Thursday, February 23, 2012

Candy Man's Delights

MAG 105


 image: epic mahoney
 Photograph courtesy Tess Kinkaid, Magpie Tales on Blogger

He doesn't come
In a stretch  limousine
To wait in front
Of a bright neon lit door

What you now see
Having taken his sweets
Is a man with a bike
Psychedelic greens and baby pinks

You want to go higher
Further than ever before
Tasting the magic of treats
Candy man's white sherbets and sweets

Every fibre inside awash
With untold delight
As the man with the goodies
Leaves pushing his drugs and his bike

When you come down
From dazzling heights
The colours all faded
The candy man who can, no longer in sight





Barbara M Lake ©
Trinidad WI
February 2012

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Ash Wednesday and Duct Tape 2012




Today Wednesday, 22 February 2012  is Ash Wednesday.

Ash Wednesday gets its name from the practice of placing ashes on the foreheads of the faithful as a sign of repentance. The ashes used are gathered after the Palm Crosses from the previous year's Palm Sunday are burned. In the liturgical practice of some churches, the ashes are mixed with the Oil of the Catechumens (one of the sacred oils) used to anoint those about to be baptized, though some churches use ordinary oil. This paste is used by the priest who presides at the service to make the sign of the cross first upon his own forehead and then on each of those present who kneel before him. We don't kneel at the altar rail - there isn't room - those days have long gone.


The priest or minister says one of the following when applying the ashes: "Remember, O man, that you are dust, and unto dust you shall return. (Book of Genesis)

"Turn away from sin and be faithful to the Gospel." (Gospel of St Mark)
"Repent, and hear the good news." (Gospel of St Mark)          

So Lent is a time for reflection, repentance and reconciliation for believers. I'll be off to receive my ashes this evening in the hope of getting my Lent off to a good start. In my case it also means duct tape because keeping my mouth shut when certain untoward things happen is difficult. During Lent I make an even more concerted effort to try to be a better person which of course, doesn't always work and one of the ways I do that is by keeping my mouth shut if I haven't got anything good to say.
 
Anyone who has been following me for at least a couple of years knows that for Lent,  I always ask for plenty of  duct tape - wholesale!
 

 
 
 

Monday, February 20, 2012

J'Ouvert Tridad & Tobago 2012


It's 1.50am Monday 20 February 2012 and my daughter has just left with a group of friends to go and play J'Ouvert, the event that starts Carnival proper.  I am posting  a very old photo of her and a one time friend (they are still friends but they don't 'move' together any more).  It's the only photo I have of her playing J'Ouvert and for those of you who have seen recent pictures of her, you'll realize she's somewhat older now.

So we are are last moving into Carnival countdown in  Trinidad . The Soca Monarch Finals were the night before last, (many us believe the outcome was rigged! the parties continue and the Dimanche Gras Show which will determine this year's Calypso Monarch is still in progress.  The end of the show will lead us into J'ouvert which starts in a couple of hours at 4am.  That will be followed by the greatest show on earth, the street party that is Carnival Monday and Tuesday.

Trinidad-Carnival-Jouvert-Silver-Devils

J'ouvert is the raw heart of Trinidad Carnival. It is a massive, night-time street party and procession which crystallizes in central Port of Spain in the early hours of Lundi Gras, before the daytime carnival parades. It is a continuation of the season’s 'fetes', parties of the night before as tens of thousands of revellers spill out onto the streets looking for more fun. They dance till dawn and beyond - chipping to steel bands and to the latest  music  live coming from dee jays pumping it out from 40 - 50 foot 'music' trucks.  The local trucking companies make a fortune at this time of the years.  J'ouvert  (pronounced jouvay) has evolved and it is is a creole corruption of the French jour ouvert meaning day break or morning and signals the start of the bacchanalia that is Carnival.

J’ouvert is full of symbols of culture and heritage. It is steeped in tradition and playing mud mas involves participants known as Jab Jabs covering themselves from head to toe and others in paint, chocolate, mud, white powder or just about anything that sticks. It is J’ouvert custom that no one is clean and a common sight is a being hugged by a muddy revelers.


Blue and Red Devils Trini Carnival

This traditional part of Carnival starts at around four in the morning and finishes after sunrise. Calypso and Soca music are the dominating sounds of J’ouvert in Trinidad and the mass of revellers take the street party wining and chipping their way to the Savannah in Port of Spain in the early hours of Lundi Gras, before the daytime carnival parades.

The roots of J’ouvert in Trinidad go back 200 years, with the arrival of French plantation owners. The French never colonized Trinidad but elements of their culture remained. J’Ouvert evolved from the Canboulay festivals in the 1800’s, which were night time celebrations where the landowners dressed up and imitated the negres jardins (garden slaves). Following emancipation, the newly freed slaves took over Canboulay, now imitating their former masters imitating them.

Canboulay revellers, who carried lighted cane torches, were seen as a potential risk by the authorities and the tension mounted leading to the Canboulay riots. It was eventually banned, and then was re established as J’ouvert. The Canboulay Riots are now acted out in the streets during the week leading up to Carnival.

The spectacular costumes represent characters and events from the history and folklore. Moko Jumbie Bats, Bookmen, Baby dolls, jab molassie, devil mas are all traditional Carnival characters that capture the elements of the past, and continue to tell the story.



Red-Devil-Jouvert-Trinidad-Carnival

So here we go again, when crime will be at an all time low between Monday and Tuesday, when the unions have stopped fighting the management of the national oil company because the government gave in to their pay increase demand at the11th hour, when the government today gave in to the calypsonians upping the prize money to one million dollars for fear of them boycotting tonight's show as they had threatened,  when people have spent thousands of dollars on costumes they can't afford, when there will be integration of all the races that make up Trinidad and Tobago without any trouble (by Ash Wednesday they will be ignoring or fighting with one another again!), when non-stop music will fill the air and when visitors from all over the world  will come and spend their US dollars much to the delight of the Trinidad and Tobago government.



And as I write I can hear the music trucks beginning to gear up bringing the very sound of soca into my living room.

Here's to a safe Carnival 2012.








Stage_Crossing_at_Trinidad_Carnival

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Fantasy

Mag 104 

 

Image by Christophe Gilbert
Photograph courtesy Tess Kinkaid, Magpie Tales 
 
Now I lay me down to sleep
Wondering who my soul shall keep
Will it be the one above
Or those here of  imagined love
 
If I should  die before I wake
Praying Lord my soul will take
If I wake before I die
An erotic fantasy I cannot lie 


Barbara M Lake
©

February 2012
Trinidad WI
 
 
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