Miller 2014
Miller 2014
Ivor L. Miller
The Abakua mutual-aid society of Cuba, re-created in the 1830S from several
local variants of the Ekpe leopard society of West Africa's Cross River basin,
is a richly detailed example of African cultural transmission to the Americas.
Since the late nineteenth century, many Abakua members have lived in Florida
as part of the larger Cuban exile community. While focusing on the Florida ex
perience, this essay discusses Abakua historically, since there exist structural
relationships between its lodges, as well as spiritual connections among its
membership that extend from West Africa to the Western Hemisphere.
Abakua leaders who migrated from Cuba have regrouped in exile and main
tained their identity as Abakua, but due to their strict protocol they did not
sponsor lodges outside of Cuba. Therefore the Abakua communities in Florida
gather for commemorative celebrations but do not perform initiations, which
are performed only in their home lodges in Cuba. Due to renewed communi
cation with African counterparts through a series of meetings in the United
States, Europe, and Africa since 2001, Abakua activities-including rumbas
and commemorative social gatherings-have intensified in the first decade
of the twenty-first century. Meanwhile, vibrant expressions of Abakua prac
tice have been produced by Cuban artists in Florida through representational
paintings that depict Abakua as integral to a Cuban national identity.
249
Ekpe
Alth
sphere
ceeded-
Ekpe
peope
ing their I
impo
estuaries
expI.a.ins.
If
[a
Cuha,-
Ekpes '
exactly
thea
d
The
land,
ofC
each
ous
as
regia (I
nized.
the U
Ekpe and Ngbe (or Mgbe), after the Efik and Ejagham terms for "leopard."l
Although Cross River peoples migrated to many parts of the Western Hemi
sphere during the transatlantic slave trade, it was only in Cuba that they suc
ceeded in re-creating Ekpe, as far as is currently known.
Ekpe was established in Cuba because among the thousands of Cross River
people there were included knowledgeable specialists instrumental in organiz
ing their people through the transmission of traditional knowledge . Another
important element was the conducive tropical environment with mangrove
estuaries similar to that of Calabar. In Calabar, Chief Bassey Efiong Bassey
explains,
If you want to plant an Ekpe in some place, there must be an Obong Ekpe
[a titleholder] with authority, who is versed in the procedure. In colonial
Cuba, it was possible, because some of the people who went were Obong
Ekpes who were forcibly taken away. When they got there they knew
exactly what to do to plant it. There is the belief that if you don't have
the authority, if you don't know the procedure inside out, it will lead to
death, or you will lose your senses. So people don't want to do it.
The Cuban leaders have maintained their Ekpe (i.e., Abakua) in their home
land, but they have never authorized any member to establish a lodge outside
of Cuba. The same is true for contemporary Nigerian Ekpe leaders, who to date
have not authorized any lodge to be created outside of Africa.
In West Africa, as in Cuba, the societies are organized through local lodges
each with a hierarchy of grades having distinct functions . Because of the obvi
ous historic and conceptual links between Ekpe and Abakua, I refer to both
as variants of an Ekpe-Abakua continuum that exists in the contemporary
regions of Nigeria, Cameroon, and Cuba, all places where lodges are orga
nized, although some of their members live outside these regions, including
the United States.
As a diaspora practice, Abakua maintains many facets of the Ekpe practice
of West Africa from two centuries ago. Abakua leaders transmit inherited his
torical information by performing it as "ritual-theater" during ceremonies.
All of the roughly 150 lodges in Cuba have traditions of coded language and
ritual performance that refer back to West African origins. Cuban Abakua
leaders look to the Calabar region with reverence as a historical source and a
holy place. For example, Abakua have created many maps that indicate specific
.-..a initiation places and events in the foundation of their institution in Africa (see fig. 1.5).
