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| About site: Ethnicity/The Americas/Indigenous/Caribbean/Tainos - Taino Borincano - NY Boricua | Return to Society |
| About site: http://www.nyboricua.com/boricua.htm |
Title: Ethnicity/The Americas/Indigenous/Caribbean/Tainos - Taino Borincano - NY Boricua Essays, photographs, references to published materials and links to related resources are provided on this site which focuses on the survival of Taino heritage. |
| About site: http://www.nyboricua.com/boricua.htm |
Title: Ethnicity/The Americas/Indigenous/Caribbean/Tainos - Taino Borincano - NY Boricua Essays, photographs, references to published materials and links to related resources are provided on this site which focuses on the survival of Taino heritage. |
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Taino_Indian_Culture A concise historical and ethnographic description of the Tainos is provided on this page by Magaly Rivera.
| TaÃno_Nation_of_the_Antilles_(TaÃno_Wara-a_Bawakén) The official website for the "Restoration of the Taino Nation" features essays and an introduction to this movement in Puerto Rico, Cuba and the Dominican Republic, as well as contact information.
| Taino_Resources_at_the_Caribbean_Amerindian_Centrelink A directory of online resources on the Tainos of the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Puerto Rico and amongst immigrant communities in the United States.
| The_Taino_Survival Challenging the argument that the Taino Indians of the Caribbean are extinct, the author argues that they have always been present.
| Taino_Timucua_Tribal_Council,_Tampa,_Florida This page provides an ethnohistoric overview of the Timucua of Florida and their Taino relations.
| The_Taino_World As the Museo del Barrio's Internet complement to its exhibitions and publications on Pre-Columbian Taino culture, this site offers various pages of ethnohistorical descriptions as well as pages on the
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| Related sites for http://www.nyboricua.com/boricua.htm |
| Taino_net_(Spanish) Information on the Taino 'roots' of Puerto Rico, featuring four museum and commemorative sites in Puerto Rico. Click on the "Cultura Taina" link on this page. | | TaÃnos_of_Puerto_Rico,_a_cultural_site A cultural history of the TaÃnos of Borikén including traditions, folklore, cooking, agriculture, clothing, artifacts, and physical description. | | The_Tekesta_Indians_of_South_Florida The Tekesta Indians lived in what is now Dade and Broward Counties, southeast Florida, and had a capital town, probably also called Tekesta, in Miami. Today the Tekesta Taino society is reorganized un | | United_Confederation_of_Taino_People This site features information on the organization, contact information, a wide variety of educational resources, a news group and a journal focusing on contemporary Taino, Carib and Arawak Indians wi | | World_History_Archives__Indigenous_Peoples_of_Boriken A retrospective and contemporary history of the TaÃnos of Borikén, and the history of Caribbean peoples of Amazonian origin in general. | | Yukayeke_Guajataka This Taino community site presents photos of its members, a description of its organization, a newsletter, and an art gallery. |
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This is dmoz2006.org cache of m/ as retrieved on 2010.07.29 dmoz2006.org's cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web. The page may have changed since that time.
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Boricua - "Como El Coquí"
TAINO BORINCANO ^Miguel Angel Guzman Mural - Caguana Souvenir Shop - Utuado, PR Taino Borincano - DNA testing is under way at UPR - Mayaguez. Random samples have shown a considerable number of Puerto Ricans have an "Amerindian" genotype. Boricua: n., adj. Meaning "The Valiant People of the Sacred House". Derived from the Taíno name for Puerto Rico (Borikén: Land of the Brave Noble Lord). Represents a proud sense of identity. Taíno: n., adj. "The Good Ones". Native American tribes originally inhabiting pre-Columbian Borikén (Puerto Rico), Haiti-Kiskeya (Haiti-Dominican Republic), and Cuba. Arawak: n., adj. Language spoken by a once-predominant group of Native American tribes originally inhabiting an area that stretched from present-day Florida down through the islands of the Greater and Lesser Antilles and the coastal area of South America as far as Brazil. The history of the Caribbean's indigenous peoples is often told from the European perspective, rather than the indigenous peoples themselves. The majority of the written records pertaining to their culture and history consist of diaries and the reports of European explorers, conquerors and their descendants who have a long history of misinterpreting the native-american cultures. Obviously, their insight was limited, as they did not share the language nor did they have a solid understanding of the indigenous people’s way of life. Another flaw in the history of the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean is that