Palenquero Explained

Palenquero
Nation:The Colombian constitution recognizes minority languages as "official in their territories."[1]
States:Colombia
Ethnicity:6,637 (2018)
Speakers:2,788
Date:2005
Familycolor:Creole
Fam1:Spanish Creole
Region:San Basilio de Palenque
Iso3:pln
Glotto:pale1260
Glottorefname:Palenquero
Lingua:51-AAC-bc
Script:Latin (Spanish alphabet)
Map:Colombia - Bolívar - Mahates.svg
Mapcaption:Map highlighting Mahates municipality, where Palenque is located

Palenquero (sometimes spelled Palenkero) or Palenque (Lengua) is a Spanish-based creole language spoken in Colombia. It is believed to be a mixture of Kikongo (a language spoken in central Africa in the current countries of Congo, DRC, Gabon, and Angola, former member states of Kongo) and Spanish. However, there is not sufficient evidence to indicate that Palenquero is strictly the result of a two-language contact. It could also have absorbed elements of local indigenous languages.[2]

Palenquero is considered to be the only surviving Spanish-based creole language in Latin America.[3] Typically Papiamento, which is often thought to be Portuguese-based, from this assessment. In 2018 more than 6,600 people spoke this language.

It is primarily spoken in the village of San Basilio de Palenque, which is southeast of Cartagena, and in some neighbourhoods of Barranquilla.[4]

History

The formation of Palenquero is recorded from the 17th century with the dilution of the Spanish language and the increase of maroon activity.[5] Existing records dating from the era of Cartagena’s slave trade allude to the pidgin from which Palenquero evolved. As illustrated in the ethnographic text of De Instauranda Aethiopum Salute (1627), the priest Alonso de Sandoval refers to the ‘corruption of our Spanish language’ commonly spoken amongst African slaves. Palenquero's origins are unclear; it was not referred to in print until 1772.

Palenque de San Basilio

Palenque de San Basilio or San Basilio de Palenque is the village from which Palenquero originated from and in which it is most commonly spoken in the 21st century.

The village was formed in the early 17th century to the south of Cartagena by fugitive slaves who escaped from surrounding districts, under the leadership of Benkos Biohó.[4] The dissolution of the Spanish language intensified as maroons settled in armed fortified territories. The Palenqueros maintained their physical distance from ethnic Europeans as a form of anti-colonial resistance but they likely intermarried with indigenous women. They developed a creole based mostly on their own African languages and Spanish.

In the early 20th century, residents of this area were noted as having been bilingual in both Palenquero and Spanish. A 1913 document noted that residents of Palenque de San Basilio had a 'guttural dialect that some believe to be the very African language, if not in all its purity at least with some variations'.[6]

Decline

For almost two decades in the 21st century, Palenquero has been classified as an endangered language. Although it is spoken in parallel with Spanish, the latter has dominated the regular linguistic activity of Palenque de San Basilio. Some 53% of residents are unable to speak Palenquero.

The decline of Palenquero can be traced to the establishment of sugar and banana plantations. Many natives left the village in order to find work either in the Panama Canal or the Department of Magdalena. There they came into contact with other languages. In the 20th century, with the introduction of a standard Spanish educational system, Spanish became the supra regional prescriptive speech, and Palenquero was often criticized and mocked.[7]

Racial discrimination against people of ethnic African descent added to the decline of Palenquero. Some parents did not feel comfortable continuing to teach their children the language.[8]

Revitalization

With its legacy of cultural resistance, Palenquero has survived since the early 17th century despite the many challenges. In recent years, scholars and activists have encouraged teaching and use of Palenquero, and native speakers are encouraged.[9] Three major events have contributed to the revived interest in the Palenquero creole:

Antonio Cervantes

Antonio Cervantes, also known as Kid Pambelé, is an internationally recognized boxing champion born in Palenque de San Basilio. After he won the 1972 world Jr. Welterweight championship, local residents took pride in both the village and Palenquero as a language. As result, Palenque de San Basilio attracted interest by many journalists and politicians.[7] It has continued to attract cultural and foreign attention.

UNESCO Heritage of Humanity

In 2005, Palenque was declared by the United Nations to be a Masterpiece of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity. The recognition has led to appreciation for Palenquero culture. Films, documentaries and music festivals have brought more attention to the community. These type of cultural programs have successfully appealed to Colombian youth, who otherwise were not interested in Palenquero.

Academic Interest

Beginning in 1992, the educational system in Palenque de San Basilio started reintroducing Palenquero in the curriculum. Children resumed learning Palenquero, as it was introduced in preschool, and they continued to learn it in advancing grades. Parents and grandparents were encouraged to use the language at home, and classes were opened for adults. A fully equipped cultural centre was constructed to promote the language and culture.

Additionally, academic research, conferences and activism have increased the desirability of Palenquero. There is new energy to continue to pass it down generations.

Grammar

Similar to several other creole languages, Palenquero grammar lacks inflectional morphology. Nouns, adjectives, verbs and determiners are almost always invariant.[10]

Gender

Grammatical gender is non-existent, and adjectives derived from Spanish default to the masculine form: lengua africano ‘African language’.[10]

Plurality

Plurality is marked with the particle ma. (for example: ma posá is "houses"). This particle is believed to derive from Kikongo, a Bantu language, and is the sole Kikongo-derived inflection present in Palenquero.[11] The younger speakers of Palenquero utilize ma for plurality more so than the speakers that came before them.

