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by Professor René A. Römer The specific character of the Caribbean can also be found in the history of this settlement. Caribbean societies are characterized by the fact that they are basically profoundly hybrid in their structure and in their culture, but present themselves at first view as a harmonious whole. For four centuries there has been an encounter of different peoples and different cultures, which in the end resulted in a kind of amalgamation of these elements. Nevertheless, in this new structure that developed the original elements are still there and easy to recognize. Like a work of art, which it is in a certain sense, reality in the Caribbean looks different depending upon the angle from which you look.
Take for example the Handelskade:
a superficial glance gives the impression of a replica of some Dutch facade as
we know them from pictures of the big mansions along the canals of Amsterdam or,
for that matter, any other Dutch city; A closer look, however, reveals some
fundamental deviations from the original Dutch architecture. The same goes for
San Juan, Puerto Rico. The city has the appearance of a Spanish town and the
atmosphere still has a Spanish touch, but the notable American influences of the
last century, has rendered it definitely not Spanish. Both Willemstad and San
Juan, and Havana, for that matter,
are typically the result of a process of give and take among different
cultural traits in a process that took place over the course of time. In
fact they are thoroughly Caribbean in the new form, which resulted from
this process of amalgamation. This can be seen not only in the
architecture, but also in cuisine, music and dance. |
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Should this bring us to the conclusion that Willemstad is not Dutch? I think
this question can be answered both in a positive and in a negative sense. The
gables remind us of the Dutch gables and the grid of Punda reminds us of other
Dutch colonial cities, such as Paramaribo, Suriname in South America, Cape Town
in South Africa or Colombo in Sri Lanka. Here in Curaçao, however, the Dutch
building tradition was adapted to the climatological circumstances: the high
temperatures on the one side and the cooling effect of the trade winds on the
other side. But apart from these architectural adaptations, a very important
element in determining the different aspect of Willemstad, as not typically
Dutch was the dynamic interchange of Iberian cultural elements, of a
qualitatively important group of Sephardic Jews, and the African culture of the
slaves, with the Dutch dominated Northern-European, Protestant culture resulting
in a local variant of the typical Afro-Caribbean culture. The
Afro Caribbean mixture here is a different blend. Curaçao, to my
knowledge, is the only place where these three elements, the Nordic, the
Mediterranean and the African, had the opportunity to interact in such an
intensive way and for such a long period of time.
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Content © René Römer, 2002 - Copyright © CaribSeek 2002, All Rights Reserved. Web Published: June 21, 2002