Dancing devils of Corpus Christi

(Dancing Devils of Yare ka di tom m-bahina)

Dancing Devils of Corpus Christi nyɛla Venezuelan adiini chuɣu shɛli niriba pam ni mi ka di puhiri Corpus Christi, ka di niŋdi presence of Christ din be Eucharist.[1] Di nyɛla din niŋdi ni 11 brotherhoods ban yina "Region" koŋkoba na, ka mali niriba ban kalinli gari 5,000 ka bɛ ni ŋun kpaŋ o maŋ pam nyɛ Dancing Devils of Yare. UNESCO nyɛla ban daa nyɛ li ka daa zaŋ li pahi Intangible Cultural Heritage yuuni 2012.[citation needed]

Dancing devils of Corpus Christi
Tingbani shɛli din yinaVenezuela Mali niŋ
Intangible cultural heritage statusRepresentative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity Mali niŋ
Described at URLhttps://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/00639, https://ich.unesco.org/fr/RL/00639, https://ich.unesco.org/es/RL/00639 Mali niŋ
25 meter tall monument to Dancing Devils of Yare, at Venezuela de Antier in Mérida, Venezuela. Constructed 1924–25.

Brotherhood laɣingu ŋɔ nyɛla din daa piligi mid seventeenth century[2] Aragua mini Vargas.[3] Yuuni 1749 piligu, Corpus Christi nyɛla waa shɛli din daa wari ka dabba, paɣaba n-ti pahi bihi zaa nyɛ ban yɛri nima ka alizini nim la ka di nyɛla bɛ yɛn gbaai la alikawli ni Blessed Sacrament.[citation needed]

Niriba pam nyɛla ban mali lahabali koŋkoba zaŋ n-ti Dancing Devils of Corpus Christi. Lahabali shɛli wuhiya ni San Francisco de Yare brotherhood, yuun kobisi nahi nyaaŋa (400 years ago), buɣi jamdi ŋun daa bi tooi gbubi procession of Corpus Christi yɛliya: "di yi niŋ ka liɣiri bee ban mali dihitabili gbubi Blessed Sacrament in procession, din ŋuna alizini nim kam na!"[citation needed] Ka di niŋ ka pɔhim ʒɛbu nyaaŋa, alizini nim pam nyɛla ban daa tahi bɛ maŋ na church maa tooni.[4]

Lahabali shɛŋa din gba yina zaŋ jɛndi Yare brotherhoods, kundivihira shɛŋa ni nyɛla din be novel Peonía ka ŋun daa sabi li nyɛ Manuel Vicente Romero Garcia, buɣisiri li wahi wariba ŋɔ ni daa nyɛ Cúa alizina shɛm yuuni 1870s.[5]

Brotherhoods

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Laɣingu pin'yini nyɛ guilds,[citation needed] ʒilɛli ni bee laɣingu shɛŋa din wari yuuni yuuni waa ŋɔ jamdi ka gbaari alikawli ni Blessed Sacrament.[6][7] Di zaa nyɛla ʒingama laɣinsi ni bɛ ʒilɛli ni saawara ni. Laɣingu shɛŋa nyɛla din yina n-ti mali liɣiri tabiri sɔŋdi li.[2]

Din yɛn che ka laɣingu ŋɔ chani viɛnyɛla, ninvuɣ shɛba nyɛla ban ʒini "national meetings," ka laɣingu kam nyɛ din ʒini tiŋ koŋkoba. Lala zuɣu National Association of Dancing Devils of Corpus Christi nyɛla binshɛli bɛn daa kpa ka di nia nyɛla di zaŋ sokam laɣim.[2]

Dancing Devils of Yare (Diablos Danzantes del Yare) nyɛla adiini chɛɣu yuli ka bɛ niŋdi li San Francisco de Yare, Miranda, Venezuela, Corpus Christi dabisili dali. The Sociedades del Santísimo (Societies of the Holiest) nyɛ din su di niŋbu. Di nyɛla din piligi 18th century, ka di nyɛ zaɣa kurili n-ti brotherhood zaŋ n-ti American continent.

Corpus Christi kam (alaamishi dabisa awɔi nyaaŋa nyɛ Holy Thursday), waa ŋɔ yuli booni "Dancing Devils," ka bɛ yɛri nima din nyɛ colorful garments (ka di tooi nyɛ zaɣa ʒee).

Procession and dress code

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Lahabali kɔligu:Dancing Devils of Yare original Masks.jpg
Dancing Devils of Yare original Masks

Chuɣu ŋɔ nyɛla chuɣu shɛli bɛn niŋdi ka mali bɛ zaɣa niŋdi saint Saint Francis of Paola mini Jesus Christ din be Blessed Sacrament. Bɛ piligiri li la alaaba dali ni wake where fulías (ka bɛ ŋmɛri ni binkumda ), décimas (native form of poetry) nyɛla yiinda shɛli hali ni yuŋ. Dabisili shɛli din paya na maa bɛ nyɛla ban yɛn wari waa gindi tiŋ maa. Bɛ lahi nyɛla ban wari waa doli palli ka yɛ niin ʒɛhi ni masks, corríos (octosyllabic musical poems).

Kundivihira

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  1. UNESCO. Diablos Danzantes de Venezuela (Spanish). Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 CONVENTION FOR THE SAFEGUARDING OF THE INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE. NOMINATION FILE NO. 00639. UNESCO. 2012. p. 15. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  3. Correo del Orinoco (25 November 2012). Los Diablos Danzantes están a punto de ser un patrimonio de la humanidad (Spanish). Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  4. Historia de los Valles del Tuy. Diablos Danzantes de Yare (Spanish). Archived from the original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  5. Manuel V. Monasterios G. (2012-04-03). Origen de la festividad religiosa y tradicional celebrada cada año el jueves después de la octava de pentecostés (Spanish). Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  6. Venezuela Tuya .com. Los Diablos Danzantes de nuestra tierra (Spanish). Retrieved 2013-10-26.
  7. MINCI / AVN (2013-05-30). Diablos danzantes de Corpus Christi, Patrimonio Cultural de Venezuela y del Mundo (Spanish). Retrieved 2013-10-26.
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