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B RO U G H
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LU N A
CA P O E I R A
A G A M E - DA N C E - F I G H T F O R L I F E
CAPOEIR A (kah-PWEH-dah) is an Afro-Brazilian art form that combines aspects of ritual,
dance, street ghting, acrobatics, music, cunning, and playfulness. The practice has been
deeply inuenced by the African experience in Brazil, and dates back at least to the 18thcentury colonial era, perhaps far earlier. However, because it has largely been passed down
from one practitioner to another, few outsiders have had access to the secrets of capoeira until
relatively recently. As a result, its historyriddled with complexities and contradictionsis
only just beginning to be unraveled. This article should therefore be read as a preliminary,
and evolving effort to bring together the hard facts of historical research with the oraland
bodilyhistory of capoeira, as learned through the authors own research and training in the
form.F
AFRICAN O R I G I N S
BANTU
REGION
The likely ancestor of capoeira is a little-known tradition of dance-ghting that is still found
in some isolated Bantu-language communities of West Central Africa. In such traditional
African societies, it is common for rites of passage, celebrations, and even military training
to be weaved into community life through music, storytelling, and movement. In a remote
corner of Southwestern Angola, one group of people (who do not have a name for themselves,
but are sometimes referred to as the BangalaF) perform a kind of challenge dance called the
engolo. Often cited by capoeira practitionersF as the closest cousin to capoeira, the engolo is
still performed as part of formal initiation or marriage ceremonies.F It may have also been
used in the training of warriors, or as an informal, playful way to keep the reexes sharp.
Inspired by the the ghting style of zebras, the engolo (and similar forms throughout the area)
consists mostly of kicks, sweeps, and headbutts meant to humiliate, but generally not disable,
an opponent. The lack of hand strikes may partially be explained by a proverb in Kikongo
(a nearby Congolese language) that says that hands are to build, feet are to destroy.F It is
probably this kind of foot-ghting tradition, transplanted to the Americas along with many
other African cultural practices, that became known in Brazil as the jogo de capoeira.F
THE BRA Z I L I A N C O N T E X T
Upon the rather uneventful landing of a Portuguese eet on the Northeast coast of Brazil in
1500, the vast country (equal in size to the lower 48 United States) did not seem to offer the
seafarers any obvious riches or civilzations to spoil. The local Tupi peoples, hunter-gatherers
who engaged in constant warfare against their neighbors (including ritual cannibalism), did
not possess gold or build impressive cities, such as those the Spanish would soon topple in
Mexico and Peru. With their encyclopedic knowledge of the land, however, they did help the
Portuguese harvest a marketable red dyewood called pau brazil
brazil, which would eventually give
the country its name. Even so, the Portuguese lacked the resources and desire to colonize the
country, so they focused their efforts on continuing their growing monopoly over the African
slave trade, and trading routes to the Far East.
Slave quarters
(detail from Rugendas, Brazil, c. 1830s)
With the introduction of other New World goods such as coffee and cocoa into Europe, the
need to sweeten these bitter drinks led to an increased demand for sugar. By the mid 1500s, the
Portuguese expanded their successful system of sugarcane plantations to Brazil. At rst, local
peoples were rounded up to work the plantations, but they continuously resisted, ed to the
interior, or succumbed to European diseases for which they had no resistance. As a result, the
Portuguese began to depend more on African slaves, who had already proven their endurance
under the difcult conditions of sugarcane production elsewhere.F Africans also practiced their
own agricultural methods, as well as a complex (but often humane) form of bonded servitude.
