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Groundings with we Carnival - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

Culture Matters

DARA E HEALY

'… culture is not a dead thing, nor does it always remain the same. It belongs to living people and is therefore always developing…What we need is confidence in ourselves, so that as blacks and African we can be conscious, united, independent and creative.'

- Walter Rodney, The Groundings with My Brothers

THE WORK of the artist is most powerful when the viewer or listener can relate to the story being told, when they can identify their own pain, their own narrative.

I suspect that the yearning for such meaning is at the core of some of the disappointment with carnival in Tobago. Over the past weeks, as I observed the various commentaries, I felt an overwhelming sense of déjà vu. We continue to grapple with the question: what is the purpose of Carnival and how should it empower our nation?

In Trinidad, we are learning many harsh lessons for refusing to answer this question. There was a moment when the Carnival did respond to the needs of a developing nation. In treating with themes such as racial equality, the environment or social progress, artists helped us express what we were feeling through the mas, pan and calypso.

Jeff Henry documents that 'Emancipation was the beginning of the Africans' participation in masking as free men and women.' However, as we know, the enslaved brought their centuries-old religious beliefs and practices, movement, dance, costuming and speech traditions. During enslavement, they found ways to manifest these cultural traditions, masking them as entertainment under the scrutiny of plantation masters. Thus, for the enslaved, Carnival represented a reclaiming of self as 'the Africans found ways and means to thread their history through drama, mime, dance, song and storytelling.'

Culture served a similar purpose in Tobago. As established by Rita Pemberton and other researchers, local practices 'provided the means for a strong assertion of identity for the island's oppressed African population during and after emancipation.' Music, song and dance were interwoven with work. For instance, one work song from Tobago in the call-and-response African style says, 'Pull, pull, leh we go/Hold yuhself we going down/Pull, pull, leh we go/Hold yuhself, we going up.'

Still, the battle to preserve African traditions was constant. In 1798, the African drum was banned in Tobago. By 1884, drums were outlawed in Trinidad, with elitist newspapers of the times describing African music as 'barbarous sounds.'

Hollis Liverpool notes that in 1853, Joseph Allen of the Congo Society was charged with disorderly conduct in a dance. In reality the members of the society were holding a traditional African wake, no doubt in bongo style, to honour those who had transitioned.

The Congo influence in Tobago was also strong. JD Elder wrote about spiritual elders 'Congo Keorke, Congo Leberoot and Congo Peter Jorge,' members of the Congo community who had t