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Paga Lomba: Aruba's System of Cooperative Reciprocal Exchange
| Article
# : |
14691 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
11 / 1988 |
2,730 Words |
| Author
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A.M. Powers Anthropologist A.M. Powers has done fieldwork in the Canadian
Maritimes and the Caribbean. She is a freelance author who
occasionally teaches in colleges in the New York area. |
Aruba is one of the Leeward Islands, situated in the Caribbean Sea some eighteen miles north of Venezuela's Paraguana Peninsula. Formerly part of the Netherlands Antilles, since 1986 Aruba has been a separate entity in the kingdom of the Netherlands (which consists of Holland, the Netherlands Antilles, and Aruba). Oriented in a northwest-southeast position, the relatively flat island is only nineteen miles long and six miles across at its widest point. The island is actually an elevation of the South American continental shelf, and its landscape is characterized by unusual and immense boulders of diorite.
Aruba's climate can be described as semidesert. Volcanic rock, limestone, and coral make up most of the island, and the Aruban soil is thin, gravelly, saline, and alkaline. Southeasterly trade winds prevail throughout the year, except during the planting season, during October and November. The Aruban climate is hot and dry. The average mean temperature is eighty-two degrees Fahrenheit, and rainfall is as unreliable as it is throughout most of the Lesser Antilles. Wind and rain erosion are extensive, owing to the arid terrain. Most of the rains come during the growing season and sometimes extend into December. Average annual rainfall is around seventeen inches.
Aruba is populated by many ethnic groups. Many of the most recent inhabitants came to live and work on the island when Lago Oil began building a refinery plant in the late 1920s. (The plant closed in the mid 1980s.) Early labor relations were strained, since many of the native Arubans did not speak English, and the American supervisory staff saw no advantage in speaking Dutch (the official language of the island), or in learning papiamento (the local dialect, a Creole based in part on Spanish) or Spanish (which most Arubans partially understood). Although Arubans have since learned English, most of the initial labor force was supplied by immigration from the surrounding Caribbean islands, primarily from the English-speaking Dutch Windward Islands and the British West Indies. This event has had a significant impact on Aruba's subsequent social and economic organization.
Automation of the refinery in the 1950s caused drastically reduced immigration to the island. Those immigrants who remained in Aruba have been incorporated into the local population, though they are generally referred to as "the English," since native Arubans clearly distinguish between themselves and non-natives.
In Aruban perception, the island's population consists of two ethic groups: mestizos
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