~ whilehis
.-ember Cuban Abakua phrases also refer to African foundations : "Echitube akarnbamba, Efik
.... Usedwith Obuton?" asks, "How was the first lodge created in Africa?"2 The Efik Obuton
lodge of Cuba was named after Obutong, an Efik community in Calabar with
a strong Ekpe tradition. This phrase evokes African founding principles in the
Abakua members reached Florida from Cuba after their ancestors had initially (as Cuban ,
migrated from West Africa, where Ekpe was a "traditional police" under the because th
authority of the council of chiefs of an autonomous community. Their decrees more than
were announced publicly and their verdicts executed by specific Ekpe grades "the a
with representative body-masks (i.e., a uniform that covers the entire body to deep ties e:J
mask the identity of the bearer). In colonial Cuba, Abakua leadership main sustainedi:
tained the prestige of Ekpe through the autonomy of each lodge and the rig the 1860s
orous selection of its members. Because the primary allegiance of an Abakua ban iosti
member was to his lodge and its lineage, Abakua held jurisdiction over its 10ngbefoR
members, a position that conflicted with agendas of the Spanish government. thee
As a result, Abakua has been demonized by various colonial and state adminis ties of
trations through much of its history.s But other narratives maintained by Aba Ceuta,Fen
kua leaders represent Abakua as being "tan Cubano como moros y cristianos" To ev-adep
nhers who
i celebrate
~esof
nor initia
d protocol
I-mother"
rsworking
in the spe
I members
t leaders
ilalso have
ed it. In
Cameroon
a lodge in
en chil
~ it will be
rize lodges
JreVenting
be mother
Figure 16.2. Ritual activity in a Havana Abakua temple. Untitled. Acrylic paint on wood. At the
[lS Oetters, center ofthe lodge altar is a Sese Erib6 drum with four plumes issuing from the top. Left to
~ Ekpe and right: a short man with white animal horn around his shoulder, rooster in one hand and herbs
pment in the other, represents the title of Nasak6, the medicine man; the lreme body-mask holds a
short staff and a broom for"cleansing" the temple space; a man kneels with a ceramic jar on
akualead
his head during the process of his receiving a title; an Abakua leader representing the title
Enkrikamo holds a drum with plume to guide the lreme's actions. Archives of Luis Fernandez
Pel6n, Miami. Photo by Ivor Miller, 1994.
.---- -~ - . ~ ~. ---- ------ ..
ad initially (as Cuban as black beans and rice). These Abakua narratives are persistent
er the because they coincide with the widespread Cuban ideology that "A Cuban is
eirdecrees more than mulatto, black, or white," as famously articulated by Jose Marti,
~ grades "the apostle of Cuban Independence," in the late nineteenth century.6 The
body to deep ties existing between Cuban creoles that transcended race and class were
main- sustained in many cases through membership in Abakua, whose members by
~ the rig- the ~86os included eligible males of any heritage, making them the first Cu
Im 01... _ 1._.";:,
-l'UJdKUd ban institution whose leadership reflected the ethnic diversity of the island,
O\""er its long before the creation of the Cuban Republic (see fig. ~6 . 2).7 At the onset of
renment. the Cuban Wars of Independence (~868), those suspected by colonial authori
~ admin js- ties of being rebels were sent into exile in Spanish Africa (Chafarinas Islands,
Aba- Ceuta, Fernando Po [today Bioko] , and other sites); among them were Abakua.
3istianos" To evade possible deportation, many Abakua members fled to Florida as part
Confronting Misconceptions
ing a dlaEpU!I"
Misconceptions and misinformation of African-derived institutions-the in the
rule during the slave trade and colonial period-persist into the present, and rival of res pill!
Abakua is no exception. Being a self-organized African-derived institution un came dose
authorized by colonial authorities, Abakua was misconceived as a criminal or the special
ganization. Later reports about Abakua creating lodges in Florida were simply same Jll()dII~
erroneous. Both errors were documented in twentieth-century literature to meaning
the extent that they became accepted as fact. nized an ue
To outsiders, an African-derived traditions were "black culture," without the yankee ciI:
awareness of distinctions between communities. Abakua were commonly re phrases.
ferred to as ndnigos (nyanyigos), a term likely derived from the nyanya raffia of the Ha
chest piece worn on many Ekpe and Abakua body-masks. Distinct African~ the notes
derived practices were lumped together as ndnigo by outsiders, but colonial
authorities also associated ndnigos with crime. Abakua members have there
Migratioo
fore since the early twentieth century rejected this term, using instead "Aba
kua," a term likely derived from the Abakpa (Qua-Ejagham) people of Calabar. In 1886.
