I would like to express my views on
Carnival through the research of Dr. Lynne A. Guitar Ph.D. of Dominican
Republic. She has earned much accolade for her research and findings on several
cultural anthropology. Guyana proudly held its first Carnival last weekend.
Hence, I am intrigued to express a brief viewpoint on the topic for two
reasons, namely, Christian roots of Carnival and its significance today. In
Ancient Greece and Italy, long before the emergence of Christianity, people
whom we call pagans today had wild celebrations centered around the winter and
spring solstices, and spring and fall equinoxes, celebrations that the people
did not want to give up, even after they became Christians. The Catholic
Church, therefore, adopted many of the celebrations, overlaying them with
Christian meanings. For instance, the wildly licentious feast called
Saturnalia, dedicated to Saturn, the god of agriculture, and to the god of
wine, Bacchus, a festival that used to be celebrated around the longest night
of the year (December 17 under the old calendar), became the Roman Empire’s
celebration of Christmas on December 25. The licentiousness of the pagan
celebration was postponed until the week before Lent began, around the time of
the spring equinox. The new springtime celebration came to be called carnival or carnaval from the Latin
wordscarnis(“flesh” or “meat”) and levare(“to leave off”), because
immediately after the carnival festival came the time of Lent, 40 solemn days
of penance and sacrifice, which included not eating meat as well as the
renunciation of other pleasures of the flesh. Most of the medieval carnival
festivals climaxed on Shrove Tuesday, the day before Lent officially began on
Ash Wednesday. (In Latin, Shrove Tuesday is mardisgras.)
Although the word “carnival” originated with this pre-Lenten celebration, the
celebratory style of masking, inversion and grotesquerie came to characterize
other festivals as well; as a result, some scholars specify the pre-Lenten
carnival with the term carnestolendas.
As Christianity spread, so too did the celebration of carnival—it spread across
Europe and eventually to the Americas, carried there by European conquistadors
and colonists.
Carnival in the Caribbean has a
complicated beginning. It is tied to colonialism, religious conversion, and
ultimately freedom and celebration. The festival said to have originated with
the Italian Catholics in Europe, and it later spread to the French and Spanish,
who brought the pre-Lenten tradition with them when the y settled in Trinidad,
Dominica, Haiti, Martinique and other Caribbean Islands. Historians believe
that French settlers would have brought the tradition of Carnival with the Fat
Tuesday masquerade in the 18th Century. This eventually evolved into
heterogeneous culture. Hence, dress, music and dance become the primary
ingredient for the celebration after the emancipation in 1934. It is important
understand and learn the history of what we celebrate.