Carnival
in Trinidad has grown out of the collective experience of all people who have
come to this island from Spanish times, prior to 1797, on through to the
present day. Carnival is essentially Roman Catholic in origin. Its earliest
participants must have been the Spanish settlers who, in isolation, living in
the little hamlets bearing beautiful names like San José de Oruna and Puerto de
los Hispanioles, would have danced the medieval “burroquete” in the muddy
streets accompanied by guitar, fiddle and drum. The local Amerindians must have
been looking on in amazement.
Hardly
drawing a crowd, the pre-Lenten fiesta would have been at most a dozen or so
people dressed in rags, alpagattas and battered straw hats. The priests, the
Governor, the chief of police, and of course the donkey costumes into which a
man or boy got to prance about, waving the little ass’ head from side to side,
making mincing steps in a parody of riding merrily. The burroquete mas is
ancient, having its origins in north Africa and finding itself marooned in
Spain after the withdrawal of the Moors in the 1490s. Eventually, it was
brought to the New World.
In
the period before 1783, before the influence of the French and Africans, it has
been suggested that the population was as follows:
Spanish
white - 126
Coloured
- 245
Slaves
- 310
Amerindians
(Carib) - 2000
With
the Cedula of Population of 1783, a dramatic change took place. The island, though a Spanish colony,
received a French population. These French, made up largely of the petit
noblesse of France’s southern provinces, brought with them many slaves. They
came mostly from Dominica, St. Vincent, Martinique and Grenada. Amongst them
were a great number of people of colour, who were not enslaved. Those were the
descendants of earlier French settlers and African slaves. The institution of
slavery was then seen by Europeans and Africans, by Christians and Muslims, as
an economic reality. It meant that these free black people who came to Trinidad
possessed slaves as well.
The
population of Trinidad just before the British conquest in 1797 was as follows:
Spanish
white: 150
Spanish
coloured: 200
Africans
enslaved: 300
Amerindians:
1127
French
white: 2250
French
coloured: 4700
African
enslaved: 9700
Being
almost entirely Catholic in their faith, the French in Trinidad just like the
Spaniards observed Lent and celebrated Carnival. It is said that the French
combined an aristocratic tradition and their natural tendency to “contagious
gaiety, brilliant verbal sally and comic buffoonery” in their version of
Carnival. This gave the festival a different flair altogether. Historians say
that this period of Trinidad’s development, that is, the 1790s, was marked by a
certain degree of racial ease. In as much as both the whites and the free
coloureds were sharing the frontier town experience, having freshly immigrated,
there was an atmosphere of modest mingling. In fact, there was a lot of
so-called ‘miscegenation’ taking place! It was only with the advent of the
British conquerors that this changed.
Carnival
celebrations of the turn of the 19th century were enjoyed by both groups of the
population. But what of the several thousand slaves?
Port
of Spain had then a large slave population which acted as domestics. What of
the hundreds of slaves who moved about on their masters’ business, as
messengers, sailors, wagon drivers, etc.? According to tradition, they took no
part in Carnival. A memory by Ofuba the chantwell, a slave who sang “Neg deye
polla” has been preserved, picturing a slave peeping from behind the door at
the Carnival fête of the French masters (“Nègre derrière la porte”).
By
the 1820s, during Governor Woodford’s term, the free persons of colour were
subjected to very stringent regulations, and although it was not forbidden to
wear masks, they were compelled to keep to themselves and never presumed to
join the amusements of the privileged class.
The
Caribs were moving in their own world, their own time and space. Their rapidly
diminishing share in the population did not share in the realities of the
European and African immigrants, who in turn may not have noticed them
particularly.
A
description of a Carnival ball has come down to us. Mrs. Bruce’s ball in 1831
was attended by “the beauty and fashion of Port of Spain, composing a motley
assemblage of elegantly dressed ladies, largely Swiss damsels, French
marquises, English noblemen, grooms, postillions, priests and friars” (the
latter costumes have been banned since then). The French also disguised as
their servants and slaves, their husbands and mistresses. One costume was the
graceful and costly one of the “mulatresse” of the time, whilst gentlemen
adopted that of the “nègres du jardin” (in Patois ‘neg jardin’) or field labourer. In that costume the gentleman
often figured in the “bamboola” in the “giouba” and in the “calinda”, all
popular local dance steps of the era.
The
French would often unite in bands, their faces blackened with soot,
representing different estates. Lionel Fraser, who wrote a history of Trinidad,
relates:
“In
the days of slavery, whenever a fire broke out upon an estate, the slaves of
the surrounding properties were immediately mustered and marched to the spot,
horns and shells were blown to collect them and the gangs were followed by
drivers cracking their whips and urging them with cries and blows to their
work. After emancipation, the negroes began to represent this scene as a kind
of commemoration of the change in their condition and the procession of ‘cannes
brulées’ used to take place on the night of the 1st of August, the date of
emancipation.”
In
later years, the practice of cannes brulées was used at a different time of
year to inaugurate Carnival. With emancipation, social life was altered between
the free black people and the slaves. The ancient lines of demarcation between
them as classes were obliterated. Fraser remarks:
“As
a natural consequence, the Carnival degenerated into a noisy and disorderly
amusement of the lower classes. The earliest record of an attempt to regulate
or control Carnival appears in 1833. An attempt was made by Mr. Peake
(assistant to the chief of police) to check the shameful violation of the
Sabbath by the lower order of the population who are accustomed about this time
of year to wear masks and created disturbances on a Sunday.”
Peake
arrested several people. On returning to his home, he found that all his
windows had been broken.
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