The general confusion about ndnigo persists in the literature about Abakua in outside ,[
Florida. estCuba.n~
From the 1860s to the present, exiled Abakua members have regrouped tainly n t
in foreign lands. Because of this, some scholars have argued that new Aba Mokongo.- oil
kua lodges were re-created in the Cuban diaspora, including Florida. There is told w e alD
little evidence for this. The collective and hierarchical nature of Ekpe in the Key ' est an
Cross River region, a structure firmly reproduced in Cuban Abakua, prohibited
the informal foundation of new lodges. 8 Certainly, exiled Abakua gathered to Mygr.md
share their music, dance, and chanting, but initiations seem not to have been Maria.
performed, nor were lodges created. Abanekues (initiates) who gathered in BarOkoE
exile would not have the authority to form a lodge, nor could they perform
ceremonies, since there would have been no sponsoring lodge or group of title
holders to direct the rites. 9
Abakua lore recounts how African ancestors designed a collective that could iards..
act only in concert. This practice underscores the profundity of the transfer of Fl
Ekpe to Cuba, since this could only have been achieved through the collective
action of authorized titleholders and their supporters. Even today, Abakua
is the only African-derived institution in Cuba to maintain both a conective
identity and a decision-making process affecting the entire membership.
The collective procedure required for the creation of the first Abakua group
is repeated throughout the Cuban literature. lO This includes the payment of
f=,n;.;; phrases, but on special occasions whistles were used. For example, a dignitary
of the Havana lodge Biabanga was said to have "substituted his oral chant for
F African the notes of the pito (reed flute) . . . in the beromo or procession."12
but colonial
; have there
Migration
m ead "Aba
e of Calabar.
In ~886, with the foundation of the cigar-making company town of Ybor City
rt Abakua in
outside Tampa, many Havana cigar workers migrated there, making it the larg
est Cuban settlement in the United States. Many male tobacco rollers, but cer
e regrouped
tainly not all, were Abakua members, as described by Gerardo Pazos "EI Chino
at new Aba
Mokango," a third-generation Abakua of Spanish descent. From Havana, he
ida.. There is
told me about his family members who escaped persecution by migrating to
Ekpe in the Key West and Tampa in the late nineteenth century;13
i. prohibited
gathered to My grandfather Juan Pazos (~864-~95~) was born in the barrio of Jesus
Dhave been Maria, the son of a Spaniard. He was obonekue [initiate] of the lodge Ita
gathered in Barako Efa [meaning "the first ceremony of Efa"].
aey perform Many Cuban tobacco rollers went to Tampa, Florida, and stayed there,
uup of title including my grandfather's brother, who was a member of the lodge
Ekori Efa . They left during the persecution of the Abakua by the Span
'e that could iards, and later by the Cuban government. Many left in schooners to
! transfer of Florida, because those captured were sent to Fernando Pa, Ceuta and
le collective Chafarinas. I knew several elder men of color sent there who told me
lay, Abakua their stories. They were very tough prisons and many Abakua who were
a collective deported there died.
ership. My grandfather's brother lived in Tampa, and he never told me that
.akua group they "planted" [initiated] in Florida. No Abakua elder ever told me that
payment of they "planted" there.
Abakua leaders report that even though Abakua leaders lived in Florida, they
could not conduct ceremonies, because there were no lodges there with the
knowledgeable personnel and ritual objects. Nevertheless, a series of scholarly
essays have claimed that Abakua lodges existed in Florida.
For example, in 2001 Cuban scholar Enrique Sosa argued for the "certainty
of the existence of fidfiigos" in Key West in the late nineteenth century among
exiled tobacco workers.14 Sosa uncritically cited an earlier scholar who wrote:
"Imported from Cuba, Nanigo appeared in Key West as a religious, fraternal
and mutual-aid sect among blacks in the period 1880-90. The last Nanigo
street dance occurred on the island in 1923."15 For her evidence, this scholar
cited Stetson Kennedy's 1940 WPA report:
A Nanigo [sic] group was organized in Key West, and enjoyed its greatest
popularity between 1880 and 1890 . They gave street dances from time to
time, and dance-parties on New Year's . . . . In 1923 the last Nanigo street
dance to be held in Key West was performed "for fun" by Cuban young
people, attired in make-shift costumes.
Leader of the Nanigos in Key West was a man named Ganda, a small
"tough" Cuban mulatto.. . . Ganda conceived the idea of making elabo
rate Nanigo costumes, head-dresses, bongos (drums), and other equip
ment, teaching young Cubans in Key West the Nanigo dances, and then
joining his company with a carnival of some sort.... He finished the
costumes and other equipment, but died in 1922.16
While Kennedy did not give evidence for the foundation of Abakua lodges
there-he merely described costumes and recreational dances-later authors
cited his work as evidence. In Havana, Gerardo Pazos "El Chino Mokongo"
explained that Kennedy's description was not that of an Abakua rite: "It is not
possible even that they left in beromo [procession], without planting [a cer
emony]. It is possible that comparsas [carnival troupes] paraded around with of
From Cuba . . . the Latin-Americans of Ybor City and Tampa have im
ported their own customs and traditions which survive mostly in annual
festivals. The Cubans found good political use for voodoo beliefs brought
lorida, they
by slaves from Africa to the West Indies and there called Carabali Apapa
re with the
Abacua [voodoo being used generically for "African spirituality"J. Prior to
of scholarly
the Spanish-American War [Cuban Wars of Independence], Cuban na
tionalists joined the cult in order to hold secret revolutionary meetings ,
~ •certain ty
and it then received the Spanish name, Nanigo [an Efik-derived termJ.
