6:40 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: October 2008 Member #: 1478 Posts: 849 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: yumnuk3 previously said: Young Dominicans Embrace Their African Traditions On the poorly lit stage of a public school auditorium on 183rd Street, a dozen or so young people learn dances that date back more than two hundred years. These dances and music are still used by some in the Dominican community to celebrate and communicate with their revered saints. But a new generation of artists is borrowing the old rhythms to reconnect with their Afro-Dominican roots - roots that until recently had been denied. More now than reggaeton, in the Dominican community of New York City palos music is hot. “We’ll be in the middle of a party giving a workshop on palos,” said Ariel Ferreira, a young real estate broker who has been dancing with Alianza Dominicana’s Conjunto Folklorico troup since he was a teenager. “I take it personally. If you do it the wrong way, if you’re not educated, I will educate you.” During the rehearsal of a tale from a collection called the Colonial Caves, the Conjunto Folklorico shows the climax of religious rituals, where a saint’s spirit overtakes a person intoxicated by tobacco, rum and the beat of long drums called palos. In the show, the dancer called caballo, or horse, enters a state of trance and adopts that saint’s personality. If, for example, Saint Anne, a feminine and flirtatious saint, possesses the caballo, he or she may put on jewelry and makeup and move and dance in a sensual way. The performance of these rituals in the Dominican Republic’s towns and villages was for many years attributed to the Haitian invasion of the country in the 1800s. In reality, these traditions originate with African slaves, who were brought to the island by Spanish colonizers. By adopting Catholic saints to disguise their African gods, a practice called syncretism, the slaves were able to practice their religion in the open. But it has taken the Dominican people many years to understand and accept their African heritage. Dr. Milagros Ricourt, chair of Latin American Studies at CUNY Lehman College in the Bronx, explained that Dominican intellectuals have sought a distinction between black Haiti and Spanish Dominican Republic since the birth of the country. They established Dominicans as Catholic, with a Spanish heritage and good moral values, she said. In contrast, Haitians were seen as blacks from Africa who had a satanic religion and a “language that isn’t a language” and who were immoral and filthy. “I don’t even believe that people doing that relate their practices to Africa,” said Dr. Ricourt of the those who take part in Afro-Dominican religious ceremonies. “Is coming, who knows, from Jupiter?” In the diaspora, Dominicans recognized and understood their African past after encountering racism and discrimination in the U.S. It is a sense of pride and a deep understanding of his African self that drives percussionist Joan D’Leon-Metz to study, learn and teach palos and other Afro-Dominican rhythms. “This cannot die,” said D’Leon Metz. “This is part of my culture. And I gotta learn it, I gotta absorb it and keep the tradition and show it to the next generation.” So, in a Bronx apartment with a bedroom just big enough for a twin bed, dresser and several kinds of drums, he sits and learns rhythms once pounded out by slaves who had toiled in the sugarcane under the tropical Dominican sun. Another artist who feels a personal responsibility to spread this type music is singer-songwriter Irka Mateo, who recently moved from the Dominican Republic to Brooklyn to record her first album. “I really wanted to learn my roots. And for me it was really, really important to know what being Dominican was,” said Mateo. “By the music, I learned to be Dominican. And I fell in love with our culture.” And Dominican-Americans are responding to the passion of artists like D’Leon Metz and Mateo. On Tuesday nights he performs at La Cueva de la Amistad, a restaurant on Broadway in the Bronx, for a young set who have a new interest in the old drums. Young Dominicans in New York are just as happy dancing palos as they are breaking down on provocative reggaeton moves. Some are even surprised at how sensual palos dancing can be. “I see my parents dancing palo, and it’s the same thing as reggaeton, except they dress in white,” said Marlene Alba, member of the Domincan Club at Lehman College. “That’s fun. I’m like, ‘Go, Mami!’” Dr. Ricourt, of Lehman College, said a change in the attitudes of Dominicans back on the island might come in the near future as the diaspora returns home and brings back their new-found pride and identity. “I’m Dominican in many different ways, but it’s a Dominicaness rooted in the true meaning of being Dominican. I’m not in denial anymore,” said Dr. Ricourt. “I see my nose and I don’t want to go and do plastic surgery.” Ferreira, the dancer of the Conjunto Folklorico, likened the pride he has found for his heritage to the West African Adrinka symbol for a bird called the Sankofa. The bird is looking backwards while it flies. “You never know where you are going without knowing where you came from,” he said. http://digitalstoragespace.com/08/dominicandances/article.html Cool Beans Mr Yumnuk3. Edited on 4/14/2009 6:40 PM by DominicanLady. |
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| #13 - Posted 14 April 2009, 7:48 PM | |
Location: United States, ø„¸¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨¸„ø¤º°¨ Join date: June 2008 Member #: 926 Posts: 2244 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture DominicanLady previously said: Cool Beans Mr Yumnuk3. Thank you, once again....You never know where you are going without knowing where you been. Edited on 4/14/2009 8:24 PM by yumnuk3. ø„¸¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨¸„ø¤º°¨ ¨°º¤ø„¸INFINITY„ø¤º°¨ „ø¤º°¨FOREVER`°º¤ø |
