| Notting Hill Carnival |
| Carnival History II |
|
FROM TRINIDAD to LONDON In
Trinidad, during the days of slavery, Black people (slaves) were forbidden
to play musical instruments and wear costumes, apart from when the
traditional imported European Carnival took place, six weeks before
Easter. On those occasions their participation was limited to providing
entertainment for their masters. It was also known that slaves were forbidden to be in the streets after dark unless they were accompanying their masters. When the Laws were repealed and freedom from slavery was announced in 1833, the slaves took to the streets in song and dance, indulging in their culture and using their artistic skills to mimic their masters and pour scorn on the system that had had them enslaved for so long. Consequently,
slaves would dress like their masters, powder their faces to look pale
like their masters or make masks to resemble their masters, distorting
images and features if they regarded their masters as particularly evil or
ridiculous. |
| Read about the History of Pan in the UK... |
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