Junkanoo

(Redirected from Jonkunnu)

Junkanoo is a festival that was originated during the period of African chattel slavery in British American colonies. It is practiced most notably in The Bahamas, Jamaica and Belize, and historically in North Carolina and Miami, where there are significant settlements of West Indian people during the post-emancipation era. In the present day, there are considerable variations in performance and spelling, but there are the shared elements of masquerade (or masking), drumming, dance, and parading.

Junkanoo
Junkanoo (or "John Canoe") celebrants (Kingston, Jamaica, Christmas 1975)
StatusActive
GenreFolk festival, street festival, parade
CountryCaribbean
Junkanoo
CountryThe Bahamas
Reference01988
RegionLatin America and the Caribbean
Inscription history
Inscription2023 (18th session)
ListRepresentative

In many territories, Junkanoo is observed around the week of Christmas. These Christmas-time cultural parades are predominantly showcased in Jamaica.[1] In The Bahamas, it was initially called Junkanoo and is said to date back to the 1700s where it is celebrated year round. In Belize, where the music is also mainstreamed, competition results are hotly contested.[2] There are also Junkanoo parades in Miami in June and Key West in October, where local black populations have their roots in the Caribbean.[3]

Origins

edit

Its origin is assumed to have begun in The Bahamas, but is claimed by several other islands in the English-speaking Caribbean. However, evidence shows that Junkanoo's origins point strongly to Jamaica and was later spread throughout the Caribbean as early as the 18th century.[4] Though stemming from the same origin, each celebration has been localized by different countries and, over time, evolved to be somewhat different.[5]

This tradition is one of the oldest dance celebrations in Jamaica.[6] In addition to being a cultural dance for the Garifuna people,[7][8] this type of dancing is also performed in The Bahamas on their independence day and other historical holidays.

Historically, Junkanoo parades were also found in southeastern North Carolina that can be traced back to Jamaican roots.[9] However, the custom became less popular after slavery was abolished. The last known Junkanoo celebration in the Southern United States was in Wilmington, North Carolina, in the late 1880s.[10]

Dances are choreographed to the beat of goatskin drums and cowbells.

History

edit

The festival may have originated several centuries ago when enslaved Africans or their descendants, on the plantations in Jamaica, celebrated holidays granted around Christmastime. This was done with dance, music (drumming), and costumes. The costumes and drumming used in celebration in Jamaica show strong similarities to West African mask dances.

A contribution to the origins of this Jamaican tradition could be found in three "groups" of West African festival traditions. These are;

  1. the annual New Yam Festival of the Mmo secret society of the Igbo peoples
  2. the Egungun masquerades of the Yoruba people, and
  3. the Homowo yam festival of the Ga people[11]

The tradition continued in countries like The Bahamas after emancipation. Junkanoo evolved far from simple origins to a formal, organized parade with intricate costumes, themed music, and official prizes within various categories.

The origin of the word junkanoo is disputed. Theories include that it is named after a folk hero named John Canoe or that it is derived from the French term gens inconnus (unknown people), as the revelers wear masks.[12]

Douglas Chambers, professor of African studies at the University of Southern Mississippi, suggests a possible Igbo origin from the Igbo yam deity Njoku Ji, referencing festivities in time for the New Yam Festival. Chambers also suggests a link with the Igbo okonko masking tradition of southern Igboland, which features horned maskers and other masked characters, similar to junkanoo masks.[13]

Similarities with the Yoruba Egungun festivals have also been identified.[14] However, an Akan origin is more likely because the celebration of the Fancy Dress Festivals/Masquerades are during the same time (Christmas week (December 25–January 1)) in the Central and Western Regions of Ghana. In addition, John Canoe was an existing Ahanta chief and an Akan warrior hero that ruled Axim, Ghana before 1720, the same year the John Canoe festival was created in the Caribbean.[15] As scholar Jeroen Dewulf pointed out, the term may have had a religious dimension, relating to the Akan deity Nyankompong (in today's spelling), who was known in eighteenth-century English sources as John Company.[16]

According to Edward Long, an 18th-century Jamaican enslaver/historian, the John Canoe festival was created in Jamaica and the Caribbean by enslaved Akan who backed the man known as John Canoe. Canoe was an ally soldier for the Germans until he turned his back on them for his Ahanta people, siding with the Asante, Nzema, Wassa and others in an alliance called Kotoko(another name for the Asante state), to take the area from the Germans and other Europeans. The news of his victory reached Jamaica, and he has been celebrated ever since the Christmas of 1708 when he first defeated Prussian forces for Axim. Twenty years later, his stronghold was broken by neighboring Fante forces, aided by the military might of the British.

