How Argentina ‘Eliminated’ Africans From Its History And Conscience

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Rising Star
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By Palash Ghosh | June 04 2013 5:48 AM


Tens of millions of black Africans were forcibly removed from their homelands from the 16th century to the 19th century to toil on the plantations and farms of the New World. This so-called “Middle Passage” accounted for one of the greatest forced migrations of people in human history, as well as one of the greatest tragedies the world has ever witnessed.

Millions of these helpless Africans washed ashore in Brazil — indeed, in the present-day, roughly one-half of the Brazilian population trace their lineage directly to Africa. African culture has imbued Brazil permanently and profoundly, in terms of music, dance, food and in many other tangible ways.

But what about Brazil’s neighbor, Argentina? Hundreds of thousands of Africans were brought there as well – yet, the black presence in Argentina has virtually vanished from the country’s records and consciousness.

According to historical accounts, Africans first arrived in Argentina in the late 16th century in the region now called the Rio de la Plata, which includes Buenos Aires, primarily to work in agriculture and as domestic servants. By the late 18th century and early 19th century, black Africans were numerous in parts of Argentina, accounting for up to half the population in some provinces, including Santiago del Estero, Catamarca, Salta and Córdoba.

In Buenos Aires, neighborhoods like Monserrat and San Telmo housed many black slaves, some of whom were engaged in craft-making for their masters. Indeed, blacks accounted for an estimated one-third of the city’s population, according to surveys taken in the early 1800s.

Slavery was officially abolished in 1813, but the practice remained in place until about 1853. Ironically, at about this time, the black population of Argentina began to plunge.

Historians generally attribute two major factors to this sudden “mass disappearance” of black Africans from the country – the deadly war against Paraguay from 1865-1870 (in which thousands of blacks fought on the frontlines for the Argentine military) as well as various other wars; and the onset of yellow fever in Buenos Aires in 1871.

The heavy casualties suffered by black Argentines in military combat created a huge gender gap among the African population – a circumstance that appears to have led black women to mate with whites, further diluting the black population. Many other black Argentines fled to neighboring Brazil and Uruguay, which were viewed as somewhat more hospitable to them.

Others claim something more nefarious at work.

It has been alleged that the president of Argentina from 1868 to 1874, Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, sought to wipe out blacks from the country in a policy of covert genocide through extremely repressive policies (including possibly the forced recruitment of Africans into the army and by forcing blacks to remain in neighborhoods where disease would decimate them in the absence of adequate health care).

Tellingly, Sarmiento wrote in his diary in 1848: “In the United States… 4 million are black, and within 20 years will be 8 [million]…. What is [to be] done with such blacks, hated by the white race? Slavery is a parasite that the vegetation of English colonization has left attached to leafy tree of freedom.”

By 1895, there were reportedly so few blacks left in Argentina that the government did not even bother registering African-descended people in the national census.

The CIA World Factbook currently notes that Argentina is 97 percent white (primarily comprising people descended from Spanish and Italian immigrants), thereby making it the “whitest” nation in Latin America.

But blacks did not really vanish from Argentina – despite attempts by the government to eliminate them (partially by encouraging large-scale immigration in the late 19th and 20th century from Europe and the Near East). Rather, they remain a hidden and forgotten part of Argentine society.

Hisham Aidi, a lecturer at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, wrote on Planete Afrique that in the 1950s, when the black American entertainer Josephine Baker arrived in Argentina, she asked the mixed-race minister of public health, Ramon Carilio: “Where are the Negroes?” In response, Carilio joked: “There are only two — you and I.”

As in virtually all Latin American societies where blacks mixed with whites and with local Indians, the question of race is extremely complex and contentious.

“People of mixed ancestry are often not considered ‘black’ in Argentina, historically, because having black ancestry was not considered proper,” said Alejandro Frigerio, an anthropologist at the Universidad Catolica de Buenos Aires, according to Planete Afrique.

“Today the term ‘negro’ is used loosely on anyone with slightly darker skin, but they can be descendants of indigenous Indians [or] Middle Eastern immigrants.”

AfricaVive, a black empowerment group founded in Buenos Aires in the late 1990s, claimed that there are 1 million Argentines of black African descent in the country (out of a total population of about 41 million). A report in the Washington Post even suggested that 10 percent of Buenos Aires’ population may have African blood (even if they are classified as “whites” by the census).

“People for years have accepted the idea that there are no black people in Argentina,” Miriam Gomes, a professor of literature at the University of Buenos Aires, who is part black herself, told the Post.

