Tampilkan postingan dengan label Capoeira. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Capoeira. Tampilkan semua postingan

>> Jumat, 03 April 2009

The origins of capoeira are still uncertain as of today, there are many different versions. The one we give here is the most commonly known among great capoeira masters and historians.

During the 1500s, masses of West African slaves were imported into Brazil by the Portuguese colonizers. They were thought to be source of inexpensive labour, which would work on the sugar plantations and create colonial wealth for the Portuguese crown.

After years of mistreatment, torture, inhumane living conditions and yearning for their freedom, the slaves began to up rise against their masters. Aware that their masters' superiority lay in the possession of weapons, the slaves came up with the idea of using their bodies to attack and defend themselves through a series of dangerous moves that would help them fight their captors. African songs and dances were used to disguise their training sessions so that their superiors would not become alarmed. With time their art and expertise grew and finally reached the point where they could use it to escape into the woods. Their style of fighting became known as 'Capoeira' because in Portuguese it was associated with the saying 'The black fled to the woods'.

After the abolition of slavery, the ex-slaves migrated into the cities of Brazil and continued to practice Capoeira. The art was for a time associated with anti-government and criminal activities as a majority of the ex-slaves had ended up in criminal gangs due to the lack of employment opportunities and a persistent unofficial but strong racial discrimination. As a result, Capoeira was outlawed in 1892. Punishment for the illegal practice of the art resulted in the cutting of tendons on the back of the feet. Rodas were often held in areas with plenty of escape routes, and a special rhythm called A Cavalaria was added to the music to warn players that the police were coming. Practitioners gave themselves an apelido or nickname to make it harder for the police to discover their identities. This practice is prevalent today, when a person is baptized into Capoeira, they are given their Capoeira name.

In 1937, Mestre Bimba, a great capoeirista who had fought to have the art recognized as a worthy physical activity, was invited to demonstrate Capoeira in front of the President of Brazil. After this performance, he was given permission to open the first Capoeira school in Brazil and Capoeira was proclaimed a 'truly Brazilian' sport which should be valued. Since then, Capoeira has been officially recognized as a national sport, and has spread around the world. Mestre Bimba's systematization and teaching of Capoeira has made a tremendous contribution to the Capoeira community.

In 1942, Mestre Pastinha opened the first Capoeira Angola school, the Centro Esportivo de Capoeira Angola in Bahia. He had his students wear black pants and yellow t-shirts, the same colour then his favourite soccer team. Most Angola schools since then follow in this tradition, having their students wear yellow Capoeira t-shirts. Together, Mestre Bimba and Mestre Pastinha are seen as the founding fathers of the two dominant style of capoeira; respectively Capoeira Regional and Capoeira Angola.

capoeira.cc

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Shaded Meanings: The Colour of your Corda

>> Jumat, 06 Februari 2009

Shaded Meanings: The Colour of your Corda


The green Brazilian flag. The black African slaves. The orange of a rising sun. You cherish your corda–train with it, don it before every class, and no matter what you tell people, at some level you aspire for the next one; but do you know exactly what you’re wearing around your waist when you tighten that hand-dyed knot?

We all know that nearly every group in capoeira has a different corda system. What I wanted to discover was: Why? How? It’s hard to imagine that each mestre just wanted to distinguish their school from the rest and so decided on a random order of colours merely by virtue of no one else having used it yet! Unfortunately, I have never heard of my own grupo’s corda colours symbolizing anything in particular (so people, please enlighten me if I’m wrong!), but thought it’d be interesting to see what kind of meanings are given to corda colours in general.

Before I continue, let’s take a brief detour through Portuguese 101: Colours!

off-white/”raw”/undyed - crua
red - vermelha
orange - laranja
yellow - amarela
green - verde
blue - azul
purple - roxa
brown - marrom
white - branca
black - negra

You might have noticed that all the colours are in feminine form; despite what you may think, this was honestly for no more reason than that the word “corda” itself is feminine. Can I help it if I want to you use proper grammar? (I don’t rig things, I just take advantage of happy accidents ;) )

Now, apparently many grupos do base at least part of their corda systems on the colours of the Brazilian flag, which is where cordas verde, azul, amarela, and branca come from, as well as the different combinations between them found in single cordas. Grupo de Capoeira Lutaxé actually bases their entire adult graduation system on just these four colours, plus black and brown, which according to their website represents “the black race and time of slavery”.

Filhos da Bahia Capoeira gets particularly creative in terms of colour placement, with nine variations of corda amarela/verde, followed by six variations of amarela/azul. There are only so many ways you can dye one rope, and they seem to have come up with them all! Their system intricately follows the process of nature, starting beginners off with corda verde and adding more and more amarelo to it in several stages, representing a blooming or ripening fruit.

Finally, we have what seem to be more standard symbols for each colour, the particular order here taken from Abada Capoeira. Get ready to feel inspired :)

Crua
Raw, undyed, colourless–this one pretty much explains itself! The true, unt(a)inted beginner, with no knowledge, no experience yet.