Ahanta and other Asante Kotoko captives were taken to Jamaica as prisoners of war. The festival itself includes motifs from battles typical of Akan fashion. The many war masks and dance formations of the Ahanta people became part of this celebration worldwide, especially in the Caribbean. The elaborate masks and attire resemble Akan battledress with charms, referred to as a "Batakari".[17]

Description

edit

Junkanoo has been prominent and celebrated in colonies such as Jamaica (as Jankunu, jonkonnu), The Bahamas (as Junkanoo), and North Carolina.[13][18]

Historian Stephen Nissenbaum described the festival as it was performed in 19th-century North Carolina:

Essentially, it involved a band of black men—generally young—who dressed themselves in ornate and often bizarre costumes. Each band was led by a man who was variously dressed in animal horns, elaborate rags, female disguise, whiteface (and wearing a gentleman's wig!), or simply his "Sunday-go-to-meeting-suit." Accompanied by music, the band marched along the roads from plantation to plantation and town to town, accosting whites and sometimes even entering their houses. In the process, the men performed elaborate and (to white observers) grotesque dances that were probably of African origin. In return for this performance, they always demanded money (the leader generally carried "a small bowl or tin cup" for this purpose), though whiskey was an acceptable substitute.[19]

 
Example of Junkanoo costume December 2007
edit

The Junkanoo parade has been featured in movies, such as the James Bond film Thunderball (erroneously described as a local Mardi Gras-type festival), After the Sunset, and Jaws The Revenge. It was also in the season one episode, Calderone's Return (Part II), of the 1984 television series Miami Vice, taking place on the fictitious island of St. Andrews.

A song titled "Junkanoo Holiday (Fallin'-Flyin')" was written by Kenny Loggins and is featured on his 1979 album Keep The Fire. This song immediately follows the hit song, "This Is It," on the album. "This Is It" has a fade ending that segues into "Junkanoo Holiday (Fallin'-Flyin')", omitting a complete break between the two songs.

In the thirteenth episode of the television show Top Chef: All-Stars, "Fit for a King", the contestants danced at a Junkanoo parade, learned about its history, and competed to make the best dish for the Junkanoo King.

The post-Covid return to Junkanoo was briefly discussed across the two-part episodes 189 and 190 of Nicole Byer and Sasheer Zamata's podcast, Best Friends, documenting their trip to The Bahamas.[20][21]

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "2nd Day of Christmas – Jonkonnu". Jamaica Information Service.
  2. ^ Smith, Sloan (January 28, 2020). "Shell Saxon Superstars sweep 2019/2020 Junkanoo season". Eyewitness News. Nassau.
  3. ^ "Bahamas Junkanoo Revue". HistoryMiami Museum. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
  4. ^ Bilby, Kenneth (November 2007). Masking the Spirit in the South Atlantic World: Jankunu's PartiallyHidden History (PDF). The Legacies of Slavery and Emancipation: Jamaica in the Atlantic World. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University. p. 3.
  5. ^ Sands, Rosita M.; DuValier, Maureen "Bahama Mama"; Simms, Ronald (1989). "Junkanoo Past, Present, and Future". The Black Perspective in Music. 17 (1/2): 93–108. doi:10.2307/1214745. ISSN 0090-7790.
  6. ^ "2nd Day of Christmas – Jonkonnu". Jamaica Information Service.
  7. ^ Hamburg, Ericka (December 23, 2007). "Free to dance - Belize's liberating Jonkonnu celebration recalls a slavery-era tradition". Los Angeles Times. p. 3. Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  8. ^ Scaramuzzo, Gene (April 28, 1989). "African-Caribbean Music Takes Off". The Times-Picayune. p. L21 – via NewsBank.
  9. ^ Lasseter, M.E. (2014). "Jonkonnu, Jankunu, Junkanoo, John Canoe: Reorienting North Carolina's Practice in the American Mediterranean". Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina | Documenting the American South. University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill. Retrieved 2023-09-05.
  10. ^ Brockell, Gillian (26 December 2021). "Jonkonnu: The holiday when Black revelers could mock their enslavers". The Washington Post.
  11. ^ Bilby, Kenneth M. (2010-01-01). "Surviving Secularization: Masking the Spirit in the Jankunu (John Canoe) Festivals of the Caribbean". New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids. 84 (3–4): 179–223. doi:10.1163/13822373-90002440. ISSN 2213-4360.
  12. ^ "The Joy of Junkanoo". The Islands of the Bahamas. The Bahamas Ministry of Tourism and Aviation. Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  13. ^ a b Chambers, Douglas B. (March 1, 2005). Murder at Montpelier: Igbo Africans in Virginia. University Press of Mississippi. p. 182. ISBN 1-57806-706-5.
  14. ^ Allsop, Richard (2003). The Dictionary of Caribbean English Usage. Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press. p. 776. ISBN 978-976-640-145-0.
  15. ^ "Fort Gross Frederiksburg, Princestown (1683)", Ghana Museums and Monuments Board.
  16. ^ Dewulf, Jeroen (December 2021). "Rethinking the Historical Development of Caribbean Performance Culture from an Afro-Iberian Perspective: The Case of Junkanoo". New West Indian Guide / Nieuwe West-Indische Gids. 95 (3–4): 223–253. doi:10.1163/22134360-bja10012. S2CID 237712750.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  17. ^ Long, Edward (1774). "The History of Jamaica Or, A General Survey of the Antient and Modern State of that Island: With Reflexions on Its Situation, Settlements, Inhabitants, Climate, Products, Commerce, Laws, and Government". T. Lowndes: 445–475. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  18. ^ "Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina". docsouth.unc.edu. 2010-03-19. Retrieved 2023-12-15.
  19. ^ Nissenbaum, Stephen (1997). The Battle for Christmas. New York: Vintage Books. p. 285. ISBN 978-0679740384.
  20. ^ "Sasheer Was Scared To Leave Nicole Stranded In the Middle of the Ocean". Earwolf. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  21. ^ "Nicole and Sasheer Regale You With the Final Chapter of Their Bahamas Trip". Earwolf. Retrieved February 14, 2023.

Further reading

edit