Afro-Bolivians

Afro-Bolivians are Bolivian people of Sub-Saharan African heritage and therefore the descriptive "Afro-Bolivian" may refer to historical or cultural elements in Bolivia thought to emanate from their community. It can also refer to the combining of African and other cultural elements found in Bolivian society such as religion, music, language, the arts, and class culture. The Afro-Bolivians are recognized as one of the constituent ethnic groups of Bolivia by the country's government, and are ceremonially led by a king who traces his descent back to a line of monarchs that reigned in Africa during the medieval period. They numbered 432,000 according to the 2012 census.[1]

Afro-Bolivians
Afroboliviano
An Afro-Bolivian woman dressed in traditional Andean clothing in Coroico
Total population
23,330-100,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
Los Yungas
Languages
Spanish
Religion
CatholicismTraditional
Related ethnic groups
West Africans, Central Africans, Afro-Latin Americans and Bolivians

History of slavery in Bolivia

Map of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. Slaves from Bolivia were often bought from port cities of the Spanish colonies.

In 1544, the Spanish Conquistadors discovered the silver mines in a city now called Potosí, which is on the base of Cerro Rico. They began to enslave the natives as workers in the mines. However, the health of the natives working in the mines became very poor, so the Spanish began to bring in enslaved Sub-Saharan Africans to work in the mines. Slaves were brought as early as the 16th century in Bolivia to work in mines.[2] In Potosí during the 17th century 30,000 Africans were brought to work in the mines from which the total population of Potosí which numbered around 200,000.[3] Slaves were more expensive in Bolivia then other parts of the Spanish colonies costing upwards to 800 pesos.[4] This was due to the fact that they had to be bought from slave ports in the coastal region of the Spanish empire and had to trek from cities like Cartagena, Montevideo, and Buenos Aires to Bolivia.[5]

The National Mint where mills would press silver ingots, extracted by slave labor, to make coins.

Slaves were put to work in difficult conditions. Some slaves working in the mines survived no more than a few months. Initially, the slaves were not used to working at such a high altitude. Many of these Native and African workers' lives were cut short because of the toxic smelter fumes and mercury vapors they inhaled while working the mines. Slaves worked in the mines for 4 months on average. As such they had to be blindfolded upon leaving the mines to protect their eyes, which had become adapted to darkness.[6]

The mine of Cerro Rico where both Indigenous and African slave labor was used to mine for precious metals.

Although it was a requirement for Natives and Africans over 18 years of age to work in the mines for 12-hour shifts, younger children were still reputed to be put to work in the mines. These children worked fewer hours; however, they were still exposed to the same extremely harsh conditions of all the miners, including asbestos, toxic gases, cave-ins, and explosions. It is estimated that as many as eight million Africans and Natives died from working the mines between 1545, when the Spaniards first put the Natives to work, until 1825, the end of the colonial period.[7]

A coca plantation in the Yungas region of Bolivia in 1924 where historically cultivation had been done using slave labor.

Many newly brought slaves died due to harsh conditions and weather. The Spaniards' way of fortifying the slaves against the conditions in the mines was to provide them with coca leaves to chew. By chewing coca leaves, the slaves numbed their senses to the cold, as well as dampening the feeling of hunger and alleviating altitude sickness.[8] Just like the mines of Potosí, coca plantations became a cash-crop of the region. Thousands of slaves were shipped to cultivate and process coca leaves on Haciendas, like the ancestors of Julio Pinedo.[9]

The Yungas

MtDNA haplogroups and continental ancestry based on AIMs. Samples are from Yungas (left) and Tocaña (right).

After their emancipation in the year 1827 (although its enforcement being postponed to 1851),[10] Afro-Bolivians would relocate to a place called the Yungas. The Yungas, which is not far north from the city of La Paz, is where most of the country's coca is grown. In parts of the Yungas such as Coroico, Mururata, Chicaloma, Calacala-Coscoma, and Irupana are a large number of Bolivians of African heritage. Before the Bolivians relocated to the Yungas, it was a place mostly inhabited by indigenous Aymara people and mestizos (European and Native mixed people).[11]

Culture

Saya music

Afro-Bolivian saya group called The Tigers of Africa in a Celebration of the Afro-descendants in La Paz, Bolivia (April 2018).