Amarela
Represents the formation of a capoeira base as solid as gold, as well as the value of the student (yup, we’re worth our weight in it!) and their future.

Laranja
The rising sun - the quest for knowledge - the awakening of consciousness.

Azul
The sky, which opens into an infinite path towards knowledge. Also the ocean, indicating the vastness and depth of ground there is to cover.

Verde
The forest: at this stage, the now-advanced student is expected to begin contributing back to the group, the way trees give oxygen to the earth.

Roxa
Continuity… … … … … … … … … … … …

Marrom
The soil of the earth, the source of life. Marrom represents being grounded in the earth, and grounded in all aspects of capoeira.

Vermelha
In Abada, fairness. In Sinha Bahia, symbolic of the blood shed by the slaves who started it all, as well as the blood we all share. True understanding of all.

Branca
The colour of diamond–resistance, longevity, timelessness, and the colour that reflects all the rest.

Obviously, the rank of each colour affects the meaning the group will give to it, so it will be different for everyone, but this gives you a good idea of what’s out there! What do you think? Does your corda already have a symbol within your group? Or do you think that symbolism stuff was all just claptrap made up after the fact? Either way, I don’t think I’ll be looking at my corda quite the same way again!

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The Black Power of Capoeira


The Black Power of Capoeira


By D. David Dreis

The nation of Brazil is taking a long, hard look at its checkered past. Some of what it sees is in need of a whitewash, cleaned up and scrubbed so that it makes good reading in history books. Slave uprisings, the likes of which were steeped in bloodshed, are part of its folklore. And Brazil is finally accepting capoeira as the true black power of its nation.

For several years now, Brazil has skirted its heritage with capoeira. It has been overlooked, disregarded and dismissed. Historians battled against bureaucratic red tape to find the clearing, some gaps in history had to be filled in. A few years ago an 81-year-old Portuguese man, an eyewitness to the open gaps in history, told his story; the story was about capoeira.

Vicente Ferreira Pastinha was the man who did the filling. What he talked about at length were the slave uprisings against the cruelty of persecution and the tool of self-defense employed by the slaves, created by the blacks.

Now that Brazil is taking its reluctant look, it is learning about capoeira and wincing at what it has learned. Descriptions aptly outlined by the old man attest to fast-moving arms and legs battling the onslaught of intemperate slave owners, fighting against the huge organization of oppression only to be pressed down in bloody defeat. Capoeira had its most terrifying results in the slave uprisings against the plunderers of human dignity, the landowners who were in operation since the colonization of Brazil by the Portuguese. With each suppression came more and more restrictions until at last, weary and beaten, the insurgent African natives, the slaves, were defeated. As the white populous worked on the ledgers of history, they erased the black marks of capoeira, pretending it never happened. Pastinha remained alive and brought the reality of the past into full focus.

Kept alive in the secrecy of hardened souls, the martial art continued to be taught and learned, and if movements were displayed, they were said to be a harmless native dance. This was the way capoeira survived the torture of time.

Pastinha revealed how the cultural aspects of the art seemed to vanish and how desperate students used the art to break down the statutes that were placed in their way. That they used capoeira for damage and destruction without rhyme or reason is also part of the haggard history. Without the culture and the heritage, much as that taught in the world of the martial arts, there was nothing save destruction and demolition. Again and again, insurgent blacks were put down in one after another bloody encounters. Capoeira’s heritage seemed to vanish for good.

Now, 81 years old and blind, destitute save for the income that has been secured from devoted followers of the art, Pastinha is cared for with the respect of students who look at him with the same dedication that Japanese karate and judo students look toward their sensei. He lives in Salvador, Brazil, and still partakes in the martial art, although the years and the disregard have taken their toll on his prowess.

But as Pastinha has revealed the past, a 68-year-old instructor known only as “Master Bimba” is advancing it to the future with his instruction in the martial art. Since he has been teaching capoeira, many practitioners have passed through his hands and are advancing the art further still.Five years ago, a group headed by Benjamin Muniz started to make a true and schematic study of the “kata” of capoeira, transferring what Pastinha related into viable and teachable terms. Reluctantly, the nation began to recognize capoeira and accept it for what it was although they have staunchly refused to accept it as a national sport, knowing all too well that capoeira is not a sport at all. Today, it has been “washed down” as a cultural, native dance. In this manner capoeira is, to the Brazilian hierarchy, “acceptable.”

International Prestige

Muniz and his group, the Olodum, are performing demonstrations wherever they can find an audience. Their efforts at folklore festivals have garnered them international prestige, despite the backhanded help given them by national officials.

Master Bimba is the foremost teacher of the martial art. He has built a following and respect for capoeira’s ability and culture to heritage of Brazil.


In 1968, the Olodum represented Brazil at the Third Latin American Folkloric Festival staged in Argentina and took second place after finding themselves winners of three gold medals and one silver. This year, they garnered a first place win at the Latin American Festival held in Peru. So commanding was their performance, supported by musical instruments, which are part of its clean-scrubbed look, that the Brazilian Ministry is paying homage to the art with the inclusion of capoeira demonstrations on its “official” schedule of national demonstrations.