“Even the schoolbooks here accepted this as a fact. But where did that leave me?”

She also explained that almost no one in Argentina with black blood in their veins will admit to it.

“Without a doubt, racial prejudice is great in this society, and people want to believe that they are white,” she said. “Here, if someone has one drop of white blood, they call themselves white.”

Gomes also told the San Francisco Chronicle that after many decades of white immigration into Argentina, people with African blood have been able to blend in and conceal their origins.

“Argentina’s history books have been partly responsible for misinformation regarding Africans in Argentine society,” she said. “Argentines say there are no blacks here. If you’re looking for traditional African people with very black skin, you won’t find it. African people in Argentina are of mixed heritage.”

Ironically, Argentina’s most famous cultural gift to the world – the tango – came from the African influence.

“The first paintings of people dancing the tango are of people of African descent,” Gomes added.

On a broader scale, the “elimination” of blacks from the country’s history and consciousness reflected the long-cherished desire of successive Argentine governments to imagine the country as an “all-white” extension of Western Europe in Latin America.

“There is a silence about the participation of Afro-Argentines in the history and building of Argentina, a silence about the enslavement and poverty,” said Paula Brufman, an Argentine law student and researcher, according to Planete Afrique.

“The denial and disdain for the Afro community shows the racism of an elite that sees Africans as undeveloped and uncivilized.”

http://www.ibtimes.com/blackout-how-argentina-eliminated-africans-its-history-conscience-1289381#
 
My wife schooled me on this topic years ago.

Shit, nearly the entire planet was populated by black people until YT exercised his genocide - Africa, Asia the pacific Island, the Americas - everywhere.
 
My wife schooled me on this topic years ago.

Shit, nearly the entire planet was populated by black people until YT exercised his genocide - Africa, Asia the pacific Island, the Americas - everywhere.

Yessir, even the Japanese that Marco Polo first encountered were black.
 
What made it so uncomfortable?



The staring man. They stare and act like they've never seen a black person before in their lives. I've been to places that have way less black people than argentina (actually, i'm in one now and dont stare.. they look and obviously are curious) but the level that they stare in Argentina is ridiculous. Even a damn baby stared so hard that her damn pacifier fell out of her mouth. Walk into a restaurant and people can sometimes act like a martian walked in. They're just rude people. Obviously I'm being general because everyone is not like that...but they're pretty bad and it's not just on race. People (whites) were even arguing with waitresses and shit because you couldnt even get your drinks and food because the waitresses are sitting in the restaurant watching soap operas and shit.
 
In the americas continent there's not one single country close to be as racist as argentina. The reason the german nazis moved in drove to that country tells you everything you need to know.

The two countries they model their own is spain and italy, not other country in south america or latin america deals with them at all. They're paying the price of their arrogance as we speak and is gonna be a long time before they can get out of it.
 
The reason the german nazis moved in drove to that country tells you everything you need to know.


:yes:

I worked with a few people from middle and south america. I was surprised to learn how many of them had a skewed mentality (hated the native indian looks and features) european complex. good post.
 
Its crazy how much Africans are shunned in Latin America when their culture is purely African influenced.Remove that influence and what do you have left????
 
The staring man. They stare and act like they've never seen a black person before in their lives. I've been to places that have way less black people than argentina (actually, i'm in one now and dont stare.. they look and obviously are curious) but the level that they stare in Argentina is ridiculous. Even a damn baby stared so hard that her damn pacifier fell out of her mouth. Walk into a restaurant and people can sometimes act like a martian walked in. They're just rude people. Obviously I'm being general because everyone is not like that...but they're pretty bad and it's not just on race. People (whites) were even arguing with waitresses and shit because you couldnt even get your drinks and food because the waitresses are sitting in the restaurant watching soap operas and shit.

:lol::lol:
 
The staring man. They stare and act like they've never seen a black person before in their lives. I've been to places that have way less black people than argentina (actually, i'm in one now and dont stare.. they look and obviously are curious) but the level that they stare in Argentina is ridiculous. Even a damn baby stared so hard that her damn pacifier fell out of her mouth. Walk into a restaurant and people can sometimes act like a martian walked in. They're just rude people. Obviously I'm being general because everyone is not like that...but they're pretty bad and it's not just on race. People (whites) were even arguing with waitresses and shit because you couldnt even get your drinks and food because the waitresses are sitting in the restaurant watching soap operas and shit.