among
In 1882, Los Criminales de Cuba , published in Havana by Trujillo Monaga,
who wrote:
described Cuban Nanigo societies as fraternal orders engaged in petty
s. fraternal
politics. Initiation ceremonies were elaborate, with street dances of voo
ast Nafugo
doo origin. Under the concealment of the dances, political enemies were
:his scholar
slain [a confused reference to carnival]; in time the dance came to sig
nify impending murder, and the societies were outlawed by the Cuban
greatest Government [could be either a reference to Abakua, outlawed in 1875;
time to to King's Day processions, outlawed in 1884; or to carnival processions,
~ st:reet outlawed in 1912J. When the cigar workers migrated from Cuba to Key
young West and later to Tampa, societies of "notorious Nanigoes," as they were
branded by Latin opposition papers, were organized in these two cities .
• a small The Nanigo in Key West eventually became a social society that staged
eIabo a Christmas street dance . . .. the last of the street dances was held in
!!" equip 19 2 3. 20
then
Nanigo, like voodoo, is simply a buzzword for unassimilated black people. The
the
claim of "societies of 'notorious Nanigoes'" was partially inspired by depictions
of carnival dance with body-masks by Key West artist Mario Sanchez (b . 1908
' lodges in Key West) (fig. 16.3). Such depictions were misconstrued as evidence for
ter authors Abakua ritual activity, when in fact they merely represented popular dances
okOngo· like rumba and carnival groups. (Sanchez's work will be discussed in a later
Eltis not section.)
[a cer Historian Louis A. Perez Jr.-coauthor of Tampa Cigar Workers and author
,d with of several histories of Cubans in the United States- reported to me: "I have
not come across any Abakua references in Tampa during the late nineteenth
and early twentieth-centuries."21 Anthropologist Susan Greenbaum wrote
More Than Black: Afro-Cubans in Tampa , a study involving the mutual-aid and
Cuban independence group the Club Marti-Maceo in Tampa. She wrote to me
that during her fifteen years of research, "Nanigos were the subject of hushed
and infrequent references. There could have been an active Abakua under
ground here, but I never heard of it."22
Nevertheless, Cuban scholar Sosa argued for the existence of Abakua
lodges in Florida by referring to an essay by Jose Marti (1893) titled "Una
orden secreta de africanos" (A secret order of Africans) that described exile
Tomas Suri in Key West. Sosa argued that Marti referred here to the Abakua
(without mentioning them by name) .23 Marti wrote that Suri belonged to "a
tremendous secret order of Africans . .. a mysterious, dangerous, terrible se
cret order," but described an order of Africans where members rejected use
of a drum, wanting instead to create a school,24 This could not have been an
Abakua lodge, however, because without the consecrated drums there can be
no lodge. 25 Marti may have referred to a group akin to Masons whose members
included Abakua, but his message is ambiguous.
I D
..... "-.
\
l~
...
Africans" as described by Marti required that the holder of the "third grade"
be able to read. This cannot be Abakua; grades are not numbered, and there is
no such requirement.
Most recently, a scholar wrote that "Potencias [Abakua lodges] were also
established in the United States in the nineteenth century by Afro-Cuban mi
.~t:;,;, .V· .....
., t:~~~"L"1 grant workers in Florida."27 An attempt to verify the source of the citation
-:tP'l • proved that it too was a misquote. 28
~\ ~~
, .' J..' Evoking Abakua in Miami
..