But its homage is to the development of the black man in the martial arts. Although the students today are members of all races, much like many of those studying Oriental martial arts are Caucasians, the Negroes are paid the most homage through their development of capoeira.

Nothing is making the black man walk tall more than his tie in the culture of the martial arts. This heritage has become entrenched in the folklore of the martial arts history. And there’s nary a tinge of the Oriental in its makeup.

How strange it was for the heritage to start in Brazil and seemingly end there, because slaves were traded and deposited all over the world. Quite possibly, had there been instructors in the martial art in the United States, capoeira might have changed the face of history in North America.

This is not a treatise on civil rights; it is a testimony to an austere and legitimate martial art that identifies with all of the traditions of the other martial arts forms. As the Japanese warlords oppressed the Okinawan populace, causing them to seek an effective means of self-defense, so it is with capoeira, developed from the black African who was trained to fight the elements in his homeland but turned to use his training to fight against the tormentors of human dignity in Brazil.

Representatives of Brazil, those who wish to look with pleasure on the history of their nation, would like the demonstrations of the dance to continue and be treated as a dance. Indeed, capoeira, because of its potentially dangerous aspects, must be practiced as a dance, as a “kata,” but there cannot be a “kumite.” The practitioners know the law and are forced to accept it, but they earnestly believe that the art could be a dynamic sport if the reigns of government myopia were removed.

Admittedly, there have been many practitioners of the art who are working out with no punches or kicks pulled. It has resulted in some damaging effects, and even they recognize that the unleashed power of the art must be tempered somewhat for a sport in which the nation could take pride. As Gichin Funakoshi tempered karate and Jigaro Kano tempered judo, the leaders of capoeira, perhaps Master Bimba, are looking for that combination of sport-art.

The emphasis on capoeira is on muscular strength, joint flexibility and rapid movements. All of these are calculated to subdue, and subdue fast, any threat, any battle.

Quick Body Movements

Capoeira makes much of quick body movements as most of the martial arts do. But it places a greater emphasis on the power of the legs, strong weaponry in the employ of trained fighters. A capoeira man may meet a fighter face to face, but in a fraction of a second he can flip to the ground, shooting a strongly placed foot into a vital attacking area. It has been said that the capoeira fighter, trained to put punch-power in his foot, can effectively destroy a man mortally with a well-placed kick!

That it whets the interest of those who see it has been fairly well documented. In Los Angeles to attend a folklore festival, the members of Olodum were besieged with requests from students to demonstrate at local colleges and universities. At every demonstration, there was much interest in bringing the martial art instruction to the United States. Many of those people making the requests were, to no one's surprise, from the black community.

In Sao Paulo, Brazil, Waldemar Dos Santos is the man in charge of making capoeira popular. His is a mission that has seen the face of determination muddied by blockades to his perseverance.

Dos Santos, a short, strong man with scarred hands and forehead, learned his capoeira on the streets. But he is the foremost teacher in this city where study in judo and karate have reached a new high in interest and attendance. At 37, the man is determined to have capoeira become even more important than these other martial arts. “This is Brazilian,” he says with assuredness. “This fighting art is in the blood.”
Members of Olodu are considered top fighters in capoeira. Left to right: Ed Bomfim, Onias Comardeli, Fernando Pallos and Edvaldo Silva.

So pronounced is Dos Santos about capoeira and its nationalistic ties that more than 100 students are studying with him. He learned the martial art in the beaten-earth clearings, which were to become “academies” for capoeira in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, but having now returned to Sao Paulo, the young man is determined to make the art “official.”

He, too, has suffered from the oppression of red-tape authority. He has titled his “course” a Brazilian folklore movement. His students practice in what was once the parlor of a townhouse, its walls now smeared with dirty palms and feet. After six months of “dance” movements, which in reality is the “kata,” Dos Santos instructs his students into the violent phase of the art. “I admit,” he says, not too proud of the statement, “that Brazilian capoeira is one of the dirtiest, formalized fighting styles known.”

How “dirty” has capoeira been or become? The history books are not clear on this point, either. There are many legends surrounding the martial art and explaining how it was used by Brazilian sailors who picked it up and “adapted it” from the slaves before them. According to some sources who reluctantly admit it, the sailors used capoeira to “fight for keeps,” taping knives and razor blades to their bare feet and hands before entering a fight. Dos Santos shrugs his shoulders on this facet. Perhaps that was how the art was “bastardized” by the Brazilian sailors, but he has enough confidence in “empty hand” and “empty foot” facets of the art to bypass that addition.

Recent Police Records

Recent police records in Rio show what happens when capoeira gets out of hand. Military police tried to arrest a drunken capoeira (the term is used for the fighter as well as the art) nicknamed “Master Satan.” Satan took on a 24-man platoon and fought them to a draw. Seven policemen were hospitalized, two with broken arms and two with split livers. When Satan still stood defiant after a battering by 24 billy clubs, police had to decide whether to shoot him or let him sleep it off. They decided to try the latter.

