Moko Jumbie
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A moko jumbie (also known as "moko
jumbi") is a stilts walker or dancer. The origin of the term
may come from "Moko" (a possible reference to an African
god) and "jumbi", a West Indian term for a ghost or spirit
that may have been derived from the Kongo language word zumbi. It
is believed that the Moko Jumbies are a West African tradition.[citation
needed] A Moko Jumbie character may wear colorful garb and participate
in festivals.
While the god Moko is from the Kongo (or Congo) and Nigeria, from
the Nuapa people, Trinidad has added their own touch to him. Moko,
in the traditional sense, is a god. He watches over his village, and
due to his towering height, he is able to foresee danger and evil.
His name, Moko, literally means the “diviner” and he would
be represented by men on towering stilts and performs acts that were
unexplainable to the human eye. In one remote tribe, the Moko rises
from a regular mans’ height to the skies fluidly with no help
and descends similarly to leave others to wonder how he performed
such an act.
The Moko arrived in Trinidad by “walking
all the way across the Atlantic Ocean from the West coast of Africa,
laden with many, many centuries of experience, and, in spite of all
inhuman attacks and encounters, yet still walks tall, tall, tall.
(John Cupid, Caribbean Beat)” The idea of the Moko survived
by living in the hearts of African descendants during slavery and
colonial life to eventually walk the streets of Trinidad in a celebration
of freedom, Carnival. While this figure was rooted in African heritage,
Trinidad adapted the figure, notably by adding on Jumbie or ghost
to the name.
Then by the early 1900’s Moko
Jumbies had become an element of Trinidad’s Carnival. This figure
would walk the streets of Port of Spain and other cities protecting
the city and revelers from evil. As part of his role in Carnival the
Moko Jumbie would accept donations from onlookers in upper floors
of buildings. However, his notable
figure of Carnival slowly faded until a drastic revival.
By the early 1990’s Moko Jumbies
were essentially non-existent in Carnival, until two men brought this
tradition back. These men, namely Moose and Dragon, have brought the
Moko Jumbie back to a place of prominence in Carnival and created
a new kind of Moko Jumbie. One man originally brought the idea to
them as well as the knowledge of how to make stilts. The style of
stilts they walked was very similar to the modern day ones but with
one main difference, they had no front leg brace. This changed when
a man named Ben from Canada, a random traveler, came to Trinidad with
a pair of stilts. His had a frontal brace on the upper leg and the
Trinidadians took inspiration from this design and used it in their
own. Now there are two main Moko Jumbie bands in Trinidad, Watusi
and Kilimanjaro, as well as several smaller ones. So while the idea
of the Moko came from Africa, Trinidad has made it its own.