:lol::lol::lol: that's those rude ass germans man... former nazis.

i used to work with a few guys from argentina that were of german descent. those mofos were stubborn like mules. :smh:

btw, while we're discussing argentina, fuck manu ginobili.
 
My wife schooled me on this topic years ago.

Shit, nearly the entire planet was populated by black people until YT exercised his genocide - Africa, Asia the pacific Island, the Americas - everywhere.
Get the fuck out with this bullshit

Yessir, even the Japanese that Marco Polo first encountered were black.
you're an idiot

Marco Polo never made it to Japan.
:lol::lol::lol::lol::lol::lol: thank you for crushing his prison education
 
The staring man. They stare and act like they've never seen a black person before in their lives. I've been to places that have way less black people than argentina (actually, i'm in one now and dont stare.. they look and obviously are curious) but the level that they stare in Argentina is ridiculous. Even a damn baby stared so hard that her damn pacifier fell out of her mouth. Walk into a restaurant and people can sometimes act like a martian walked in. They're just rude people. Obviously I'm being general because everyone is not like that...but they're pretty bad and it's not just on race. People (whites) were even arguing with waitresses and shit because you couldnt even get your drinks and food because the waitresses are sitting in the restaurant watching soap operas and shit.

The impact and influence of white supremacy no doubt.

The one drop rule has allowed Argentina to reclassify non-Europeans as "white". The same social engineering could be seen here as "Hispanics" are now being classified as whites. It's a numbers game, a way of minimizing the impact and influence of the ever-growing non-white population...
 
Its crazy how much Africans are shunned in Latin America when their culture is purely African influenced.Remove that influence and what do you have left????

Pinatas

images
 

Not even that..:smh:

Although piñatas are uniquely thought of as a fun activity for parties nowadays, they have a long, rich history.[1] There is some debate but it appears that its origin is not Spanish but rather Chinese.[2] The Chinese version was in the shape of a cow or ox and used for the New Year. It was decorated with symbols and colors meant to produce a favorable climate for the coming growing season. It was filled with five types of seeds and then hit with sticks of various colors. After the piñata was broken, the remains were burned and the ashes kept for good luck
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piñata
 
The impact and influence of white supremacy no doubt.
The same social engineering could be seen here as "Hispanics" are now being classified as whites. It's a numbers game, a way of minimizing the impact and influence of the ever-growing non-white population...

Excellent point. Cacs will close the border, and assimilate the whiter looking
Mexicans..
 
ballscout1 said:
Ironically, Argentina’s most famous cultural gift to the world – the tango – came from the African influence.

“The first paintings of people dancing the tango are of people of African descent,” Gomes added.

On a broader scale, the “elimination” of blacks from the country’s history and consciousness reflected the long-cherished desire of successive Argentine governments to imagine the country as an “all-white” extension of Western Europe in Latin America.

“There is a silence about the participation of Afro-Argentines in the history and building of Argentina, a silence about the enslavement and poverty,” said Paula Brufman, an Argentine law student and researcher, according to Planete Afrique.

“The denial and disdain for the Afro community shows the racism of an elite that sees Africans as undeveloped and uncivilized.”

http://www.ibtimes.com/blackout-how-argentina-eliminated-africans-its-history-conscience-1289381#

amazing.

tariqs next hidden colors installment should focus on things blacks/africans invented over the years.
 
That's some deep shit. Makes you wonder if the US is following the same playbook.:smh:



Wonder? Peter, you write funny thing! The reason we in Capitalist America is because we are easier to exploit as an underdog consumer class. Indians werent as easy to exploit.
 
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The staring man. They stare and act like they've never seen a black person before in their lives. I've been to places that have way less black people than argentina (actually, i'm in one now and dont stare.. they look and obviously are curious) but the level that they stare in Argentina is ridiculous. Even a damn baby stared so hard that her damn pacifier fell out of her mouth. Walk into a restaurant and people can sometimes act like a martian walked in. They're just rude people. Obviously I'm being general because everyone is not like that...but they're pretty bad and it's not just on race. People (whites) were even arguing with waitresses and shit because you couldnt even get your drinks and food because the waitresses are sitting in the restaurant watching soap operas and shit.

Have you been to Asia? In Bali, off the beaten path, motherfuckers study and approach you as if you grew horns on your head. Get over it, man. You re different. Id stare at you, too. Whos the other brother and whatnot. Argentinians are weirdos, I give you that.
 
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