“The feet are man’s most deadly weapon,” says Paulo Romero, a Rio capoeira practitioner. “The head is the weakest. Capoeira aims at bringing the strongest weapon to the point of weakness.”

Master Bimba has defined the modern sport-art and outlined 72 separate movements that have colorful names, similar to those given in tai chi chuan, such as “Daddy’s Scissors,” “Banana Plant” and “Tail of the Dragon Fish.”

“Before World War II,” Master Bimba says, “capoeira was illegal.”

Police were called wherever it was practiced. Now, at long last, it is being appreciated for the thing of physical beauty that it really is. Speed, agility and multiplication of force is the key.

Master Bimba knows that this definition is in conflict with the view taken by the fighters in the art. “Capoeira is as graceful as a ballet, but it was invented to kill,” he admits. “In a street fight in old Colonial Brazil, capoeira was a fight to the finish. A knife, a razor, a broken bottle made a capoeira the equal of 20 men.”

Pastinha, however, shirks the contempt against the art. Historically, it belongs to Brazil and it should be recognized, in his opinion. “As a Brazilian,” he says, “I am proud of this friendly country. The capoeira meeting his adversary has the possibility by means of lightness and quickness of the art to disarm any opponent, either taking the weapon from him or vanquishing him by throwing the armed adversary to the ground.”

Pastinha is still the prime authority on the art, and he has seen it develop to a point of respectability. Master Bimba is the foremost practitioner and teacher in Brazil, and his students are as enthusiastic over the techniques as students anywhere. There are some who are unhappy that it is locked into the demonstration aspect, colorful though it may be with its musical accompaniment and bright costumes, ofttimes striped trousers that give off a garish and more “carnival” appearance than most. At least the art is being nurtured and someday perhaps, if it continues to live and gain in popularity, capoeira may grow into a full-fledged martial art and a national endeavor.

Right now, one university accepts it as part of its curriculum within its folklore program. Moving it over to physical education may be a tricky accomplishment, but until that day does arrive, the followers of the art will continue to demonstrate it, allowing people to forget it is really an example of black power.

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>> Senin, 19 Januari 2009


Berimbau

The berimbau is a single-string percussion instrument, a musical bow, from Brazil. The berimbau's origins are not entirely clear, but there is not much doubt on its African origin, as no Indigenous Brazilian or European people use musical bows, and very similar instruments are played in the southern parts of Africa.[citation needed] The berimbau was eventually incorporated into the practice of the Afro-Brazilian martial art capoeira, where it commands how the capoeiristas move in the roda. The instrument is known for being the subject matter of a popular song by Brazilian guitarist Baden Powell, with lyrics by Vinicius de Moraes. The instrument is also a part of Candomblé-de-caboclo tradition.

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Grupo Axé Capoeira

Grupo Axé Capoeira began in Recife in 1982.

Today, as Canada's first academy of Capoeira, the Group continues to rise as one of the world's leading Capoeira organizations. Backed by worldwide releases of six albums of music on CD, several VHS and DVD performance releases and the four Volume Instructional DVD compilation, enrollment continues to steadily increase with over 8000 students from all over the world.

The Group continues to travel around the world and participate in competitions and has participated in the 2001 International Capoeira Competition in Argentina. Furthermore, Grupo Axé Capoeira is renowned as a traveling group which promotes the history, music, art, and culture of Brazil in interactive and educational demonstrations.

Philosophy & Methodology

The philosophy of Grupo Axé Capoeira is to respect all the mestres, preserve the roots and traditions of Capoeira, and train Capoeira in all its aspects: as a fight, art, and culture. We endeavor to teach and educate so that capoeira will grow in a positive healthy way. We attempt to pass on to the students physical and mental methods of training so that they learn to create situations and maintain a dialogue within the game. By playing both with friends and enemies, students learn to deal with any situation in or out of the roda. In North America, we not only teach movements, but the Brazilian language and customs as well, so that the students may become true capoeiristas.

Objectives

Axé Capoeira is working hard to ensure that Capoeira has a strong future. Through research, travel and participating in events, we hope to increase our knowledge in the art and contribute to the evolution of Capoeira. Our goal is for Capoeira to be placed among the most widely practiced and respected martial art forms in the world.

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The Saga of Mestre João Grande

>> Senin, 29 Desember 2008


Mestre João Grande was born on Jan. 15, 1933 in the tiny village of Itagi in the south of the state of Bahia, between Ilheus and Itabuna. Itagi is so small that it doesn't appear on maps of the region. As a youngster there was no time for school or even play, and he worked alongside his family in the fields. However, while working he was able to engage in his favorite pastime, the study of nature. He was fascinated by the way the wind moves the trees, waves in the ocean, and particularly the movements of the animals, such as the strike of the snake and the flight of the bird. This was to greatly influence his practice and philosophy of Capoeira.