The biggest African influence in Bolivian culture is Saya music or La Saya. The word saya originates from Kikongo nsaya, referring to the act of singing while performing communal work. Although Saya is growing in popularity in Bolivia it is still very misunderstood. The reason for this lack of understanding of saya is because the interpretation of the instruments as well as the rhythm is very peculiar. It involves Andean instruments incorporated with African percussion. The primary instrument is the drum, which was passed on by their African ancestors, along with gourds, shakers, and even jingles bells that are attached to their clothing on the ankle area.[12]

An example of a traditional Afro-Bolivian saya mask.

During the performance of saya, the Afro-Bolivians wear Aymara style clothing. The women wear a bright multi-colored blouse with ribbons, a multi-colored skirt called a "pollera", with a "manta" (back cover) in their hand, and a bowler hat. The men on the other hand, wear a hat, feast shirt, an Aymara style sash around the waist, woolen thick cloth pants called "bayeta pants", and sandals.[13]

An Afro-Bolivian girl in traditional clothing dancing saya in Coroico.

Every rhythm of Saya begins with the beating of a jingle bell by the Caporal (foreman) who guides the dance. This Caporal (also called capataz) guides the dancers with a cudgel (whip) in hand, decorated pants, and jingle bells near the ankles. The women, who have their own guide during this dance, sing while moving their hips, shaking their hands, as well as dialoguing with the men who play the bass drum and coancha.[14]

Caporales

Caporales dancers in modernity from Bolivia. (2016)

Caporales is a dance popular in the Andean region of Bolivia. It gained popularity in 1969 by the Estrada Pacheco brothers, inspired by the character of the 'Caporal' or "overseer" of which, historically black slaves, usually mixed race, wore boots and held a whip, the dance originates from the region of the Yungas in Bolivia. However, elements of the dance (such as the costumes) were of European origin.[15]

Morenada

An example of a Morenada costume from Bolivia showcased at the International Slavery Museum.

Morenada is a folkloric dance in Bolivia. The dance originated with sufferings of the African slaves brought to Bolivia in order to work in the Silver Mines of Potosí. The enormous tongue of the dark masks was meant to represent the physical state of these mines workers and the rattling of the Matracas are frequently associated with the rattling of the slaves' chains and satirizing "white men".[16][17]

Language

Afro-Bolivians have traditionally maintained their own creole language, with links to earlier Bozal Spanish.[18][19]

Afro-Bolivian monarchy

Cultural flag of Afro-Bolivians and the Afro-Bolivian Monarchy

The Afro-Bolivian Royal House is a ceremonial monarchy officially recognized as part of the Plurinational State in Bolivia. The royal house are the descendants of a line that was brought to Bolivia as slaves.[20] The founding monarch, Uchicho, was allegedly of Kongo and Senegalese origin, and was brought to the Hacienda of the Marquis de Pinedo, in the area of Los Yungas in what is now La Paz Department. Other slaves allegedly recognized him as a man of regal background (a prince from the ancient Kingdom of Kongo[21]) when seeing his torso exposed with royal tribal marks only held by royalty; he was later crowned in 1823. The monarchy still survives today and the current monarch, King Julio Pinedo, is a direct descendant of Uchicho.[22]

Keeping the culture

A poster of an Afroyunguera (Afro-Bolivians from Las Yungas) Cultural Program focusing on preserving cultural rhythms and expressions.

Although these Afro-Bolivians were free, they still had a difficult battle in trying to maintain their culture. Many elements of their culture began to disappear and become endangered. They had to fight very strongly against the colonial aggression and exclusion of their post-emancipation culture. Aspects such as feasts, their creole language (that has since decreolized), religion that survived through colonialism have since gone extinct, culturally, although fragments remain.[23] Afro-Bolivians due to isolation from much of Bolivia speak a dialect of Bolivian Spanish, akin to African-American Vernacular English in the United States.[24][25][19][18] Afro-Bolivians, in addition to being Roman Catholic incorporate elements of African diasporic religions such as rituals in the Macumba and Voodoo religions have influence their practice of Christianity, mainly prevalent in the towns of Chicaloma and Mururata.[26] One of the ways that they were able to hold on to this culture was through their music and dance. Musical traditions such as dances, instruments, and techniques with ancestral origin in Sub-Saharan Africa, to the present day define Afro-Bolivian identity.[27][28]

Afro-Bolivians today

An Afro-Bolivian child from Coroico.
Angélica Larrea, wife of King Julio Pinedo, and Queen of the Afro-Bolivian community[29] in 2012

It has been estimated that 25,000 Afro-Bolivians live in the Yungas. They are proud of their culture and have fought very hard to preserve it. In fact, in the town of Mururata, the Afro-Bolivians managed to maintain their traditional culture, to the point of maintaining a continuous Afro-Bolivian monarchy currently led by Julio Pinedo. Afro-Bolivians spread to the east in Cochabamba and Santa Cruz de la Sierra.

