RENUNCIA DE RESPONSABILIDAD : Las opiniones aquí expresadas pertenecen al autor y no reflejan necesariamente los puntos de vista del Departamento del Estado de los EEUU, el Programa Fulbright, la Comisión Fulbright de Colombia, el Instituto de Estudios Internacionales (IIE) o la Universidad de los Andes. Léase todo con comprensión. Atentamente, Gabriel-Josué Hurst

viernes, 11 de junio de 2010

Afro-Uruguay y la Copa Mundial 2010



Don't get it twisted. I'm no Soccer buff, but all this talk about the World Cup 2010 and the hotly disputed face-offs between national teams have really inundated me with an enthusiasm and excitement for the game that I never thought I harbored. Seeing Diego Forlán, Fernando Muslera, Diego Lugano and Diego Gordín (yeah, I know...a lot of Diegos), I'm becoming once again enamored with the sport. It's just by coincidence that all these players are from the same national team, la Selección Uruguaya, a country that has held tremendous appeal with me due to its sizable Afro-Uruguayan population.
Although it is often asserted (surprisely) within academic circles that Afro-Uruguayan role in the development of their nation was marginal and, at best, evanescent, the contrary argument would be closer to the truth. Afro-Uruguayans have made significant gains and contributions to their country's economy, society and culture at large. First, they were the slaves, peons and artisans whose toils and hardships lended themselves as the foundation upon which Uruguay's economy between the 17th and 19th centuries blossomed. Second, Afro-Uruguayans constituted the backbone of their nation's military forces, whose blood and patriotic martyrdom not only wrought a republican nation-state from a Spanish colonial backwater, but also continued to safeguard it from the wiles and geopolitical pretensions of foreign invaders, namely: Great Britain and Brazil during the first decades of the 19th century. Third, Uruguayans of African descent were the musicians, writers and artists whose artistic aptitude enriched, invigorated and entertained their fellow citizens from colonial tims until the present day through their renditions of tangos, milongas, candomblés and sambas. Unquestionably, symbols of nationhood in the River Plate were dramatically influenced by the intellectual acuity, physical brio, artistic acumen of Africans and their New-World descendants in Uruguay.




Although Uruguay is to face up against some formidable adversaries, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico to name a few, I'm reminded of Afro-Uruguayans' incontroverble contributions to their nation and I've made it up in my mind to back the underdog in this one.




VIVA URUGUAY!!!


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