~, c
Among the significant cultural achievements related to Abakua in Miami were
A the publications of Lydia Cabrera (1900-1991), who did extensive research in
Havana and Matanzas from the 1930S to the 1950S. Her publications are the
most relevant for the history of Abakua, as well as other African-derived in
ICeyWest). stitutions such as Lukumi and Palo Monte. Cabrera left Cuba in the 1960s to
squerades. settle in Miami, where she published a series of volumes documenting oral
narratives of the African-derived traditions of Cuba, including monumen
tal studies of Abakua drawn esoteric signs (1975) and language (1988), each
eenth about five hundred pages, without which the study of Abakua would be nearly
""Tote impossible.
ai-aid and In 1994, in Miami, I met Luis Fernandez-Pel6n "EI Pel6n," a titled Abakua
rote to me member who was recommended by my teachers in Havana (fig. 16-4). Regard
hushed ing Abakua activities in Miami, he told me: "Here in Miami there are ceiba
ua unde r- [kapok] and palm trees, but since the most important thing-the funda
mento-ran object with ritual authority] is in Cuba, no Abakua group can be
Abakua consecrated here. I have met with all the Abakua who live here and we have
· Una had celebrations with my biankom6 [drum ensemble], but no consecrations."29
:ibed exile Unlike the sacred objects of other Cuban religions of African descent, those of
ie Aba.ku.i. Abakua are thought not to have left the island.
:tged t o Ka Nevertheless, in 1998 the "birth" of the first Abakua group in the United
!!!Tihle se States was announced in Miami. 3o It was named Efi Kebliton Ekuente Mesoro,
eded use a reference to Efik Obliton, the first lodge established in Cuba in the 1830S,
e been an itself named after Oblitong, a community in Calabar. The event took place on
~ c.an
be January 6, considered the anniversary of Abakua's foundation in Cuba.
members The would-be Miami founders sent a letter to Abakua leaders in Havana,
announcing their existence.31 The Abakua leaders I spoke with in Havana
Those Abakua who have migrated to the USA do not have the knowledge
to create a Potency [lodge] there, because this process requires many
men with knowledge and because these ceremonies are very profound.
In addition, when a Potency is created, one must pay the derecho [fee]
of one rooster to all the existing Potencies in order to be recognized by
them. If a juego [lodge] is born in Havana, it must pay this fee to the
other juegos in Havana. If it is born in Matanzas, then to the others
in Matanzas. The juego they tried to create in Miami had no godfather
[sponsor], and furthermore, it did not have the knowledgeable men to
found it. It cannot exist.
"El Chino Mokongo's" statement reflects not only his personal views but the
protocol followed by all Abakua leaders on the island.
Abakua activities in Miami in the first decade of the twenty-first century have
been ignited by recent face-to-face encounters between Abakua members and
their Nigerian and Cameroonian counterparts in the United States. These
encounters began in 2001 when an Abakua performance troupe participated
in the Efik National Association of USA meeting in Brooklyn, New York. In
2003, two Abakua leaders traveled to Michigan to meet the Obong (Paramount
Ruler) of Calabar during another Efik National Association meeting. In 2004,
two Abakua musicians traveled to Calabar, Nigeria, to participate in the an
nual International Ekpe Festival. In 2007, an Ekpe troupe from Calabar and
an Abakua troupe performed together onstage in Paris for five concerts cel
ebrating their common traditions . Then in 2009, those Abakua living in the
seaJnj" "
United States who went to Paris produced a CD recording that fused music
ha!as c
and ritual phrases from both groups. Called Ecobio Enyenison, "Our Brothers
from Africa," it also included the participation of a Cuban artist named Jose
Orbein, whose painting appears on the jacket (fig. 16.5), and an Abakua singer of kl
named Angel Guerrero, both based in Miami. All of this activity has energized lti.i _.
Abakua communities in Miami, where Guerrero has also acted as an entrepre fo u...>............,.
neur by sharing information about African Ekpe with his ritual brothers and
organizing them in cultural events that have been advertised on the internet the ~
262 IvorL.Milier
g lodges in
m eal office
lokOngo of
! four lead
~ title in his
~oprac
to del Buen
try in Cuba
! not create
he studied
initiates.
n tury have
!mhers and
lles. These
articipated
~ York. In
Paramount
tg_ In 2004,
'in the an
a1abar and Figure 16.5. Ecabia Enyenisan CD cover. Painting by Jose Orbein for the U.s.-produced Cuban
mcerts cel Abakua recording by the Enyenison Enkama Project, 2009.The cover illustration depicts the
i'ing in the African continent as sacred space with seven t itle-holders in profile as archetypes. Below the
second "0" of Ecobio is Nasak6, the medicine man and prophet who wears a sea sponge like a
J.Sed music
hat as part of hi s paraphernalia.