At the age of 10 he saw "corta capim" for the first time. This is a movement performed by crouching down, extending one leg in front and swinging it around in a circle, hopping over it with the other leg. Fascinated, he asked what it was called and was told that it was "the Dance of the Nagos"— a dance of the African descendants in the city of Salvador. The Yoruba of Southwest Nigeria had a major cultural influence in Salvador, which was considerd the Black Rome of Brazil. But the dance was actually of Central African origin— it was Capoeira. João didn't learn the correct name of the movement until many years later, but it changed his life forever. At the age of ten he left home in search of "the Dance of the Nagos".

The young João slowly made his way north on foot, working as he went, and surviving as a migrant worker on the plantations of Bahia. He would stay with families of other farm workers, moving from one farm to another. Finally he made it to Salvador, the birthplace of Capoeira as we know it, after 10 years of travel. He saw Capoeira for the first time in a place with the poetic name "Roça do Lobo" (Clearing of the Wolf). It wasn't an average street roda he saw that day, but a meeting of the important personalities of Capoeira such as Menino Gordo, João Pequeno, who was there with his first Capoeira teacher, Mestre Barbosa, as well as the great capoeira magician Cobrinha Verde(Little Green Snake), one of the most skillful players of that era.

An enthralled João asked Mestre Barbosa what the game was called and was told: "That is Capoeira!" João then asked where he could learn it. Mestre Barbosa sent him to João Pequeno, later to become his closest associate in Capoeira. João Pequeno sent him to Mestre Pastinha who had a famous academy in the Cardeal Pequeno neighborhood of Brotas. This was Capoeira heaven— Pastinha's rodas were filled with the most famous names in Capoeira. João requested permission to join his academy, and Pastinha accepted João as a student, beginning a relationship that was to have a profound effect on his life. At the age of twenty, João was beginning capoeira relatively late in life. He went on to study with others teaching at Pastinha's academy, Cobrinha Verde included, but his primary influence was always, and continues to be, Pastinha.

Capoeira Angola greatly enriched Mestre's life, but it was a difficult life for him and many other capoeristas of that time. Most worked long, hard hours for very little pay in order to support themselves and their families. Many capoeiristas worked on the docks, loading and unloading ships. When they took breaks thay would often play or "vadiar" capoeira. A very literal definition of "vadiar" means to hang around and do nothing.

Mestre João Grande eventually became such an acclaimed capoeirista that when Carybe, a painter famous for his documentation of African Culture in Bahia, chose to do studies of capoeira he chose João Grande as a model.

João Grande and João Pequeno are featured in numerous films of Capoeira including one in which they demonstrate the knife techniques of the art. In 1966 João Grande travelled to Senegal with Mestre Pastinha to demonstrate capoeira at the 1st International festival of Black Arts in Dakar. He was awarded his Diploma of Capoeira from Pastinha in 1968 making him a full- fledged master of Capoeira. He subsequently toured Europe and the Middle East with Viva Bahia, a pioneering group that performed Afro-Brazilian folk arts such as capoeira, samba de roda, maculelê, candomblé and puxada da rede.

Eventually Pastinha's academy fell on hard times. Pastinha, old, sick and almost totally blind, was asked by the government to vacate his building for renovations. But the space was never returned to him. Instead it became a restaurant with entertainment, now called SENAC. Pastinha died broke and bitter about his treatment, but never regretted living the life of a capoeirista

After Pastinha died, Mestre João Grande stopped playing Capoeira. He continued to play music and dance in folkloric shows, but no longer performed capoeira. He returned when Mestre Moraes and Cobrinha Mansa persuaded him to come out of retirement in the mid 1980's. He began to teach with their organization Grupo Capoeira Angola -Pelourinho. In 1989 he was invited by Jelon Vieira to tour the United States. Jelon was the first to formally introduce capoeira to the US in 1974. The tour was a tremendous success. In 1990 he returned to present Capoeira Angola at the National Black Arts Festival in Atlanta, Georgia and at the Schomberg Center for Research for Black Culture in New York City. Mestre João Grande decided he liked the US and has been teaching in New York ever since.


Mestre João Grande has taught thousands of students at his academy and has staged innumerable Capoeira Angola performances. He has travelled Europe, Brazil, Japan and many parts of the US to teach and perform. In 1995 he received a Doctorate of Humane Letters from Upsala College, East Orange, NJ. In 2001 he was awarded the National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, which is one of the most prestigious awards given to practitioners of traditional arts in the US. Mestre João Grande has also recorded an audio CD and several DVDs featuring himself and his students, as well as other illustrious figures of Capoeira Angola.


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Reinaldo Ramos Suassuna also known as Mestre Suassuna, was born in Bahia, Brazil in 1938 in Ilhéus and raised in Itabuna, started to practice Capoeira, an Afro-Brazilian martial art developed initially by African slaves in Brazil, in the beginning of the 1950s, against his will. Due to a physical handicap in his legs, the doctor recommended that he involve himself in a sport that was not soccer. Under the influence of two friends that had begun Capoeira and his medications, Suassuna started to practice this Brazilian art.