By the late 1500s, as the demand for sugar (and later, coffee) grew exponentially, the Portuguese,
along with other opportunistic Europeans and Africans, had transformed this institution into
a gruesome, wholesale trafc of human beings. Over the course of four centuries, as many as
5 million Africans were transported to Brazilnearly 40% of all the Africans taken to the
Americas (in contrast, North America received only about 5%).F
AFRICAN S I N B R A Z I L
Under the harsh conditions of the slave ships, nicknamed tumbeiros (or tomb ships), some half
of the Africans died on their way to Brazil. Those who survived the middle passage usually
found themselves at the coastal slave centers of Pernambuco, Bahia, and Rio de Janeiro, to
be processed and sold. While newly arrived Africans may have initially been relieved that the
climate and terrain of Brazil was not too unlike their own,F the grueling difculty of slave
life soon became an inescapable and hostile reality, making it a major task to keep African
traditions and customs intact. Nevertheless, a wide range of African cultural formsexpressed
in food, dress, religious practices, movement forms, words, and attitudeshave survived to
the present day. Of these, a few (including, arguably, dance-ghting) have even been passed on
with little alteration.
At the same time, the African presence in Brazil has been greatly inuenced by the historical
cycles of the slave trade. Whereas early trading concentrated on the extreme West African coast
(in an area called Senegambia), by the 17th and 18th centuries, the majority of Africans that
were taken and transported to Brazil came from West Central Africa, from the areas near todays
Angola and the Congo (with a signicant population also drawn from Mozambique in East
Africa). As the demand for slaves increased, moreover, slave raiding routes began to encroach
upon the more isolated territories where dance-ghting was practiced. A last cylce of slaves
were drawn primarily from the Yoruban peoples of the Bight of Benin (or present-day Nigeria
and Benin), who brought their own martial arts (including stick-ghting and wrestling), and a
complex religion of orix worship that would become Brazils candombl.
candombl F
Portrait of Salvador
(detail from Rugendas, c. 1820s)
The batuque
(Debret, Brazil, c. 1830s)
It may be that just as certain groups were recognized by the Portuguese for their agricultural
or artistic practices, the warriros of the engolo and other related forms were recognized for
their athletic prowess. Evidence for the lasting presence of these warriors is implied by the
existence of other dance-ghting practices throughout the Americas, including the ladja and
danmy of Martinique, the broma of Venezuela, the man of Cuba, and the secretive knocking
and kicking of the Southern US (all areas of high Bantu concentration).F Yet it has also been
suggested that these forms may have also been spread throughout the Americasand even
back to Africa itselflater on, by Brazilian ex-slaves who had bought their own freedom and
returned to Africa, or by the surprisingly large numbers of African freemen also traveled widely
as mariners throughout the 18th and 19th centuries.
While many questions about the age and dissemination of African dance-ghting practices
remain unresolved, it is clear that in todays Africa the tradition appears to be dying out,
especially in the areas of Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo, which have been
ravaged by years of warfare and mass migration. Research is also complicated by the fact that,
throughout the 400-year span of the slavery in Brazil (c. 15501888), details about African
culture were documented in a rather haphazard (and often Eurocentric) manner. The fact that
Africans were brought to Brazil from different regions of Africa, at different times, also means
that various African customs were undoubtedly creolized with older ones already present in
(or adapted to) the Brazilian context, which would also include Amerindian and Portuguese
inuences. Because of this complex picture, and the relative scarcity of cultural accounts on
Brazilian slavery, it may be impossible to determine how a practice like the engolo became
known as capoeira, or if a single moment marks the beginning of capoeira in Brazil.
The rst written citations of capoeira as a movement form occur in the police records and
tourist accounts of Brazils main coastal cities of Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, and Recife in the
early 1800s. On the narrow streets of these heavily urbanized areas, where newly arrived
Africans, acculturated Afro-Brazilian creoles, and other mixed-race people (and later, even
poor Europeans) all mingled, the authorities recorded the arrests of hundreds of capoeiras
capoeiras
capoeira playerswho engaged in the bloody war dance known as capoeiragem, or the
practice of capoeira. Later, especially in Rio, these streetwise rogues (or malandros
malandros) organized
themselves into vicious gangs (or maltas
maltas) that alternately terrorized and protected communities
and politicians. Many capoeiras also worked seasonally as shermen, stevedores, and sailors:
occupations with many hours of downtime, during which capoeira came to be known by the
ironic euphemism of vadiao (or doing nothing in particular).