II"Brothers
idIIled Jose
lkua singer of their lodge's foundation. On February 24, 2010 , the members of the lodge
; energized Itia Mukanda Ef6 gathered with friends to celebrate the anniversary of their
Cl entrepre founding in 1947 in Havana.39
others and On January 2 and 3, 2010 , in Miami, members of two Havana lodges from
lie internet the same lineage, Efori Enkomon (founded 1840) and Ekue Munyanga Ef6
(founded 1871), celebrated a feast to adore the La Virgin de la Caridad (the Vir
sta- (party gin of Charity), the patron saint of the Munyanga lodge and also of the Cuban
ritual (fig. nation (fig. 16.7). This saint is popularly understood as a dimension of Ochun,
ge patio to the Lukumi/Yoruba goddess of fertility, who for Abakua also represents Sikan,
!! hundreds their Sacred Mother. 4o This date was chosen for being a weekend near Janu
Guerrero's ary 6, known as "Abakua day," the anniversary of the colonial-era Three King's
JeIDbers of Day processions wherein African "nation-groups" would perform their tradi
nniversary tional dances and greet the governor general in Havana. This day was chosen
to found the Abakua society in Cuba because they were able to use the mass
celebration as a cover for their own activities. On September 14 and 15, 2010,
members of the Havana lodge Amiabon (founded in 1867) gathered, appar
ently for their own anniversary (fig. 16.7). The most recent feast was "Abakua
day" on January 8, 2011, in Miami at a private home (fig. 16.8).
These activities have been meaningful to Abakua on either side of the "Rum
Curtain." Angel Guerrero (2011) reported that Abakua had little opportunity to
communicate across the Gulf Stream from the 1960s to the 1980s: "Because of
the rupture in communications between those who left and those who stayed,
many members willing to send money to help their lodges in Cuba were im
peded. Also, many Abakua lodges performed ceremonies without knowing
Ivor L. Miller
--- ~--
Left: Fi~u re 16.7.~Ireme Eribangando;
Abakua Day: 'Poster by JQse Orbein,
, Mia~i, January ~-3, 2010. The Ireme
b~y-m~,sk represented in the poster
perf6rms t6:~o'i>en
( -;
the'
,
way~ for the oth
~
<
. ' .,
vrn TCrLrnnfi
EL DIl1 DEL .~ "
ethe mass
SI1DI1DO 0Dr rnrno
"
.. .,
~5. 2010 ,
~ appar-
2011
IS -Abakua 11111111 fLOnIDI1
eKRum 20 1~ nw 22 counT
iJrtunity to
I
11111111
Because of fLOITIDI1
stayed, 331~2
it \\-ere im
From the late nineteenth century to the present in Cuba, there has existed an
artistic tradition of using Abakua themes in music, theater, and painting as a The pai::l
symbol of the Cuban nation itself. This tradition has continued among Cuban
artists living in Florida today.
Mario Sanchez (1908-2005) is an early example of an artist working in Key about
West who documented carnivalesque popular dances in the early twentieth lodge
century. Because he depicted various styles of body-mask performance, in enyo . !rIM!
cludingAbakua heme and Puerto Rican Vejigantes, some scholars interpreted ers from
this as evidence for Abakua rites occurring in Key West.41 Sanchez was more
likely exploring issues of identity and cultural performance, as did other art
ists mentioned in this essay. Artists have been creating images of freme for nu His
merous purposes, none of which provide evidence for Abakua ritual activity in
figure:1~.9. qborek'ue Ara~nsuao; By Jose Orbein, Miami, 2008. 20 X'32 inches. AcrYlic andcharcoal over
.:card,board. The.pailltirig depicts a neophyte during an Abakua initiationwith a handkerchief across the
eYes and esoteric signs drawn on the body. The arrows pointing downward indicate initiation. Used with
permission.
announcing "the First artistic gathering of Abakua in Florida" (fig. 16.6). The
map identifying the location of the feast is a sign that these activities promote
education about Abakua practice as a community-wide event, instead of be
ing a "secret, hidden" one that in the past may have aroused suspicion among
non-members. The process of communicating with West African counterparts
is fueling desire for a wider public understanding, so that the ongoing public
performances already mentioned will be popularized as relevant to all in the
transatlantic African diaspora, as well as the Cuban diaspora. The 2010 poster
displays the "Ireme Eribanganda," a body-mask used to lead processions dur
ing initiation ceremonies, implying that "Abakua is moving forward" (fig. 16.7).
