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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .

Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.

Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.

A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.

Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.

Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.

I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.

REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.

ivan

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Woozle - Back To The Roots [Goa Trance Mix] ᴴᴰ MrLemilica2

grupo la realida en el zocalo de oaxaca

Black Mexicans finally get respect and recognition from Mexico ISMAIL AKWEI | Head of Content

Black Mexicans finally get respect and recognition from Mexico

ISMAIL AKWEI | Head of Content



Afro-Mexicans have been in the North American country since the 16th century but are now getting respect from the Mexican government which just created the Instituto Nacional de los Pueblos Indígenas – National Institute of Indigenous Peoples – to recognize the rights of indigenous groups.
Black Mexicans were only recognised for the first time in 2015 when the Mexican government conducted its national survey and counted about 1.38 million people of African descent (about 1.2% of the country’s population).
The Afro-Mexicans have been invisible in the country for too long but with the new institute created by the Mexican Senate, Black Mexicans and other indigenous groups will be consulted by the government on matters affecting them.
It reflects “respect and autonomy for indigenous groups, and strengthening of their cultures and identities, rather than a mere focus on inequality and social exclusion as had previously taken place,” reports Atlanta Black Star.
In August 2018, the neglect faced by Black Mexicans was the focus of the country’s first-ever all-black film, La Negrada (Black Mexicans), directed by Jorge Pérez Solano, one of Mexico’s biggest filmmakers.
The story follows the lives of two Afro-Mexican women,  Juana and Magdalena, who are romantically involved with the same man called Neri.
It starts off with a Mexican immigration officer asking one of the protagonists “You are not Mexican, right?’ just because she is black.
What makes the film refreshing is that it features non-professional actors and is shot in Costa Chica, a region in Oaxaca with one of the biggest populations of black Mexicans.
Although the Afro-Mexicans have been featured in documentaries, this film is a fiction piece that captures the daily lives of Mexicans and the subtle and overt racism they go through. It further gives a glimpse of the music and natural background that adds flavour to their experience.
Before 2015, Mexico and Chile were the only Latin American countries that did not officially count the people of African descent in their surveys. Many lauded the move by Mexico at the time while others felt that it had been long overdue.
Afro-Mexicans are the descendants of enslaved African people brought into the country in the 16th and 17th century. The indigenous communities in Mexico reduced drastically at this time because of diseases.
The shortage of labour saw slaves from Africa brought in: estimates indicate 200,000 slaves arrived in the country. They were forced to work in plantations in the South and underground mines in the North. Mexico had a larger African slave population in the early 1600s than any other country in the Americas.
Most of them tried to escape the horrendous experience and ended up in the mountainous region of Mexico where they hid in caves and jungles. One such community was established in the state of Veracruz in 1570 by former slave Gaspar Yanga, who dared to revolt against the Spaniards.
The statue of Gaspar Yanga…Wikipedia
The Afro-Mexicans of that time were quite instrumental in the development of Mexico. From music to the arts, they formed the fabric of Mexican culture.
Politically, Mexico’s second president was a black man called Vicente Guerrero, who abolished slavery in the country in 1829.
Vicente Guerrero
Most of the freed slaves then intermarried with the indigenous community, raising children known as “mulattos,” “pardos,” or “zambos.
In 1781, Mexicans of African descent helped established Los Angeles. The Los Angeles Pobladores, or “townspeople,” were a group of 44 settlers and four soldiers from Mexico who came from various Spanish castes, with over half of the group being of African descent.
Governor of Las Californias, a Spanish-owned region, Felipe de Neve called on 11 families to help build the new city in the region by recruiting them from Sonora and Sinaloa, Mexico. According to a census record taken at the time, there were two persons of African ancestry, eight Spanish and Black persons, and nine American Indians. There was also one Spanish and Indian person, with the rest being Spaniards.
In Los Angeles, the El Pueblo de Los Angeles State Historic Park honoured the pobladores in the 1950s with a plaque, but it was mysteriously removed. In a Los Angeles Times report, it was suggested that the removal of the plaque was racially motivated. However, in 1981 during the city’s bicentennial, the plaque was replaced.
While a lot of modern people are inclined to believe that the Afro-Mexican population declined over the years, statistics indicate that the population ranges between two per cent and eight per cent of the Mexican population. However, these blacks still suffer from discrimination in their home country.
Not only are they deported to other Latin American countries because the police believe there are no black people in Mexico, they are also living in abject poverty.
It is such incidents and lack of recognition by the Mexican government that forced a number of Afro-Mexican activists to rally behind such recognition.
México Negro, a rights group formed in 1997, is seeking for the constitutional recognition of Afro-Mexicans and the increased visibility of Afro-Mexican culture.
Such recognition has taken too long for various reasons including the feeling that mestizo identity (the mix between indigenous people and Europeans) is a better term than breaking down groups into ethnicity.
The lack of recognition of the community has limited them from advancing their own agenda including socio-political and economic survival.
Some Afro-Mexicans have turned to music and dance to express themselves and stay true to their African roots. One of such groups is the dance troupe in the southern state of Oaxaca, known as Obatala. They have been touring different parts of the state of Oaxaca creating awareness around their ancestral African heritage with their energetic and unique African dances.
The Afro-Mexican dance group identifies itself with a popular Yoruba deity called Obatala, which is believed to be the oldest of gods generally referred to as Orisas in Nigeria.
Obatala, which is always adorned in white, is also said to be the father of many other Orisas. While this god is synonymous with the Yoruba community in Nigeria, he is also very popular in Latin America.