Suassuna states that in the beginning he had not liked Capoeira at all because he had difficulty learning the ginga and its unique sway and he lacked rhythm to sing, but with time he started to enjoy the taste of Capoeira so much that he began to take his training seriously and at this point his mother thought he was sick or ill.

When Suassuna started Capoeira he did not fixate himself to a group, but rather, he learned to love capoeira as a whole, independent of whether it was Angola or Regional. He met people from the Academies of Mestre Bimba and Mestre Pastinha. He participated in presentations in Salvador, Brazil with Canjiquinha, Gato, Caicara … and all of this has served as an excellent base for developing his work and arriving to where he is today: international recognition.

At the beginning of the 1960s, Suassuna shone in Bahia with his Capoeira presentations and consequently many invitations from other states and from abroad were offered. In 1965, after two of his friends kept on insisting for him to come to São Paulo, he left Bahia and went to the land of the rain with the intention of opening an academy and succeeding in life with Capoeira. His mission was to develop Capoeira as folklore and as a sport. At the beginning it was very hard; he was far from his friends, he worked at various jobs, went through financial difficulties. After a lot of struggle, he met some people from Itabuna that took him to Ze Freita’s Academy, in São Paulo, Brazil. That is where he met Brasilia. In 1967, together with Brasilia, he founded the “Associacao de Capoeira Cordão de Ouro”.

Today, Suassuna is dearly liked and respected. He is proud to see that his group’s work is well structured and full of creativity, with members found all over the world. His many doings include various presentations, the recording of four compact discs, the directing of the Show Group of Cordão de Ouro, the creation and development of the “Miudinho Game” and the conducting of workshops and seminars in several states in Brazil and around the world.

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Mestre ITABORÁ FERREIRA (Quizumba Capoeira)

>> Jumat, 05 Desember 2008


Mestre Itabora


ITABORÁ FERREIRA
Itaborá Ferreira has been practicing capoeira since 1974, with teaching experience totaling over 20 years. He started his capoeira and folklore education in Rio de Janeiro under the direction and guidance of Mestre Camisa (the head Master of ABADÁ CAPOEIRA, a leading capoeira organization that sets the standard for most capoeira training and development conducted throughout the world). Mestre Itaborá also studied at the National School of Folklore, in Rio, from 1973 to 1976. He received his graduation from Mestre Camisa in 1996 at Circo Voador in Rio. In 1990, he spent several months in the city of Salvador, Bahia, learning Capoeira Angola from Grand Master João Grande.

In the United States, Itaborá Ferreira has taught capoeira and drumming classes at Yale University, UCLA, UCSC, UC Riverside, Stanford University, and more recently at Cabrillo College in Santa Cruz, California. He has also participated in many community art projects from New York City to Oakland, Berkeley, and Santa Cruz.

On the stage, highlights of his career include his participation in the acclaimed performing company DANCE BRAZIL, directed by United States capoeira pioneer MESTRE JELON VIEIRA, in the tours and productions of the American Theater Festival, the Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival, the Spoleto Festival and a four-year engagement in the San Francisco Ethnic Dance Festival with the dance company, Brazil Dance Review, directed by the Bay Area's great capoeira master, Marcelo Caveirinha from Mandinga Capoeira.

While working with Mestre Barrão, from Axé Capoeira, Mestre Itaborá has taught seminars worldwide, including such places as: Toronto & Victoria, CANADA; Virgin Islands, USA; Guadalajara & Puebla, MEXICO; Prague, CZECH REPUBLIC; Moscow, RUSSIA; Kiev, UKRAINE; Wroclaw, POLAND; Ankara, TURKEY; Hamburg, GERMANY; and Bandung, INDONESIA. He is the technical director of the United States Capoeira Federation and the organizer of the US OPEN CAPOEIRA TOURNAMENT.

Mestre Itaborá is also a 2-time Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu World Champion (Rio de Janeiro, 2004-2005) and a Brazilian Jiu-jitsu Pan American Champion (Los Angeles 2005). He holds 2 personal training certifications (NASM & NCSF) and currently works at Gold's Gym of San Mateo as a personal trainer, and instructor of Capoeira and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

Itaborá has inspired many people through his teachings (see "testimonials") and he believes that capoeira can serve as a catalyst for community-building and character development. Capoeira is his way of life, and he is committed to helping people rise to the best of their potential by encouraging them, without any form of judgment, to find their own rhythm in the game of capoeira, and, by so doing, in their daily activities as well. In Mestre Itaborá's own words: "There is a game for everyone, regardless of age, ethnicity, and gender or body type".

ACKNOLEDGMENT

First and foremost, I couldn't allow an exposure of my life and work with capoeira in a website without recognizing many important masters and capoeiristas who, in one way or another, helped my growth and understanding of this incredible art form.