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| #14 - Posted 14 April 2009, 10:18 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: October 2008 Member #: 1478 Posts: 849 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: yumnuk3 previously said: DominicanLady previously said: Cool Beans Mr Yumnuk3. Thank you, once again....You never know where you are going without knowing where you been. You said it baby...... |
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| #15 - Posted 15 April 2009, 9:45 AM | |
Location: United States Join date: September 2008 Member #: 1459 Posts: 49 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture I don't care about this African crap it's only for chopos, Palo music what a bunch of ignorants. The only ancient traditions Dominican people should embrace are the Tainos and Spanish, Tainos being the original inhabitants of our country and the last time I checked our country is not in Africa. I'm glad that my whole family feels the way I do and all my Dominican friends share this same opinion. |
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| #16 - Posted 15 April 2009, 9:53 AM | |
Location: United States Join date: October 2008 Member #: 1478 Posts: 849 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: DominicanForWhiteWomen previously said: I don't care about this African crap it's only for chopos, Palo music what a bunch of ignorants. The only ancient traditions Dominican people should embrace are the Tainos and Spanish, Tainos being the original inhabitants of our country and the last time I checked our country is not in Africa. I'm glad that my whole family feels the way I do and all my Dominican friends share this same opinion. You should seriously consider re-visiting your history..... All one has to do is look at your user name to get an idea about you and your statement. |
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| #17 - Posted 15 April 2009, 12:58 PM | |
Location: United States, ø„¸¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨¸„ø¤º°¨ Join date: June 2008 Member #: 926 Posts: 2244 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: DominicanForWhiteWomen previously said: I don't care about this African crap it's only for chopos, Palo music what a bunch of ignorants. The only ancient traditions Dominican people should embrace are the Tainos and Spanish, Tainos being the original inhabitants of our country and the last time I checked our country is not in Africa. I'm glad that my whole family feels the way I do and all my Dominican friends share this same opinion. He has a mind like a steel trap - always closed! ![]() You should do some soul-searching. Maybe you'll find one. ø„¸¨°º¤ø„¸¸„ø¤º°¨¸„ø¤º°¨ ¨°º¤ø„¸INFINITY„ø¤º°¨ „ø¤º°¨FOREVER`°º¤ø |
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| #18 - Posted 15 April 2009, 1:10 PM | |
Location: Canada, home safe Join date: January 2008 Member #: 268 Posts: 2673 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: yumnuk3 previously said: Quote: DominicanForWhiteWomen previously said: I don't care about this African crap it's only for chopos, Palo music what a bunch of ignorants. The only ancient traditions Dominican people should embrace are the Tainos and Spanish, Tainos being the original inhabitants of our country and the last time I checked our country is not in Africa. I'm glad that my whole family feels the way I do and all my Dominican friends share this same opinion. He has a mind like a steel trap - always closed! ![]() You should do some soul-searching. Maybe you'll find one. DominicanForWhiteWomen amazing I wonder what kind of education you have, Latina, Dominican women are beautiful, you suffer from an extreme complex of inferiority, you need help , go to the nearest hospital. We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope. |
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| #19 - Posted 15 April 2009, 1:12 PM | |
Location: United States, New York City Join date: February 2008 Member #: 411 Posts: 4070 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: yumnuk3 previously said: Quote: DominicanForWhiteWomen previously said: I don't care about this African crap it's only for chopos, Palo music what a bunch of ignorants. The only ancient traditions Dominican people should embrace are the Tainos and Spanish, Tainos being the original inhabitants of our country and the last time I checked our country is not in Africa. I'm glad that my whole family feels the way I do and all my Dominican friends share this same opinion. He has a mind like a steel trap - always closed! ![]() You should do some soul-searching. Maybe you'll find one. Ese tiguere ta' pasao. Merengue- music of african origin mangu - dish of african origin mayimbe-word of african origin Our music, our foods, our vocabulary, our collective DNA, all have the stamp of Africa on them. If you remove that ingredient we are no longer Dominicans. "Don't ask me who's influenced me. A lion is made up of the lambs he's digested, and I've been reading all my life."-Charles de Gaulle |
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| #20 - Posted 15 April 2009, 1:12 PM | |
Location: United States Join date: October 2008 Member #: 1478 Posts: 849 | RE: Dominicans Celebrating African Culture Quote: yumnuk3 previously said: Quote: DominicanForWhiteWomen previously said: I don't care about this African crap it's only for chopos, Palo music what a bunch of ignorants. The only ancient traditions Dominican people should embrace are the Tainos and Spanish, Tainos being the original inhabitants of our country and the last time I checked our country is not in Africa. I'm glad that my whole family feels the way I do and all my Dominican friends share this same opinion. He has a mind like a steel trap - always closed! ![]() You should do some soul-searching. Maybe you'll find one. OMG!!! That S**T was Dope!!! Edited on 4/15/2009 1:14 PM by DominicanLady. |
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