Main content

The Afro-Mexicans

Black people in Mexico鈥檚 remote Costa Chica feel ignored and neglected. Lucy Duran meets a community struggling for recognition and proud of its identity.

Many black people in Mexico鈥檚 remote Costa Chica area near the Pacific ocean feel ignored and neglected by the state. A lot of Mexicans don鈥檛 even know the Afro-Mexicans exist. Outside their towns, they often get stopped by police who don鈥檛 believe they can be Mexican. Some have even been deported, despite having Mexican ID papers.

So who are the black Mexicans? Lucy Duran meets members of this ethnic community that is struggling for identity and recognition. They use their culture, such as the characteristic Dance of the Devils or Chilena music, to assert their identity and fight for their rights.

Activists want the state to accept Black people as a separate ethnic minority, distinct from indigenous people, but with the same rights. It is not only about being able to hold your head high. It鈥檚 also about money. Those fighting for official recognition say that they鈥檙e not eligible for the special kind of financial support that similarly isolated indigenous communities get. They blame their poverty on this lack of funding.

Dr Lucy Duran meets black Mexicans ranging from a cowboy to a singer-songwriter and explores how they identify themselves, why even those who do not obviously look as though they are of African descent describe themselves as black, and why their identity has become a political issue.

Consultant and translator: Dr Sergio Navarrete Pellicer

(Photo: Paula Maximiana Laredo Herrera and Tulia Serrano Arellanes, council workers in Santiago Llano Grande, a black town in the Costa Chica area of Oaxaca state, Mexico)

Available now

50 minutes

Last on

Thu 14 Apr 2016 01:06GMT

Related LInks

Broadcasts

  • Sun 10 Apr 2016 03:06GMT
  • Sun 10 Apr 2016 13:06GMT
  • Wed 13 Apr 2016 06:06GMT
  • Wed 13 Apr 2016 08:06GMT
  • Wed 13 Apr 2016 23:06GMT
  • Thu 14 Apr 2016 01:06GMT

Featured in...