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NiLP Guest Commentary 

The Rainbow People:

Puerto Ricans --- Thoroughbreds or Mutts?

By Izzy Sanabria

 

Izzy SanabriaHistory has taught us that conquerors plundered, raped, killed and destroyed cultures. As conquerors go, the Spaniards were one of the worst and, at the same time, one of the best. They practiced slavery and instituted racism, but unlike the Americans, they were more tolerant of the Indian and African cultures, and even merged with them. And, in so doing, created a whole new culture.

 

As a consequence of the Indian rebellions in Puerto Rico, there is still a very strong strand of Indian genetics present in the island's racial make-up. There's European (white, blue-eyed blondes), African (Blacks) and Indian, as well as an overlapping of each. Whereas in Cuba and Santo Domingo, where the Indians were literally wiped out, the population is basically either black or white, and their mixture, Mulattos.

 

The Spaniards first instituted these racial mixtures, then clearly defined/categorized each group by name, i.e., white with Indian-Creoles, Indian and black-Mestizos, etc. However, unlike American and other European slave owners or traders, when the Spaniards fostered children, they also gave them their last names. Of greater importance, they also married the women (due to honor and the strong influence of the Catholic Church).

 

Another interesting facet of Spain's racism, which differs from American, is their relationship with the Blacks and Indians. In America, Blacks were used to fight Indians. The Blacks were led to believe that they were less savage, and even part of the new system, etc. Such policies made the Indians the worse treated group in America.

 

In Puerto Rico, there was a great deal more homogenization, which gave birth to what is today's island culture. The Spanish influence is, of course, most prominent. They set the social standards, religion and language. And, ironically, although born American citizens (since 1907), the Puerto Rican people continue to vote Spanish as its national language. English is, however, a required second language in the schools.

  

Nowhere is the fusion of the three cultures more evident, than in the music, and where the biggest African influence on the culture is evident. In Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, the basis for much of its folklore and popular dance music are the African Rhythms. The music is a mixture of Indian and African percussion with Spanish lyrics and melodies.

 

Another interesting irony is that those Caribbean islands are responsible for keeping the African rhythms and culture alive in this hemisphere. American blacks were deprived of any ties with their African culture. Many years later, Black Jazz musicians were exposed to these rhythms and, of course, immediately took to them like ducks to water and incorporated them into Jazz. It was the doing of legendary Jazz great, Dizzy Gillespie, with Afro-Cuban percussionist Chano Pozo, when they recorded the number "Manteca" that started the new musical art form of Latin-Jazz.

 

While America's racism considered a person "a Negro" if they had any drop of black blood, in Puerto Rico, it was more a matter of skin tone and the art of passing as white. Being lighter often meant better opportunities for education, jobs and even status --- in essence, looking more like Spaniards. In fact (though embarrassing to many), in Puerto Rico there's a saying that tells it all: "Ser blanco es una carrera como otra cualquiera" (Being white is a career, like any other career).

 

Therefore, Criollos were supposedly better than Mestizos or Mulatos. Another method of separation (or acceptance) was based on hair: Straight hair being good and kinky bad. Therefore, a fairly dark skinned person with straight hair might be better accepted and even considered white.

 

The common denominator has always been the Hispanic culture. As a consequence, Caribbean Blacks have always felt superior to American blacks with the argument, "I'm Spanish"! And they felt justified since they, in fact, had a sense of history and a culture-Spanish or African. America's blacks only had slavery as a reference point. That is, until Haley wrote the book, "Roots," which was made into a successful television movie series.

 

Because the Spaniards married the women in the Catholic church, they also instituted and culturally emphasized the importance of the family unit. Again, something American blacks were deprived of, since slave owners systematically broke up families by selling them off separately.

 

Spain's greatest gift or contribution to Puerto Rico was the creation of "The Rainbow People" --- a people and culture not made up of human mutts of casual inter-racial sexual encounters, but rather blessed with inheriting the blood and cultures of three of the world's great races. In an ironic sense, if the world ever learns to live in peace and harmony, free of racism and inter-marriage, eventually the whole world will look like Puerto Ricans!

 

Imagine a future world, where the average person is genetically comprised of all God's children. And then perhaps one day they'll all be standing together, ready to greet visiting aliens from another world as true Earthlings. So ironically, wherever the world is going, perhaps Puerto Ricans have already started the ball rolling.

 

 

Izzy Sanabria is a creative innovative multi-media artist and publisher of Latin NY Magazine that spearheaded and documented the Latino Cultural Renaissance during the 1970s in New York City. He currently resides in Valrico, Florida and can be contacted at SalsaIzzy@gmail.com. For more detailed information visit: www.SalsaMagazine.com. And join him on FaceBook.