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What is Carnival?
Where did the word
“carnival” come from?
African
influences on carnival traditions
Carnival in Trinidad and Tobago
Creating a carnival production
The Birth of the Steelband
Uniting
the World
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History of
Carnival
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The History of Carnival
What is carnival?
It is an annual celebration of life found in many countries of the world.
And in fact, by learning more about carnival we can learn more about
ourselves and a lot about accepting and understanding other cultures.
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Where did the word
“carnival” come from?
Hundred and hundreds of years ago, the followers of the
Catholic religion in Italy started the tradition of holding a wild costume
festival right before the first day of Lent. Because Catholics are not
supposed to eat meat during Lent, they called their festival,
carnevale — which means “to put away the meat.” As time passed,
carnivals in Italy became quite famous; and in fact the practice spread to
France, Spain, and all the Catholic countries in Europe. Then as the
French, Spanish, and Portuguese began to take control of the Americas and
other parts of the world, they brought with them their tradition of
celebrating carnival. |
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African
influences on carnival traditions
Important to Caribbean
festival arts are the ancient African traditions of parading and moving in
circles through villages in costumes and masks. Circling villages was
believed to bring good fortune, to heal problems, and chill out angry
relatives who had died and passed into the next world. Carnival traditions
also borrow from the African tradition of putting together natural objects
(bones, grasses, beads, shells, fabric) to create a piece of sculpture, a
mask, or costume — with each object or combination of objects representing
a certain idea or spiritual force.
Feathers
were frequently used by Africans in their motherland on masks and
headdresses as a symbol of our ability as humans to rise above problems,
pains, heartbreaks, illness — to travel to another world to be reborn and
to grow spiritually. Today, we see feathers used in many, many forms in
creating carnival costumes.
African
dance and music traditions transformed the early carnival celebrations in
the Americas, as African drum rhythms, large puppets, stick fighters, and
stilt dancers began to make their appearances in the carnival festivities.
In many
parts of the world, where Catholic Europeans set
up colonies and entered into the slave trade, carnival took
root. Brazil, once a Portuguese colony, is famous for its carnival, as is
Mardi Gras in Louisiana (where African-Americans mixed with French
settlers and Native Americans). Carnival celebrations are now found
throughout the Caribbean in Barbados, Jamaica, Grenada, Dominica, Haiti,
Cuba, St. Thomas, St. Marten; in Central and South America in Belize,
Panama, Brazil; and in large cities in Canada and the U.S. where Caribbean
people have settled, including Brooklyn, Miami, and Toronto. Even San
Francisco has a carnival!
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Carnival in Trinidad and Tobago
Trinidad's carnival is
a beautiful example of how carnival can unite the world. For in this small
nation, the beliefs and traditions of many cultures have come together;
and for a brief five days each year, the whole country forgets their
differences to celebrate life!
Like many
other nations under colonial rule, the history of Native Americans and
African people in Trinidad is a brutal, sad story. Spain and England at
different times both claimed Trinidad as their colonies. Under British
rule, the French settled in Trinidad, bringing with them their slaves,
customs, and culture. By 1797, 14,000 French settlers came to live in
Trinidad, consisting of about 2,000 whites and 12,000 slaves. Most of the
native peoples (often called the Amerindians) who were the first people to
live in Trinidad, died from forced labor and illness.
Carnival
was introduced to Trinidad around 1785, as the French settlers began to
arrive. The tradition caught on quickly, and fancy balls were held where
the wealthy planters put on masks, wigs, and beautiful dresses and danced
long into the night. The use of masks had special meaning for the slaves,
because for many African peoples, masking is widely used in their rituals
for the dead. Obviously banned from the masked balls of the French, the
slaves would hold their own little carnivals in their backyards — using
their own rituals and folklore, but also imitating their masters’ behavior
at the masked balls.
For
African people, carnival became a way to express their power as
individuals, as well as their rich cultural traditions. After 1838 (when
slavery was abolished), the freed Africans began to host their own
carnival celebrations in the streets that grew more and more elaborate,
and soon became more popular than the balls.
Today,
carnival in Trinidad is like a mirror that reflects the faces the many
immigrants who have come to this island nation from Europe, Africa, India,
and China. African, Asian, and American Indian influences have been
particularly strong.
Carnival
is such an important aspect of life in Trinidad that many schools believe
that sponsoring a carnival band is a way to teach young people about their
roots and culture. In Trinidad’s Kiddies Carnival, hundreds of schools and
community organizations participate! In this way, communities work
together to develop stronger friendships and greater respect for the many
cultures that make up Trinidad. |
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Creating a carnival production
In order to put a
carnival band together, it takes many weeks of welding; sewing; gluing;
applying feathers, sequins, foil papers, glitter and lots of creativity,
energy, and patience. The first step is to come up with a theme or overall
concept for the band and to develop costume illustrations for each section
of dancers. Costumes are then sewn, decorated, and fitted to each
individual dancer. All this creative activity takes place in what are
referred to in the Caribbean as “mas camps,” where teamwork and
organization are crucial to creating an award-winning production.
The larger
costumes are usually more difficult to design and build. Huge frames are
created by bending wire into shapes, then covering with paper mâché, foam,
and other materials. Physics play an important role, as the costume must
be able to move and dance across stages and streets, and not fall apart!
Many different forms of decorations and materials (natural and man-made)
are used to transform the costume into a dream of the mind’s eye. Created primarily from wire, netting, foam, and
paint, these awesome costumes mesmerize and dazzle spectators.
One
of the most incredible artists working today in Trinidad is
Peter Minshall. He is acclaimed internationally
as the foremost artist working in the field of “dancing mobiles,” a form
of performance art that combines the three-dimensional quality of
large-scale sculpture with the dramatic and choreographic expressiveness
of a live human performer. As Minshall has noted, “The dancing mobile is
one of many forms to grow out of the masquerade tradition of Trinidad
Carnival.”
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The Birth of the Steelband
One of the exciting
aspects of Caribbean carnival is the appearance in the early 20th century
of the steel pan, which are instruments made from used oil drums that have
been cut off on one end and then shaped, pounded, and tuned. Every
carnival season, steelbands, composed of one to two hundred pan players,
practice for months on end. Ready with their tunes, these steelbands take
to the stadiums and the streets, to create some of the most beautiful
music in the world.
The
history of the steelband in Trinidad and Tobago is directly tied to the
banning of all types of drumming in Trinidad in the 1880’s. Though this
ban was not readily accepted and rioting resulted, ultimately Africans
applied and readapted their tradition of the drum to create new forms and
mediums of music, including the
tamboo bamboo, a rhythmic ensemble made up of
bamboo joints beaten together and pounded on the ground. Biscuit tins and
dustbins were manipulated and crafted into instruments, becoming the first
“pans.” To explore the roots of pan and understand that this phenomenal
music came about through years of struggle and sacrifice.
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Uniting
the World
Carnival arts offers
all of us a dynamic tool for self-expression and exploration, a tool to
seek out our roots, a tool to develop new forms of looking at the world
and its cultures, and finally, a tool to unite the world, to discover what
we all have in common, and to celebrate what makes us different. The power
and creativity that underlies these art forms can transform lives. Join
hands with All Ah We, and together we will dance the song of life!
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The History of Carnival
was provided by
www.allahwe.org |
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