As has already been noted, in earlier days of the slave trade, Africans and Afro-Brazilians were
often allowed to practice their own traditionsas long as they worked hard and paid their
respects to Catholicism. However, by the early 1800s, the increased risk of slave rebellion,
as well as a growing (and very racist) perception of African culture as being degraded, led
to a harsh persecution of all things African. Capoeira, along with the secretive candombl (to
which capoeira is intricately linked), was singled out as a particular threat to the peace, and was
punishable by public whipping. When a number of local statutes failed to wipe out the form,
capoeiragem was ofcially prohibited nationwide in 1890.
Despite its harsh repression, capoeira maintained an uneasy relationship with the state
throughout the prohibition period. Sometimes, to avoid punishment, practitioners were
drafted to serve in the military. During the war with Paraguay in the 1860s, for example,
many capoeiras (many from Bahia) distinguished themselves by their effectiveness as front-line
warriors. At other times, the capoeiras were informally enlisted to help put down domestic
disturbances. In popular culture, a whole literature romanticizing the dangerous lifestyle of
the well-dressed malandro gure also arose, even as the real-life counterparts of these ctional
scoundrels were being punished and imprisoned for practicing their art.
By the early 1900s, the authorities nearly succeeded in eliminating capoeira altogether. In
Rio, where capoeira had been heavily inuenced by the new underclass of poor Europeans
(including the notorious Portuguese knife-wielding fadistas),
fadistas F capoeira had also degenerated
into all-out gang warfare (armed with machetes, razors, and clubs). Such violence gave the
authorities an excuse to wipe out the maltas without mercy, and as a result, capoeira carioca was
all but lost. It only survived as a streetwise ghting form in a few seedy favelas (shantytowns),
and as a martial art taught in a few military academies with no ritual or music.F Meanwhile,
in the far northern city of Recife, tough capoeiras such as the famous Nascimento Grande
were known as moleques de banda (band brats) who performed, sometimes with colorful
umbrellas as part of battling street processions. After the police began to repress these displays,
some of its movements were recongured into a dance known as the passo. It was only in
the old colonial capital of Salvador, Bahia (and the surrounding recncavo of the Bay of All
Saints), that capoeira thrived on its own terms. Taking on the more deliberate appearance
of a dance through the use of drums, tambourines, and an ancient Bantu bow instrument
called the berimbau, Bahian capoeira managed to survive as a streetwise game-dance-ght that
symbolized the subterfuge and resistance necessary for everyday survival, and was also perhaps
the closest living representation of the African dance-ght tradition.
T WO MA S T E R S
Throughout the prohibition period, many informal, streetwise mestres (masters) of capoeira
remained active in Bahia. Among these were two remarkable men who fought for the
recognition of the form. Both were said to have been taught the tradition by Africans, and it
is largely because of their efforts that the secret movements and mythologies of capoeira were
nally revealed to the world.
In Rio de Janeiro in the 1960s, a group of young capoeira enthusiasts (many of them originally
from Bahia) formed the Grupo Senzala, creating a highly stylized version of Mestre Bimbas
luta regional that was inspired by Rios own underground tradition of capoeira, as well as other
martial arts and gymnastic practices. Apart from the inuence of some of Mestre Bimbas most
respected graduates in Bahia, such as Mestres Acordeon, Itapoan, and Dr. Angelo Decnio, the
so-called Senzala style (and its offshoots, such as Abad-Capoeira and Omulu), has remained
the primary force in the modernization, globalization, and homogenization of capoeira.F
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This contemporary style, which introduced belt ranking systems and military-style training
methods (echoing the move of Rios capoeira from the streets to military academies), is also
the most public face of capoeira: as seen in Hollywood lms (such as Only the Strong and
Oceans Twelve
Twelve), commercials, dance performances (such as Jelon Vieiras famous DanceBrazil),
and video game characters (such as Tekkens Eddy Gordo). Some argue that its extreme
stylizationemphasizing fast games, ghting techniques, and powerful, airborne acrobatics
has also sacriced the deeper Afro-Bahian roots of capoeira, where, by contrast, capoeira is still
understood as a playful, ritualistic, and somewhat secretive pastime.
