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Shake Your Hips To Jamaica’s Traditional Island Dances
Written by Maureen Wright-Evans   

 

charles_town_maroon_19Music and dance are two elements of Jamaican culture that you should consider experiencing during your visit to the island. Many original dances in Jamaica are of African origin, and Jamaicans love to dance. The traditional dances of the island bear a striking resemblance to African dances, but the newer dance moves are more global and infuse hip-hop, jazz, and other international dance forms.

 

The single most popular and traditional dance is the “Kumina,” which originated in West Africa. This style of dance is predominantly found in the parishes of St. Thomas and St. Mary and is otherwise known as “Kalunga” or “Kaduunga.”

 


Kumina features flat-footed inching of the feet (or the kongo step), a steady, but often subtle forward-thrusting of the hip with the rib cage and arms moving against the hip, followed by wild spins and sudden breaks, all signaled by the lead drum. The dominant elements of Kumina are dance, music, spirit possession, healing, and the use of herbs.

 


The drums used in the dance are the Kbandu, which provide the basic rhythms, and “Playing Cast,” the lead drum. These go together with candles, graters, shakas and catta sticks, played on the back of the drum. According to Jamaica Journal, Volume 10, No.1, “Linguistic evidence cites the kongo as a specific ethnic source for the ‘language’ and possibly the music of Kumina.” There are Congolese words in some of the Kumina songs performed in Jamaica, which shows Jamaica’s connection to Africa.

 

 

A Kumina session involves dancing and drumming of two natures. Bailo is more public and less sacred, where songs are sung mainly in Jamaican dialect. Country is more African in nature and is a serious dance involving two leaders, a male and a female. The leaders must be able to control the zombies, or spirits, and assume their positions of leadership after careful training in their feeding habits, ritual procedures, dances, rhythms, and songs of a variety of spirits, conducted by a previous king or “captain” and queen or “mother.”

 

 


Jamaica has a vibrant Kumina dance group called the Port Morant National and International Kumina Dancers. The group has been around for as long as most members of the group can remember, including Bernice Henry, who states, “The group has been around from when I was born. My grandmother was an old African woman. My mother passed it on and I passed it down to our children.” Bernice says that the group consists of about twenty members, and sometimes they have to form smaller groups, depending on the occasion.

 

 


Other traditional folk dances are Dinki Mini, Quadrille, Bruckins, Mento, Maypole, and Junkunoo. The Dinki Mini/Minnie Gerreh is a type of dance generally done in the eastern end of the island, even though Gerreh is from the west. This dance is said to be done when an individual in the community dies, and the dancers perform this dance in celebration of the person’s life.

 

 


Ettu/Etu is practiced mainly in Hanover by people who claim Yoruba ancestry; this type of dance is normally performed at weddings, feasts, nine nights, and forty nights. The Nago dance is a Westmoreland based dance which is similar to Etu, mainly practiced at dances. Buru/Burru is a variant of John Kunnu, which is believed to be a fertility masquerade dance.

 


 


Jamaica is indeed a culture of dancing and dancers! Be sure that you too feel the rhythm and learn a few dance moves the next time you visit.

 

 

 

About the Author

 

 

You can learn much more about Jamaica's Emancipation and Independence Celebrations and other events. Go here http://budgetjamaicavacation.com/

Maureen Wright-Evans is the owner and operator of Smokey Manor House, She also specializes in packages to see Authentic Jamaica.

 

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“What a Bam Bam?” It’s Festival Time in Jamaica!
Written by Maureen Wright-Evans   

 

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To celebrate Jamaica Independence, “Festival Season” was developed as the time of year to display and appreciate Jamaica’s culture.

 

Throughout the years, Festival has been fine-tuned, and a popular song by Toots and the Maytals—“What a Bam Bam,” which won the Festival song competition in 1966—is just one of the many songs which were written to describe what Festival means to Jamaicans.

 

In 1955, a three-hour-long parade was developed by one of Jamaica’s great theatrical performers, Eric Coverley. The Festival was further developed in 1962, the year of Jamaica’s independence, and has since highlighted the best in Jamaican dance, drama, song, and food.

 

Today, our Jamaican Festival features “Things Jamaican,” which involves Jamaican creativity and aims to raise cultural awareness.

 

It includes the popular Festival song competition and parish eliminations in various creative art forms.

 

Edward Seaga, a former Prime Minister, stated that “the intention of the Festival celebrations was to expose the unique, natural, creative talents which belong to our people.” As testament to his words, current Festival events include art and photography, crafts, literary arts, the National Mento Band competition, as well as the Miss Jamaica Festival Queen Contest, among others.

 

The best of the Festival of the Performing Arts (dance, speech, drama, and music) is showcased in the Jamaica Cultural Development Committee’s (JCDC’s) annual “Mello Go Round.”

 

 

The JCDC also presents an annual exposition of art, craft, traditional music, dance, games, and food at the National Mento Yard, and the Festival itself happens at the National Stadium and attracts Jamaicans from all parishes as well as visitors to the island.

 

 

If you are looking to see and sample Jamaica's culture up close and personal? The time to be in Jamaica is August 1-7 every year. Celebrate Emancipation Day and continue through to Independence Day.

 

 

About the Author

 

 

You can learn much more about Jamaica's Emancipation and Independence Celebrations and other events. Go here http://budgetjamaicavacation.com/

Maureen Wright-Evans is the owner and operator of Smokey Manor House, She also specializes in packages to see Authentic Jamaica.

 

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A Spring With Healing Powers: Jamaica’s Mineral Bath
Written by Maureen Wright-Evans   

jamaica_march_09_150

As I approached the entrance of the spring, I saw people coming from every direction.

 

Children…young people… old people … We all had one thing in common! “Getting relief for our aches,pains, sinusitis, Arthritis and any other ailment you can think of…

 

Jamaica’s Mineral Bath, in the parish of St. Thomas, has long held the secret of ‘Healing’

For weeks I have been struggling with blocked Sinusitis and my body ached for relief…

 

Now was the Moment… I hurriedly crossed the small stream, and ran to the Bamboo Shower which took the steaming hot mineral water from the rocks high in the hills.

 

As the water rained on my head, I closed my eyes and recalled the story I have heard so Many times of how this spring was discovered.

 

Legend has it that a “Runaway Slave” who lived up in the hills of St. Thomas Was whipped by his ‘Master’ and while running through the bushes he saw this pool Of water where he started washing his wounds… A strange thing occurred the next Day… his wounds started to heal…

 

This spring now became his medicinal Pool…

 

Minutes later, having completed my ‘My Shower’, I sat on a rock just relaxing and Taking in the gorgeous view of the massive rock formations… Without warning, I felt A sudden shift in my nose and forehead…My blockage was gone! My relief was Overwhelming! My Sinusitis was as clear as day…

 

 

My heart was indeed filled with gratitude for this Mineral Spring...

 

 

 

About the Author

 

You can learn much more about Bath Mineral Spring and other hidden attractions in Jamaica by going to http://budgetjamaicavacation.com/

Maureen Wright-Evans is the owner and operator of Smokey Manor, a company specializing in packages to see Authentic Jamaica.

 

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