they are frequently lumped together as one singular group. In almost every historical account, the Taino people have been interchangeably linked with the Arawak, and have been categorized together. This one inclusive category has remained intact to the present day, with little documented challenge. Few people have any concept of their linguistic and cultural diversity, nor do they know the names of the different groups. Today, although the indigenous populations of the Caribbean have decreased substantially in numbers, their culture, in many places, is still very much alive. It is important to realize that these people are more than just a memory and that by looking at their story from all possible angles, we can put together the pieces of their history and attempt to find the truth. "Ellos ven muy mucho de lejos y determinan lo que ven mas que otros. Parece que con la vista penetran los corazones de los hombres. Y tienen comunmente los ojos hermosos. Oyen tambien muy mucho, huelen cualquiera cosa de muy lejos, aunque sea entre los montes. Lo mismo es del gusto. El sentido del tacto tienenlo en gran igualdad." Fray Bartolome De Las Casas CONTENTS • Areyto - Indiera Alta, Maricao • Caguana: Taino Ceremonial Park • Tumba Del Indio, Jayuya • Piedra Tallada, Jayuya • History of PR / Historia de PR • mtDNA and Race in Puerto Rico • Origins of the Taino DNA Survey • MtDNA Results For PR • The Puerto Ricans At Carlisle Indian School • Carlisle Indian School - Tribal Tally • Taino Origins: Culture of the Collas • A Note On Tainos • Taino Gold • Porto Rico - New Advent Catholic • Caribbean History • Caribs in Dominica • Bartolome De Las Casas • TainoHistory & Tribal Links / Books • La Voz Del Pueblo Taíno • Indigenous Latino? • Chronology Of The Papal Bulls Movement Piedra Tallada - Jayuya Click Foto To Zoom In
LA CARA DEL INDIO
Monumento Cacíque Mabodomaca
Sculpted by: Isaac Laboy Moctezuma RT. #2, km105 & RT. #113 North Isabela, Puerto Rico 00662 Cacíque Mabodomaca was one of the leaders during the Indian Wars. His chiefdom covered Camuy-Quebradillas-Isabela. Before the European invasion this area was one of the most important Taíno chiefdoms and was known as Guajataca (Taíno for "The Water Ladle"). Legend has it that when his warriors could no longer hold back the European invaders he led his people along the Guajataca River and disappeared into the Island's central mountain range. Route # 113 (Quebradillas-Isabela) has been renamed "Avenida Cacíque Mabodomaca" in honor of this great leader. ORIGINS OF THE TAINO DNA SURVEY by Rick Kearns In1995, the remains of four people were unearthed at a construction site in Arecibo, Puerto Rico. These ancient skeletons weredamaged by the regular excavation process and were then donated to Dr. JuanMartinez Cruzado, a geneticist from the University of Puerto Rico Mayaguezcampus. Due to the age and condition of the skeletons, scientists couldnot tell the age or gender of these individuals. Dr. Martinez Cruzado wasallowed to use the remains for "practice" studies.Despite their almost anonymous status and poor condition, these ancient remainswere very important to the geneticist and to all of his colleagues. Thisaccidental discovery provided scientists with their first opporunity to doancient DNA work with Puerto Rican samples.Martinez Cruzado and his team decided to separate an element of the DNA of theancient people after it was determined that they died around 645AD; making themmembers of the pre-Tainos, who arrived in Puerto Rico 700 years before theTaino. (The Pre-Tainos are classified as having an Ostionoid Culture andthey inhabited the island between c. 600 to 1300 A.D.)"We isolated a fragment of the mitochondrial DNA and sequenced it. Wedid that and they were all identified as belonging to a known native americanlineage," Martinez Cruzado recounted in a brief phone interview thisOctober. "The problem was the sequence was identical for all four samples,so we got worried that it was a homogenous popultion and it would be difficultto determine differences from one individual to another."Martinez Cruzado explained that it would be important to identify certain"sites" in the DNA molecules where certain differences would appear."Any two DNA's from two different people will be identical at many sitesbut in other sites there are differences," he continued. "Weneeded to find which (of the sites) would be different in the Tainopopulation. We needed to get more Taino DNA and so we went to the Indieras- barrios on the island which were known to have had Indian populations in thelate 18th century - as it was so hard to get more samples from the ancientbones."From that point, Martinez Cruzado and his team began an informal DNA survey ofPuerto Ricans from these barrios and from university employees and faculty whoclaimed to have mothers or grandmothers with Indian traits. What theyfound from two small groups was a much higher percentage of Taino DNA than theycould have expected, based on the historical accounts of Taino extinction. Theyfollowed those first surveys with