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Cascada de Oaxaca Mexico

A watery, dreamlike tale of teenage runaway in 1980s Mexico


A watery, dreamlike tale of teenage runaway in 1980s Mexico

Fiction: Sea Monsters

Chloe Aridjis

Chatto & Windus, hardback, 192 pages, €18.19

Restlessness: Aridjis based the book on an episode from her youth2
Restlessness: Aridjis based the book on an episode from her youth
Francesca Carington
Despite its rompy premise - 17-year-old Luisa runs away to a beach in Oaxaca with a mysterious boy to search for a troupe of Ukrainian dwarves - Sea Monsters isn't a picaresque Ferris Bueller-style caper or finding-myself odyssey, but rather a meandering account of stasis; a big old "what now?"
Chloe Aridjis's third novel is based on an episode from her teenage years in late 1980s Mexico and its brilliance lies in capturing so convincingly that state of adolescent restlessness. The only drawback is that this story of a teenage runaway could stand to be a bit more fun.
Luisa, the daughter of an academic and a translator, lives in Mexico City and goes to a rich kids' school. She's clearly smarter than her classmates and cooler, too, hanging out with artists and punks. She takes up with 19-year-old dropout Tomas, and, when she sees in the paper that 12 dwarves are missing from a visiting circus, the two board a bus to Zipolite, the "Beach of the Dead", to find them. This is where most of the introspective, elliptical novel takes place, unravelling Luisa's musings and wanderings, as she meets beachcombers, hippies, nudists, fabulists and a silent, solitary drinker she calls the merman.
Luisa's defining characteristic, beyond a melancholic obsession with shipwrecks, is passivity. She's an observer, and the narrative pauses constantly to tell the tales of others: the girl who overdosed in a posy nightclub; four Zapotec girls who drowned; the beachcomber who dreams of buying a metal detector. And the stories she doesn't know, she invents: a tale of father-daughter estrangement ("Yes, this was the story, I thought to myself"); an eastern European background for the merman; and of course Tomas, the object of her infatuation, is more romanticised than real. And when, unsurprisingly, he turns out to be a jerk, she is drawn instead to the still-enigmatic merman. "That was the problem with mysterious people, I explained, once you spend time with them they're not so mysterious after all." Shipwrecks exert such a pull over her imagination because they're submerged, ever unknowable. Even after Tomas has left the scene, Luisa remains on Zipolite, waiting, watching, as if by absorbing enough of other people's experiences she might figure something out about herself. The beach is a strange, liminal space, where it's always night and time seems to stand still.
"I'd intentionally left my watch at home, or perhaps I'd forgotten it, but what purpose, anyway, would it serve here on the beach? Oaxaca ran on Oaxaca time, Tomas on Tomas time, even the dogs ran on their own time." The sea, "vast and indifferent as a cathedral", does what it always does, continuing "to write and erase its long ribbon of foam".
Aridjis's languid prose lets these images wash over the reader, unfurling in comma-rich sentences that beautifully render a state of inertia.
When she's finally found by her father, she contemplates that "to imagine travel is probably better than actually travelling since no journey can ever satisfy human desire; as soon as one sets out, fantasies get tangled in the rigging and the dark birds of doubt begin their circling overhead." Sombre thoughts for a 17-year-old. But not altogether sad; Aridjis leaves us with the sense that Luisa's disillusionment, like everything else, is in flux.


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Lo mejor del Festival Nudista Zipolite 2019-2020 YouTube Lo mejor del Festival Nudista Zipolite 2019-2020. PrankZone TV. Loading... Unsubscribe from PrankZone TV? Cancel Unsubscribe. Working. Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant


Lo mejor del Festival Nudista Zipolite 2019-2020
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