Carnival is a festive season that occurs immediately before Lent (the
last celebration before lent); the main events are usually during
February. Carnival typically involves a public celebration or parade
combining some elements of a circus, mask and public street party.
People often dress up or masquerade during the celebrations, which mark
an overturning of daily life.
The Brazilian Carnival is one
of the best-known celebrations today, but many cities and regions
worldwide celebrate with large, popular, and days-long events. The
Carnival in Rio de Janeiro is the largest carnival in the world,
according to the Guinness World Records, with two million people per day
on the streets. The first festivals of Rio date back to 1723.
Origins of Lagos Carnival.
During
the 1850’s there was a large influx into Lagos of educated Africans who
had earlier been sold as slaves, from Sierra Leone, Brazil and Cuba.
The Sierra Leoneans were known as Akus or Saros, the Brazilians and
Cubans as Agudas.
In the 1880s there were four distinct groups
in Lagos – the Europeans, the educated Africans (Saros), the Brazilians
and the indigenes. The town was physically divided into four quarters
corresponding to these groups. The Europeans lived on the Marina, the
Saros mainly west of the Europeans in an area called Olowogbowo, the
Brazilians behind the Europeans – their quarter was known as Portuguese
Town or Popo Aguda or Popo Maro – and the indigenes on the rest of the
island – behind all three. By 1888 there were 3,221 Brazilians in Lagos.
A prominent member of the Brazilian group was Placido Adeyemo Assumpçao
who later changed his name to Adeyemo Alakija.
Fanti Carnival
(also known as Caretta) was brought to Lagos Island by these Brazilians
who settled around Campos area in Lagos State and on Lagos Island to be
specific. It was introduced by the Da Souza and Kanaku families. The
masked rider and the horse are aspects of Brazillian ranch life. Some of
the men dress like cowboys and they are known as FASUTINI and they ride
bicycles while their leader rides a horse.
It is important to
stress that, in the early days women did not partake in the dressing up
in masks and different clothing, but they were allowed to go around with
the different actors.
The carnival comes up three times in a
year, Boxing Day, Easter Monday (the first celebration after Lent and
Easter Sunday) and on New Years Day.
As time went on, the people
living in Lafiaji area, also on Lagos Island, started participating in
the carnival. Later still, other areas of Lagos, like Obalende,
Surulere, Yaba, etc caught the carnival bug. Until recently, Lagos was
the only part of Nigeria that hosted the carnival. |
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