another random search, using samples of peoplewho were not from the Indiera and the results were almost the same: a very high percentage of peoplewith Indian DNA. As a result of these astounding discoveries, MartinezCruzado decided to go further. He applied for and was awarded a $270,000grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation to continue a formal survey, using more than 720 samples gathered from around the island.Until the analysis of the survey samples is completed, which will take anothertwo years, the final determination of the original remains will not be made,Martinez Cruzado noted. Tumba Del Indio - Jayuya Click Foto To Zoom In Caguana / Utuado Taino Ceremonial Park The center consists of a large main court, a circular court and 10 smaller rectangular courts (Bateyes). Monoliths, petroglyphs, and a collection of artifacts can be seen. A botanical garden recreates the plants the Tainos used for food (such as the yautia, sweet potatoes, corn and tobacco), and building materials, the ceiba, ausubo, tabonuco and royal palm. In Arecibo, take Road 10 to Utuado and turn right on Road 111 to km. 12.3. The drive passes through karst country and skirts rivers, lakes and impressive interior mountain peaks. Admission: s $2.00 - Seniors & Children $1.00 Wednesday To Sunday - Miercoles A Domingo9 AM - 4:30PM Carretera 111 - KM. 12.4 Barrio Caguana - Utuado, P.R. Tel: 787.894.7325 Click Foto To Zoom In More Fotos Aymaco Picture Gallery Centro Ceremonial Indígena de Tibes Taino Origins The Andean Culture of the Collas From: "The Eagle and The Jaguar" - By Antonio Blasini The precedence of the Taino culture is reaffirmed when we examine the following customs acquired from the Colla tribe. Any theory stating that the Taino is a descendant of the Arawaks is completely discarded with these findings, and other revelations. 1. When a child was born, the Tainos tied a wooden piece to the baby’s head to deform his skull. This ritual, inherited from the Incas, was also performed by the peoples of Tenochtitlan and Copan. The Arawaks never performed this ritual. 2. Ceremonial Burial: This ritual consisted of burying their dead in a fetal position, together with some of his possessions, which the deceased would carry into the better life. The Arawaks cremated their dead, and made a beverage from their ashes, which they drank. 3. The Tainos majestic agricultural and surveying skills inherited from the Collas, as fray Bartolome de las Casas quoted: "To see them working the land, is a wonder". The Arawaks never farmed their lands, even when the missionary priests tried to teach them, they hardly developed any farming skills at all. 4. The Taino ceremonial sport, The game of the Batey, was also part of the Taino rituals. Played in rectangular courts surrounded by monoliths, aligned with the solar equinoxes. The Arawaks had a lesser version of this game. 5. The handcrafting of stone, wood, bones, and shells, was never developed by the Arawaks, with such majesty as the Tainos did. For example: the Taino’s travelling canoes, 90 feet long, accommodating 150 people, crafted with "unsurpassed beauty", as Fray Bartolome de las Casas described. 6. Another example are the Taino percussion instruments, one of them called the Mayohuacan, sacred tambour. If we compare it with the Aztec’s drum, the Teponzatle, both have the same acoustic design. For both cultures, it meant "the voice of the gods". 7. The majestic ceremonial dance, the Areyto Taino, with it’s choreographies (dances), and choralogephies (chants), had distinctive names which gave these tribal rituals a regional definition, like the "Areyto of the Magua", and the "Areyto Anacaona". The Arawaks never celebrated these rituals with such majestuosity. 8. There was a ceremony celebrated by the Colla tribe, where the single males dressed with the female dress, the nagua. In this ritual, they asked the moon for a wife. The Tainos also celebrated this ritual. It is to be noted that the Spaniards, when seeing an Indian dressed with nagua, thinking that they were homouals, released their pack of dogs and killed them. 9. The cohoba ritual, where the Tainos inhaled an hallucinogenic dust from the cohoba tree, was used to communicate with the gods. This ritual was also inherited from the ancient Andean tribes of the Collas. The Arawaks never performed this ritual. 10. The Taino wedding ceremonies, by tying a knot among their wedding clothes, symbolizing the myth of the marriage among the two moons of Venus (as the myth states), was also celebrated by the Andean tribes, not so with the Arawak people. 