| Toronto's
Carnival (formerly called Caribana), like carnival festivals
in other places, is far more than just a party. It is a breaking
down of the artificial barriers of society - like class, race
and wealth. It is a celebration of literal and spiritual emancipation.
It is also a time to turn society upside-down and take a good
critical look at it.
Toronto Carnival is generally percieved to be based on Trinidad
and Tobago Carnival. But where does "T&T" Carnival come
from? In fact, most histories of Trinidad Carnival begin with
a discussion of the ethnic and social make-up of the islands:
people of African descent (both slaves and free): French plantation
owners; East Indian and Chinese indentured labourers; British,
Spanish and Creole settlers and the indigenous Indians. From
the 1790s onwards Trinidad was remarkable for its multiplicity
of racial and social groupings.
Before 1834, when slavery was abolished, Trinidad's Carnival
celebrations had two aspects: the torches, drumming and other
African-derived ceremonies of the slave classes, and the fancy-dress
silks and satins of the European plantation owners. Often,
the French monsieurs and madames would dress as fantastical
versions of their own slaves, while the slaves would parody
the plantation owners.
After the emancipation, former slaves, under the concealment
of disguise, brought their dances, their songs and their festival
traditions to the streets, recreating in symbolic ways the
freedom from the cane fields. This period was characterised
by the participation of the "jamette" or underclasses, and
by cross-racial costumes. Archtypical characters-devils, bats,
royalty, indians and death figures - were gradually refined
into such traditional favourites as the Jab Jab, Jab Molassic,
Midnight Robber and pierrot Grenade (versions of which persist
to the present day).
Throughout the mid-19th century, the middle and upper classes
were extremely uneasy with this torchlight revelry. It seemed
too bawdy, too raucous, and too liable to provoke riot and
violence. Various measures were taken to prohibit public disorder,
especially after 1881, when police and revellers clashed in
the "Canboulay riot".
As the turn of the century approached, however, Trinidad began
to recognize that Carnival was here to stay. Official competitions
were established, while some of the more provocative elements
were suppressed. Merchants began to understand the economic
benefits of an annual street celebration, and soon a wider
segment of society - including people from all races and classes
- were "playing Mas" (that is, dressing up in masquerade costumes).
The early 20th century saw the dawn of the great era of Calypso.
the steel drum was born; a wedding of African ingenuity and
the cast-off industrial waste of foreign navies. the three
art forms of Trinidad Carnival - masquerade or Mas', Steel
Pan and Calypso - were developed as forms of social commentary
that could criticize the law, the government or society at
large without fear of punishment. Competitions in all three
genres elevated the skill of their practitioners, so that
today Trinidad Carnival is known by many as "the greatest
show on earth."
Thus, Toronto's Carnival Festival is a complex hybrid. It
has inherited African, East Indian and European festival traditions
from Trinidad and Tobago Carnival. Over the years Toronto
Carnival has also welcomed the festival traditions of members
of many other communities that are now present in Toronto,
including Jamaican, Brazilian, Cuban, St. Lucian, Guyanese,
Bahamian, Antiguan, Barbadian and Dominican.
Trinidad Carnival falls just before the Christian season of
Lent, so that a time of excess and indulgence is balanced
by a time for introspection and abstinence. Coincidentally,
Toronto's Carnival Festival falls on the anniversary of the
emancipation from slavery in Trinidad (August 1, 1834), and
also on the date of a European festival celebrating the first
loaf of the new year's wheat and the opening of the fields
for common pasturage. These
themes of liberation and renewal are essential to the Festival,
and help to explain its enduring popularity. Toronto Carnival's
potent message for the rest of the world will continue to
be spread for generations to come. |