The use of the colors and star of the Cuban flag are another statement that
Abakua is "as Cuban as black beans and rice." Participants have reported that
in Cuba, the use of a Cuban flag on an Ireme could lead to conflicts with the au
thorities, a reminder that Abakua jurisprudence has acted independently from
the colonial Spanish and Cuban state since its foundation. The 2011 poster cel
ebrates the legacy of nineteenth-century Abakua leader Andres Petit through
his portrait (fig. 16.8). In the 18sos-60s Petit lead the successful process of
initiating the first white Abakua members, thus ensuring that Abakua would
be open to all eligible males of any heritage. 46
Painter Elio Beltran (b. 1929) was born and raised in RegIa, a small indus
trial town on the Bay of Havana where Abakua was founded in the 1830s. Still a
vital center for African-derived community traditions, RegIa is home to scores
of active Abakua lodges. From his home in Florida, Beltran wrote: "I grew up
registering dream-like images in my mind during my childhood years. Images
that many years later would emerge as oil paintings to help me to ease my
pain of separation from the very dear surroundings and people that I loved
in Cuba." A series of paintings reflect the impact of an Abakua heme (body
mask) performance on the young artist. Asustados Intrusos, or "Scared Intrud
ers" (1981), depicts "three scared kids hiding and secretly watching an Abakua
initiation in the early 1940'S behind the tall grass at the edge of a cliff in the
night. 47 I believe it was the Otan Efa brotherhood of the Abakua on the out
skirts of my hometown Regla. 48 I was one of the three boys overlooking the
scene of the celebration on the site at the entrance to what was known then as
El callej6n del Sapo." A second painting, Ceremonia Secreta (1987), depicts the
same event from 180 degrees (fig. 16.10). These paintings are remarkable for
depicting how a hermetic club became famous among non-initiates who were
awed by the communal rites.
A third painting, Memories del Carnaval (2010, not illustrated here), recon
structs the night scene of a Carnival celebration in an Old Havana neighbor
hood circa 1938-40. It shows how elements of African-derived traditions (an
Abakua mask, a bata drum, a conga drummer with the camisa rumbera [fluffy
sleeves] of early rumba players) were fused in the citywide celebrations. In all
of these works, one senses the profound impact of an Abakua mask perfor
mance on the young viewer, as well as the identification of Abakua as part of
the national culture.
Beltran's corpus recalls the reaction of Spanish poet Garda Lorca to an Aba
kua performance during his visit to Cuba in 1929-30. About it, Lydia Cabrera
wrote, "I do not forget the terror that the ireme instilled in Federico Garda
Lorca, nor the delirious poetic description he made for me the day after wit
nessing a plante [ceremony]. If a Diaghilev had been born on this island, surely
he would have made the diablitos [iremel of the iidfiigos parade through the
theaters of Europe."49 While Beltran has worked primarily from his memories
and in isolation, other painters have consulted with Abakua members during
their creative process.
Author's Note
Thanks to Amanda B. Carlson and Robin Poynor for their support of this proj
ect as well as their fine editing. Thanks also to Norman Aberley (curator of
the Key West Art and Historical Society), Nath Mayo Adediran (director of
National Museums, Nigeria), Peter Appio, "Chief" (engineer) Bassey Efiong
Bassey, Elio Beltran, George Brandon, Orlando Caballero, Osvaldo Caballero,
Jill Cutler, Senator Bassey Ewa-Henshaw, Luis Fernandez-Pelon, Liza Gadsby,
Susan Greenbaum, Angel Guerrero, Stetson Kennedy, Chester King, Victor
Manfredi, Jose Orbein, Louis A. Perez, Gerardo Pazos, Leandro Soto, Robert
Farris Thompson, and Brian Willson. Thanks to the J. William Fulbright For
eign Scholarship Board for a Fulbright Scholars Grant to Nigeria (2009-11) and
to Professor James Epoke-the vice chancellor of the University of Calabar.
Thanks to the National Museum of African Art (NMAfA), Smithsonian Insti
tution, in Washington, D.C., for a Senior Fellowship (2011-12).
Notes
1. The leopard society has many names depending on the local language, including
Nyamkpe (in Cameroon), Banko (in Equatorial Guinea), Okanka (in Igbo), and Abakua
(in Cuba). Most West African communities also recognize the term Ekpe, since the lifik
influence in the region was widespread in the nineteenth century.