An Afro-Bolovian man and child from Tocaña.

Despite the Afro-Bolivian community fervently working to preserve their culture, many Afro-Bolivians have reported experiencing severe racism and feelings of isolation from society due to intolerance. Laws that actually criminalize racism and discrimination in Afro-Bolivia have slowly been ratified as the first anti-discriminatory law (law 45) was passed in 2010 and was met with violent protesting and rioting. In 2009 President Evo Morales added amendments to the national constitution that outlined the rights of Afro-Bolivians and guaranteed the protection of such liberties. The amendments also generally extended to indigenous peoples and officially recognized Afro-Bolivians as a minority group in Bolivia despite them not being included in the national census three years later. In addition to the country's constitution being updated in 2009, President Morales created the Vice Ministry for Decolonization to create policies that criminalize racism while working to improve literacy and create better race relations in Bolivia. The Vice Ministry for Decolonization also works to dismantle colorism and racism influenced by European colonization while also promoting the philosophy of "intercultural-ity" in which citizens of the nation recognize every ethnic groups' traditions and cultural practices as contributions to society.

Notable Afro-Bolivians

Ceremonial monarchy

Government

Activism

Basketball

Sports Shooting

Soccer

See also

References

  1. "Censo de Población y Vivienda 2012 Bolivia Características de la Población". Instituto Nacional de Estadística, República de Bolivia. p. 29. Archived from the original on 2021-08-01. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  2. "Afro-Bolivians". Minority Rights Group. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  3. "Potosí Silver Mines". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  4. "Afro-Bolivian - Afropedea". www.afropedea.org. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  5. "The Real Histories Directory - Slavery in Latin America". www.realhistories.org.uk. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  6. Johnson, Charlotte (2014-02-24). "The South American slave trade". Manchester Historian. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  7. Zieber, Anna (6 September 2018). "A History of the Potosi Mines in Bolivia: Discovery, Wealth, Slavery and Death in the Shadow of Cerro Rico | World History". Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  8. "Afro-Bolivian - Afropedea". www.afropedea.org. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  9. "Bolivia's Afro king leads a long-neglected group stepping out of the shadows". the Guardian. 2017-12-06. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  10. "Afro-Bolivians | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  11. "Afro Bolivia – Freedom Is Mine". Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  12. "Traditional Bolivian Music Types: Western Bolivia. Andean Music and Dances". BoliviaBella. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  13. Céspedes, Gilka Wara (1993). ""Huayño," "Saya," and "Chuntunqui": Bolivian Identity in the Music of "Los Kjarkas"". Latin American Music Review / Revista de Música Latinoamericana. 14 (1): 52–101. doi:10.2307/780009. ISSN 0163-0350. JSTOR 780009.
  14. "Saya -- What you teach your kids about the world MATTERS". Online education for kids. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  15. "Danzas autóctonas de Bolivia". 2012-02-22. Archived from the original on 2012-02-22. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  16. "Morenada – Bolivia Marka". boliviamarka.com. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  17. "Morenada | Bolivian dance". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-07-28.
  18. Lipski, John M. "El lenguaje afroboliviano: apuntes lingüísticos" (PDF) (in Spanish). Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  19. "Palenquero creole and the decreolization of Bolivian Spanish" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-06-24.
  20. El retorno del rey negro boliviano a sus raíces africanas - El País
  21. Busqué, Jordi. "Bolivia's little-known tribal kingdom". www.bbc.com. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
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  23. Sessarego, Sandro (16 August 2013). "Historical Afro-Bolivian creole and culture". Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages. 28 (2): 363–407. doi:10.1075/jpcl.28.2.04ses. Archived from the original on 2021-07-29. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
  24. "Más de 500 palabras serán la base de la lengua afroboliviana - La Razón". 2018-07-01. Archived from the original on 2018-07-01. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
  25. "Afrobolivianos recuperarán su lengua y cultura - La Razón". 2018-07-01. Archived from the original on 2018-07-01. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
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  28. negression.com, Kalisha at (2017-04-24). "An Interview with Maya Jensen, Filmmaker behind 'Solidarity in Saya: An Afro-Bolivian Music Movement'". negression. Retrieved 2021-07-29.
  29. "Web Oficial de la Casa Real Afroboliviana".
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