| Literature DB >> 20339580 |
Abstract
African Rice (Oryza glaberrimaSteud.): Lost Crop of the Enslaved Africans Discovered in Suriname. African rice (Oryza glaberrima Steud.) was introduced to the Americas during the slave trade years and grown by enslaved Africans for decades before mechanical milling devices facilitated the shift towards Asian rice (O. sativa L.). Literature suggests that African rice is still grown in Guyana and French Guiana, but the most recent herbarium voucher dates from 1938. In this paper, evidence is presented that O. glaberrima is still grown by Saramaccan Maroons both for food and ritual uses. Saramaccan informants claim their forefathers collected their first "black rice" from a mysterious wild rice swamp and cultivated these seeds afterwards. Unmilled spikelets (grains with their husk still attached) are sold in small quantities for ancestor offerings, and even exported to the Netherlands to be used by Maroon immigrants. Little is known of the evolution of O. glaberrima, before and after domestication. Therefore, more research is needed on the different varieties of rice and other "lost crops" grown by these descendants of enslaved Africans who escaped from plantations in the 17th and 18th centuries and maintained much of their African cultural heritage in the deep rainforest.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20339580 PMCID: PMC2840666 DOI: 10.1007/s12231-010-9111-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Econ Bot ISSN: 0013-0001 Impact factor: 1.731
Fig. 1Map of Suriname, based on drawing by H. Rypkema.
Collections of “rice” specimens from suriname and the netherlands made by the author
| Species (Voucher) | Collection locality | Local name (language) | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Medicinal plant market, Paramaribo, Suriname | blaka aleisi, busi aleisi (Sr)** | ritual offering |
|
| Rijsdijkweg, Pará, Suriname | dagu aleisi (Sr) (dog rice) | ritual bath for babies, grains not edible |
|
| Aucan herb stall, Amsterdam | padi aleisi (Sr) | ritual offering |
|
| Nieuw Lombé, Suriname | baáka alísi, mátu alísi (Sar) | food |
|
| Nieuw Lombé, Suriname | baáka alísi, mátu alísi (Sar) | sowing material, food, ritual offering |
|
| Medicinal plant market, Paramaribo, Suriname | blaka aleisi, busi aleisi (Sr) | ritual offering |
|
| Saramaccan culture shop, Amsterdam. | blaka aleisi (Sr) | ritual offering |
*Primary collector names: TVA = T.R. van Andel, MJ = M.J. Jansen-Jacobs.
**Sr Sranantongo, Sar Saramaccan Maroon language.
Fig. 2a Panicle of Oryza glaberrima kept as sowing material, Nieuw Lombé, Suriname (TvA 5632). The small panicle on the left hand corner is O. sativa. Photo: C. A. van der Hoeven. b Unmilled O. glaberrima spikelets, showing apical awn, and milled grains with a clear reddish–brown bran, both from the same sample (TvA 5635). Photo: C. A. van der Hoeven.
Fig. 3Emelina Saabo with Albie Poeketie in her rice field. Photo: M. J. Jansen–Jacobs.
Fig. 4Flowering stalk of Oryza glaberrima (MJ 7075). Photo: M. J. Jansen–Jacobs.