Indeed, thanks to the rise of the Grupo Senzalas competitive style of demonstration capoeira,
the older capoeira angola was nearly lost. The closing of Pastinhas academy in the early 1970s,
as well as the informal teaching methods of many of the old mestres themselveswho taught
only a handful of students at a time, without structured lessonswere also partially to blame.
By the early 1980s, however, angola was slowly revived by Pastinhas students; rst, by Mestre
Joo Pequeno, and later, Mestres Joo Grande, Boca Rica, Bola Sete, and Curi. Mestre Moraes,
a follower of the two Joos, established the Grupo Capoeira Angola Pelourinho (GCAP) in
1980, teaching a more stylized and politicized form of capoeira angola that has become a
meeting point for black consciousness and activism. At the same time, other mestres (including
Bahias Mestre Neco, Mestre Lua de Bob, and the authors own Mestre Caboquinho) have
followed or revived other traditions of capoeira angola that trace their heritage back to Bahias
old street rodas
rodas, and far beyond. Even Mestre Bimbas luta
uta regional baiana has been rescusitated,
by his son Nenl, who is among the very few to strictly adhere to its original teachings.
CAPOEIR A : A C O N T E S T E D A RT
Although a few women are mentioned in the laundry lists of old capoeira mestres (including
Palmeirona, Maria Cachoeira, and Maria P no MatoF), little is known about the historical
role of women in this traditionally male art. The participation of women may have simply
been limited by the clearer distinction between gender roles in Brazilian society, or by issues of
fashion (as it is difcult to properly execute capoeira movements in the owing white dresses
of the baianas
baianas). On the other hand, women have always dominated the highest positions as
priestesses in the religion of candombl
candombl, and most self-respecting Brazilians make offerings to
the sea goddess Iemanj, one of the most powerful orixs in the candombl pantheon.
Yet even as there remains a stigma against capoeira in Brazilian culture itself, women have
recently become more and more involved in the practice (especially outside of Brazil). Several
remarkable women have even gained higher titles in both angola and the newer styles. Among
Bahian angoleiras
angoleiras, Mestra Jararaca (graduated by Curi) is the foremost of these, along with
her sister Professora Ritinha (of Joo Pequeno). In the U.S., angoleiro Mestre Caboquinho
has graduated two contra (or half ) mestres
mestres, named Biriba and Rapidinha. In San Francisco,
Mestre Acordeon has graduated the rst non-Brazilian mestra, a former modern dancer named
Suelly, while Abads famous Mestre Camisa (formerly of Senzala) has graduated the Brazilianborn mestrandas Edna Lima (New York City) and Cigarra (San Francisco).
CONCLU S I O N
Regardless of its external appearances (such as gender or race), the future practice of capoeira
as a cunning game, a ritualized combat, a show for tourists, or a tournament-style martial
artis now in the hands of Brazilians and non-Brazilians, traditionalists and modernists,
women and men alike. At its best, capoeira will likely remain a deeply ambivalent game that
allows its practitioners to play through lifes dilemmas and contradictions with a smile on
the face. And so, with this diversity of voicescontemporary, traditional, competitive, and
streetwisecapoeira is poised to survive for centuries to come.
NOTES
-. Robert A. Voeks (1997, p. 832) has done a vivid analysis and comparison between the African and Brazilian
coastlines.
-. Pierre Verger. On the passage of side-hold wrestling to the Americas, see Desch-Obi (2000)
-. Of these forms, only ladja has been well documented (Dunham). Desch-Obi (2000) has discussed, but not
documented knocking and kicking somewhat thoroughly. The others are either extinct, sketchy, or remain part of
folk traditions yet to be researched.
-. On the Portuguese contributions to capoeira in the late 1800s, see Soares (1994).
-. A manual written anonymously by one of these ofcers was published in 1906.
-. See Nestor Capoeira (2002, pp. 212219) for an excellent account of the Grupo Senzala, mostly from within.
FURTHER R E A D I N G