My respect and gratitude for my mestre, Mestre Camisa, who taught me the first steps, and many more steps, into this game of life. I can't go on in capoeira without recognizing his teachings, his philosophy, his dedication to this art, and his determination to gain respect for capoeira by many branches of society. He is a constant warrior and his influence is seen all over the world in many capoeira schools, including the many groups that are not affiliated with ABADA Capoeira.

Mestre Suassuna, a great capoeira master and friend. He and his group, Cordão de Ouro, also became an icon in the capoeira world. He is a pioneer that never stopped bringing a message of joy with a different perspective for many capoeira players. He told me that we play capoeira "with" another person and not against that person. He has influenced many people all over the world through his teaching, his playful character and music, and I am very thankful for his instruction and guidance.

Grand Master João Grande, a leader of the Capoeira Angola tradition, he has been a treasure for all capoeira players regardless of their style. I spent precious time taking classes from him at the Instituto do Cacau in Salvador, Bahia in 1990, and I am grateful for that. Those lessons enhanced my understanding of the beauty and intricacies of the Angola game.

Mestre Peixinho, a leader of the Capoeira Senzala group who holds a strong position in the history and tradition of capoeira in Rio. I will never forget the rodas on Friday evenings at Travessa Angrense and how welcoming he has been to all my students when we visit him at the Ladeira do Leme school in Rio.

Mestre Bira Acordeon, a living legend in capoeira. He is a philosopher, a writer, a fine musician, and above all, a master with so much wisdom and charisma. Possessing a deep knowledge of the complexities of the game as well, Mestre Acordeon is a carrier of the founding traditions of Mestre Bimba. His school, at Capoeira Arts Café in downtown Berkeley, is home to his United Capoeira Association. It is a model capoeira school and his events every summer are packed with capoeira players from all over the world.

Mestre Marcelo Caveirinha from Mandinga Capoeira. Thanks for all your support all these years and for the many opportunities you provided me with capoeira and drumming. Mestre Marcelo is located in Oakland, on Piedmont Street. He has been in the Northern California Bay Area for over 23 years and his work with capoeira and the arts has spread to public schools, universities, and community projects. Mestre Marcelo has also been a great capoeira influence in the Bay Area as well as all over the United States.

Mestre Wagner Bueno from Capoeira of San Jose, is a great master with a great heart and a beautiful school located in San Jose, CA. In a very scary and desperate moment of my life, when I had severed my left thumb, Mestre Vaguinho called the capoeira community and offered his school and time to help me out, and I will never forget that.

Mestre Barrão, from Axé Capoeira. Mestre Barrão, a pioneer in Canada, has established himself as a leading force in capoeira. His group has branches in many countries and it ranks among the largest capoeira groups in the world. His work includes music, shows, capoeira, and traditional dances from Pernambuco, Brazil, as well as community projects in Recife, Brazil. Thank you so very much for all the opportunities that you created for me and for the recognition that you showed me for my time and work with capoeira.

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>> Jumat, 21 November 2008

CAPOEIRA

Capoeira merupakan sebuah olah raga bela diri yang dikemba

ngkan oleh para budak Afrika di Brasil pada sekitar tahun 1500-an. Gerakan dalam capoeira menyerupai tarian dan bertitik berat pada tendangan. Pertarungan dalam capoeira biasanya diiringi

oleh musik dan disebut Jogo. Capoeira sering dikritik karena banyak orang meragukan keampuhannya dalam pertarungan sungguhan, dibanding seni bela diri lainnya seperti Karate atau Taekwondo.

Capoeira adalah sebuah sistem bela diri tradisional yang didirikan di Brazil oleh budak-budak Afrika yang dibawa oleh orang-orang Portugis ke Brazil untuk bekerja di perkebunan-perkebunan besar. Pada zaman dahulu mereka melalukan latihan denga

n diiringi oleh alat-alat musik tradisional, seperti berimbau (sebuah lengkungan kayu dengan tali senar yang dipukul dengan sebuah kayu kecil untuk menggetarkannya) dan atabaque (gendang besar), dan ini juga lebih mudah

bagi mereka untuk menyembunyikan latihan mereka dalam berbagai macam aktivitas seperti kesenangan dalam pesta yang dilakukan oleh para budak di tempat tinggal mereka yang bernama senz