11. Finally, Juan C. Zamora’s linguistic research: Indigenisms of the Conquistadore's Language, totally discards any Arawak influence in the Taino tribe. In this study, it was found that the Taino language was influenced by:Words of Origin % Nahuatl 41 Taino 30 Other 13 Undetermined 4 All these are just a few indications to convince us that the Taino was a direct descendant of the Collas and not the Arawaks (Tribe from the Amazon's Orinoco River). "INDIGENOUS LATINO" To: The Editor of Indian Country Today From: E. Conley February 11, 2003 As I was reading your article dated February 4, 2003, "Indigenous Latino and the Consciousness of the Native Americans", I was a bit disturbed that you referred to Central and South America and the Caribbean as "Latin America." In addition, you referred to the American Indians as "Indigenous Latino." The word "Latin" refers to the ancient Romans from Italy; that is, Europeans. The more recent usage of the term "Latin" or "hispanic" to describe Indians who speak Spanish is even a greater insult since both these terms come from the European root terms of ownership. For instance, when Columbus invaded in 1492, he named one of the American Indian Islands "Hispaniola" which means "Islas de los Españoles", the meaning translated into English (this is NOT a literal translation) is, "Property Island of the Spaniards." The common written language of that time was in Latin and not Spanish. In fact, Columbus' diaries are in Latin. When you refer to a Spanish speaking Indian as a "hispanic" or a "Latin" you are referring to them as the "property of Spain" which is probably the greatest insult any Indian from South and Central America and the Caribbean could experience. Many Indian Nations suffered at the hands of the Spaniards who committed unspeakable acts of violence, slavery, hatred, and murder upon the Indian people. The venom of the Spaniards did not stop in the Caribbean Islands or in Central and South America. Just look at the many Indian tribes and people in New Mexico, Arizona, and the California areas with Spanish names and/or surnames. Referring to Indians as "hispanic" or "Latin" is just as ludicrous as referring to the English speaking Indians as "English" or "property of England" and the French speaking Indians as "French" or "Property of France." I would hope that as a newspaper that represents the interest of ALL Indians, you would take a strong stand against any type of implicit or explicit ethnic cleansing and usage of slurs against Indians. In the spirit of survival for all our people, I implore that you discontinue the use of the words "hispanic" and "Latin" when you are referring to Indians. I ask that you research what I have told you and educate all our people. It is important that WE make an effort to stop any and all of the implicit and explicit forms of ethnic cleansing as well as the usage of slurs. Respectfully, E. Conley SEE ALSO: Hispanic or Latino - Background Knowledge and Sensitivity TainoHistory Links
GRAN AREYTO NACIONAL - JAYUYA, PR Taino Dictionary The Invisible Boricua Jatibonicu Taino Tribal Nation Taino Culture (El Boricua.Com) The Slaughter (Aymaco TainoTribe) Taino:Ancient Voyagers of the Caribbean Directory of Puerto Rico Research Resources Caribbean Amerindian Links TainoTribal WebSites Tibes Arawaks Taino.Org Taino World Taino Online Presencia Taina Baramaya Taino Aymaco Taino Tribe Taino: Voices From the Past Jatibonicu Taino Tribal Nation Rebel Slaves in the Americas Caribbean Amerindian Centrelink Native Peoples of the West Indies United Confederation of Taíno People Honoring The Taino People Past And Present PresenciaTaina.tv Video Productions / Educational Videos (1/2 and 1 hour Video productions Historical References Accomplished research assistance Taino Music Anthology Indigenous CDs and cassettes Books / Special Reports / Maps Rare and out of print copies featuring colorful and historical educational aides BOOKS Puerto Rico: Book Search 1349 Titles To Choose History Puerto Rico: A Political And Cultural History By Arturo Morales Carrion The Tainos : Rise & Decline of the People Who Greeted Columbus By Irving Rouse A People's History by Howard Zinn Lies My Teacher Told Me by James
Louwen
The Conquest of Paradise
by Kirkpatrick Sale
Rethinking Columbus by Bigelow and Peterson
The Conquest of America by Tzvetan Todorov
In Defense of the Indians by Bartolome de las Casas The Columbus Dynasty in the Caribbean by Troy S. Floyd
The Log of Christopher Columbus by Christopher Columbus The Mysterious History of Columbus by John Noble Wilford
Columbus & Cortez, Conquerors for Christ by John Eidsmoe
1421: The Year China Discovered America by Gavin Menzies
The Voyages of Christopher Columbus by Rex and Thea Rienits Presencia Taina Books - Maps - Videos - Special Reports The Indigenous People of the Caribbean By Samuel M. Wilson A Brief History of the CaribbeanBy Jan Rogozinski Antiquities ofthe IndiansBy Ramon Pane The Four Voyages of Columbus By Christopher Columbus Poet and Politician of Puerto Rico: Don Luis Muñoz Marin Doña Julia And Other Selected Poems Alberto O. Cappas Taino Myths & Legends Atariba andNiguayona The Golden Flower Chupacabras : And Other Mysteries
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Essays, | photographs, | references | to | published | materials | and | links | to | related | resources | are | provided | on | this | site | which | focuses | on | the | survival | of | Taino | heritage. | |
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