This particle is usually dropped with cardinal numbers greater than two: ma ndo baka "two cows" but tresi año "13 years".[10]

Number!scope="col"
PersonNominativeSource
Singular1stíuncertain
yoSpanish; Castilian: yo
2ndboSpanish; Castilian: vos
3rdeleSpanish; Castilian: ele
Plural1stsutoSpanish; Castilian: nosotros
2ndutereSpanish; Castilian: ustedes
enu (formerly archaic)African origin
3rdanéBantu origin

Verbs

Copula

There are four copulas in Palenquero: e, ta, jue, and senda. E roughly corresponds to in Spanish and is used for permanent states, and ta is similar to the Spanish in that it used for temporary states and locatives. Jue is used as a copula for nouns and senda is only found with predicative nouns and adjectives referring to permanent states.[12]

Examples:[13]

Vocabulary

Some 300 words of African origin have been identified in Palenquero,[14] with many believed to originate in the Kikongo language. A comprehensive list and proposed etymologies are provided in Moñino and Schwegler's "Palenque, Cartagena y Afro-Caribe: historia y lengua" (2002). Many of the words that come from African origin, include plant, animal, insect and landscape names.[4] Another handful of words are believed to originate from Portuguese (for example: mai 'mother'; ten 'has'; ele 'he/she'; bae 'go').

Palenque!scope="col"
SpanishEnglish
burúSpanish; Castilian: dineromoney
ngombeSpanish; Castilian: ganadocattle
ngubáSpanish; Castilian: cacahuetepeanut
posáSpanish; Castilian: casa. Compare house
tamboreSpanish; Castilian: tambordrum
maiSpanish; Castilian: madre. Compare .mother
bumbiloSpanish; Castilian: basuragarbage
chepaSpanish; Castilian: ropaclothing
chitiáSpanish; Castilian: hablarto speak
ngainaSpanish; Castilian: gallinachicken
tabacoSpanish; Castilian: tabacotobacco
hemanoSpanish; Castilian: hermanobrother
ondeSpanish; Castilian: dondewhere
puetaSpanish; Castilian: puertadoor
ngoloSpanish; Castilian: gordofat
floSpanish; Castilian: florflower
monáSpanish; Castilian: niñochild
ceddoSpanish; Castilian: cerdopig
cateyanoSpanish; Castilian: castellanoSpanish
forateroSpanish; Castilian: forasterooutsider
kusaSpanish; Castilian: cosathing, stuff
cuagroSpanish; Castilian: barrioneighborhood

External links

Notes and References

  1. Title 1, Article 10. http://confinder.richmond.edu/admin/docs/colombia_const2.pdf
  2. Parkvall . Mikael . Jacobs . Bart . 2020 . Palenquero Origins: A Tale of More than Two Languages . Diachronica . en . 37 . 4 . 540–576 . 10.1075/dia.19019.par. 225778990 .
  3. News: San Basilio de Palenque Journal - A Language, Not Quite Spanish, With African Echoes - NYTimes.com . www.nytimes.com . 2010-02-13 . Simon . Romero . 2007-10-18.
  4. Bickerton. Derek. Escalante. Aquilas. January 1970. Palenquero: A Spanish-based creole of northern Colombia. Lingua. 24. 254–267. 10.1016/0024-3841(70)90080-x. 0024-3841.
  5. Dieck . Marianne . 2011 . La época de formación de la lengua de Palenque: Datos históricos y lingüísticos . The Formation Period of the Palenquero Language . Forma y Función . es . 24 . 1 . 11–24 . 859491443.
  6. Lipski. John. 2018. Palenquero vs. Spanish negation: Separate but equal?. Lingua. 202. 44–57. 10.1016/j.lingua.2017.12.007. 0024-3841.
  7. Lipski. John M.. 2012. Free at Last: From Bound Morpheme to Discourse Marker in Lengua ri Palenge (Palenquero Creole Spanish). Anthropological Linguistics. 54. 2. 101–132. 10.1353/anl.2012.0007. 143540760 . 1944-6527.
  8. Hernández. Rubén. Guerrero. Clara. Palomino. Jesús. 2008. Palenque: historia libertaria, cultura y tradición.. Grupo de Investigación Muntú.
  9. Lipski. John M.. 2020-06-03. What you hear is (not always) what you get: Subjects and verbs among receptive Palenquero-Spanish bilinguals. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism. en. 10. 3. 315–350. 10.1075/lab.17083.lip. 149952479 . 1879-9264.
  10. Web site: Palenquero. Mackenzie. Ian.
  11. Book: McWhorter, John H.. Linguistic Simplicity and Complexity: Why Do Languages Undress?. 2011-06-30. Walter de Gruyter. 9781934078402. 92.
  12. Book: The Oxford Guide to the Romance Languages. Ledgeway. Adam. Maiden. Martin. 2016-09-05. Oxford University Press. 9780191063251. 455.
  13. Book: Palenque, Cartagena y Afro-Caribe: historia y lengua. Moñino. Yves. Schwegler. Armin. 2002-01-01. Walter de Gruyter. 9783110960228. 69. es.
  14. Book: Palenque, Cartagena y Afro-Caribe: historia y lengua. Moñino. Yves. Schwegler. Armin. 2013-02-07. Walter de Gruyter. 9783110960228. 171. es.