2 . Roche y Monteagudo, La policia y sus misterios en Cuba, 27. All translations from
City and Tampa in the late 1930S. The Federal Writers' Project Papers housed in the Uni
versity of North Carolina Library at Chapel Hill contain descriptions of cigar workers born
in Havana and living in Florida; none of them refer to the Abakua. dez-
20. Florida: A Guide, 133. Cubans - (
21. Historian Louis A. Perez Jr., letter to the author, 2004. saw a
22. E-mail to the author from Professor Greenbaum, 2003. (Caba!!ero.
23. Sosa, "Nafiigos en Key West," 166-67. 37
24. Marti, "Una orden secreta de africanos," 324; Muzio, Andres Quimbisa, 71-72; Sosa, in 1929 S.
"Nafiigos en Key West," 167; Ishemo, "From Africa to Cuba," 256. Jesus Cruz (personal eligih!e
communication, 2000), Ekuenyon of the Ordan Efi lodge in Matanzas told me that he had kumi
heard that Tomas Sur! was Abakua but that his lodge name was not known. After reading and
Sosa's essay, Cruz responded that nothing in this article proves that Abakua conducted the Y _
ceremonies in Florida, nor are such activities known about by Abakua leadership in Cuba.
25. In spite of the errors in this essay, Sosa should be praised for his support of Abakua
culture in Cuba in the early 1980S in the form of his book (Los Nafiigos), since it was an
unpopular theme in the political sphere at the time.
26. Ishemo, "From Africa to Cuba," 268. Ishemo falsely cited Muzio (Andres Quimbisa,
71) and Helg (Our Rightful Share, 87); there is no mention in either of Marti, a Famba, or
a flag. Ishemo also cited Sosa ("Nafiigos en Key West," 167-68), who in turn cites Marti
("Una orden secreta de africanos"), but Marti made no mention of Abakua. Marti wrote
of a secret society of Cuban "Africans," who had given up the drum in order to learn to
read-a non sequitur-and whose reunions took place in a "bannered hall ... the hall
whose parties were adorned with the banner of the revolution" ("sala embanderada ... la
sala que adorna sus fiestas con la bandera de la revolucion") ("Una orden secreta de afri
canos," 324) . Sosa imagined that Marti wrote of an Abakua group in Key West. Ishemo's
piece is riddled with the uncritical repetition of errors, and poor translations.
27. Ayorinde, "Ekpe in Cuba," 141.
28 . Ayorinde quoted Brandon ("The Dead Sell Memories," 108). Brandon (2011 personal
communication) confirmed that he made no such claim and that this was a misquote.
29. Luis "el Pelon" died in 1997 in Miami; his body was carried to Havana to receive
Abakua ceremonies and burial. Ceiba (Kapok, or White Silk Cotton Trees) are "venerated
and revered in forests zones of Nigeria. It is a fetish tree and sacrifices for the release of
people captured and detained in the world of witches and wizards ready for the kill are
performed at the base of this large tree" ("Nature Trail Tree List," 3) .
30. Cf. 1. Miller, "Obras de fundacion: La Sociedad Abakua."
31. I was shown a copy of this letter in the office of Mr. Angel Freyre "Chibiri," president
of the Abakua Bureau (la Organizacion para la Unidad Abakua), in RegIa in 2000.
32. Cf. D. H. Brown, Santeria Enthroned, 78; Ortiz reported the founding of Yoruba
derived Bata drums in Havana in the 1830S (Los instrumentos de la musica afrocubana,
3 1 5-16).
33. "There are said to be about two hundred true babalawo in Havana, and most of
them have been drawn to the large cities where they can earn more money." Bascom, "Two
Forms of Afro-Cuban Divination," 171 .
34. The ceremony performed was the creation in Miami of the first Olofies, a ritual ves
sel possessed only by high-ranking babalawo. A 1978 Miami newspaper article reporting
on the event stated that the first Olofies were made by Yoruba babalawos in Havana more
than "200 years" before. Archives of Luis Fernandez-Pelon.
35. Thanks to Mr. Nath Mayo Adediran (2005 personal communication), for the cor
Adrian Castro's poem "Cross the Water" from Wise Fish: Tales in 6/8 Time (copyright
2005) is reprinted with the permission of Coffee House Press. www.coffeehousepress.
com . Excerpts from Gordon Bleach's artist statements and notes reprinted with
permission from GayleZachmann. Chapter 14 by Andrew Warnes is a shortened and
updated version of an article that originally appeared as "Guantanamo. Eatonville.
Accompong: Barbecue and the Diaspora in the Writings of Zora Neale Hurston." Journal
ofAmerican Studies 40. no. 1 (2006): 367-89. It is reprinted by kind permission of
Cambridge University Press.
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