Afro Uruguay: Candombe
Aurora - A Brief History
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The history of Uruguay and Afro Uruguayans is rooted in Candombe music and dance. This unique culture has survived, excelled and brought national unity, cultural pride and movement toward unprecedented national equality.
During the late 1700s and early 1800s some 20,000 Africans disembarked in Uruguay's capital, Montevideo--a required port of call. By 1800, Afro Uruguayans constituted 25% of the national population. Soon, salas de nacion (mutual aid societies) organized on the basis of members African origins.
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The salas established headquarters for religious observances, meetings, and dances. They collected money for emancipation funds to buy the freedom of slave members, lobbied public officials, and assisted in disputes between slaves and slave owners.
- Large numbers of free/slave Africans and Afro-Uruguayans served in Uruguay's wars for independence. That service was rewarded first by laws leading to the abolition of slavery in 1842 and ultimately to the full civic and legal equality guaranteed by the Constitution.
- In fact, the application of equal rights to all, written in 1832, was initially denied Afro Uruguayans with discrimination and prejudice. Afro-Uruguayans responded with the most active black press per capita in Latin America as Uruguay established one of the most successful economies in South America.
- With educational reforms, Uruguay also achieved the highest literacy, lowest birth rates and lowest death rates. In these circumstances, Afro Uruguayans were much more literate than counterparts in other nations, a condition which should have provided the conditions for black upward mobility; but prejudice and discrimination were ongoing obstructions as late as 1980.
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Following substantive research and reports, in preparation for the 2001 U.N. Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, and Xenophobia in South Africa, Uruguay's government committed to ending the racial discrimination and inequality, instituting programs for Afro Uruguayan rights with attention to Afro Uruguayan Women and Youth.
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The musical groups, comparsas, which play this music, quickly grew popular among whites as well as blacks. Though once segregated, today, the groups are racially integrated, are often majority white, have led to ongoing discussion about ethnic imagery and the impact on politics. This has also brought about a National Equality Day, December 3, to continue the work of true racial equality.
Sources:
George Reid Andrews, Blackness in the White Nation: A History of Afro-Uruguay (University of North Carolina Press, 2010) and George Reid Andrews, Afro-Latin America, 1800-2000 (Oxford University Press, 2004).
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- Candombe drums: the tambores de candombe or tamboriles are drums used in the playing of Candombe music of Uruguay. They are single skin headed and there are three sizes: piano (bass) repique (tenor range), and the chico (alto range). The drums are made of wood and have a curved barrel shape with its base very narrow.
- Candombe Dance, Music and Instrumentation that Uruguay now calls its own, has Central African origins. Derived from the Central African word "ndombe" (black) and "ka" (things having to do with), candombe reflects things having to do with African people. The music, dance and the places where people express their joy, and the drums used to make the music, are candombe.
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