ala. Ketika seorang

budak melarikan diri ia akan dikejar oleh “pemburu” profesional bersenjata yang bernama capitães-do-mato (kapten hutan). Biasanya capoeira adalah satu-satunya bela diri yang dipakai oleh budak tersebut untuk mempertahankan diri. Pertarungan mereka biasanya terjadi di tempat lapang dalam hutan yang dalam bahasa tupi-guarani (salah satu bahasa pribumi di Brazil) disebut caá-puêra – beberapa ahli sejarah berpendapat bahwa inilah asal dari nama seni bela diri tersebut. Mereka yang sempat melarik an diri berkumpul di desa-desa yang dipagari yang bernama quilombo, di tempat yang susah dicapai. Quilombo yang paling penting adalah Palmares yang mana penduduknya pernah sampai berjumlah sepuluh ribu dan bertahan hingga kurang lebih selama enam puluh tahun melawan kekuasaan yang mau menginvasi mereka. Ketua mereka yang paling terkenal bernama Zumbi. Ketika hukum untuk menghilangkan perbudakan muncul dan Brazil mulai mengimport pekerja buruh kulit putih dari negara-negara seperti Portugal, Spanyol dan Italia untuk bekerja di pertanian, banyak orang negro terpaksa berpi ndah tempat tinggal ke kota-kota, dan karena banyak dari mereka yang tidak mempunyai pekerjaan mulai menjadi penjahat. Capoeira, yang sudah menjadi urban dan mulai dipelajari oleh orang-orang kulit putih, di kota-kota seperti Rio de Janeiro, Salvador da Bahia dan Recife, mulai dilihat oleh publik sebagai permainan para penjahat dan orang-orang jalanan, maka muncul hukum untuk melarang Capoeira. Sepertinya pada waktu itulah mereka mulai menggunakan pisau cukur dalam pertarungannya, ini merupakan penga ruh dari pemain capoeira yang berasal dari Portugal dan menyanyikan fado (musik tradisional Portugis yang mirip dengan keroncong). Pada waktu itu juga beberapa sektor yang rasis dari kaum elit Brazil berteriak melawan pengaruh Afrika dalam kebudayaan negara, dan ingin “memutihkan” negara mereka. Setelah kurang lebih setengah abad berada dalam klandestin, dan orang-orang mepelajarinya di jalan-jalan tersembunyi dan di halaman-halaman belakang rumah, Manuel dos Reis Machado, Sang Guru (Mestre) Bimba, mengadakan sebuah pertunjukan untuk Getúlio Vargas, presiden Brazil pada waktu itu, dan ini merupakan permulaan yang baru untuk capoeira. Mulai didirikan akademi-akademi, agar publik dapat mempelajari permainan capoeira. Nama-nama yang paling penting pada masa itu adalah Vicente Ferreira Pastinha (Sang Guru Pastinha), yang mengajarkan aliran “Angola”, y ang sangat tradisional, dan Mestre Bimba, yang mendirikan aliran dengan beberapa inovasi yang ia namakan “Regional”.

Sejak masa itu hingga masa sekarang capoeira melewati sebuah perjalanan yang panjang. Saat ini capoeira dipelajari hampir di seluruh dunia, dari Portugal sampai ke Norwegia, dari Amerika Serikat sampai ke Australia, dari Indonesia sampai ke Jepang. Di Indonesia capoeira sudah mulai dikenal banyak orang, disamping kelompok yang ada di Yogyakarta, juga terdapat beberapa kelompok di Jakarta. Banyak pemain yang yang ber

minat mempelajari capoeira karena lingkungannya yang santai dan gembira, tidak sama dengan disiplin keras yang biasanya terdapat dalam sistem bela diri dari Timur. Seperti yang pernah dikatakan oleh seorang penulis besar dari Brazil Jorge Amado, ini “pertarungan yang paling indah di seluruh dunia, karena ini juga sebuah tarian”. Dalam capoeira teknik gerakan dasar dimulai dari “ginga” dan bukan dari posisi berhenti yang merupakan karateristik dari karate, taekwondo, pencak silat, wushu kung fu, dll...; ginga adalah gerakan-gerakan tubuh yang berkelanjutan dan bertujuan untuk mencari w

aktu yang tepat untuk menyerang atau mempertahankan diri, yang sering kali adalah menghindarkan diri dari serangan. Dalam roda para pemain capoeira mengetes diri mereka, lewat permainan pertandingan, di tengah lingkaran yang dibuat oleh para pemain musik dengan alat-alat musik Afrika dan menyanyikan bermacam-macam lagu, dan pemain lainnya bertepuk tangan dan menyanyikan bagian refrein. Lirik lagu-lagu itu tentang sejarah kesenian tersebut, guru besar pada waktu dulu dan sekarang, tentang hidup dal

am masa perbudakan, dan perlawanan mencapai kemerdekaan. Gaya bermain musik mempunyai perbedaan ritme untuk bermacam-macam permainan capoeira, ada yang perlahan dan ada juga yang cepat.

Capoeira tidak saja menjadi sebuah kebudayaan, tetapi juga sebuah olahraga nasional Brazil, dan para guru dari negara t

ersebut membuat capoeira menjadi terus menerus lebih internasional, mengajar di kelompok-kelompok mahasiswa, bermacam-macam fitness center, organisasi-organisasi kecil, dll. Siswa-siswa mereka belajar menyanyikan lagu-lagu Capoeira dengan bahasa Portugis – “Capoeira é prá homi, / mininu e mulhé...” (Capoeira untuk laki-laki, / anak-anak dan perempuan).

Di Indonesia, sama seperti di negara-negara yang lain, kemungkinan Capoeira akan semakin berkembang.

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