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The Dead and the Living in Minho
| Article
# : |
13574 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1988 |
3,319 Words |
| Author
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Joao de Pina-Cabral Social anthropologist Joao de Pina-Cabral is a professor at
the University at Lisbon. The author wishes to thank Professor
Rui G. Feijo for his hospitality and guidance in Aparecida,
Lousada. |
Minho province in northwestern Portugal has played a crucial and unique role throughout the country's history. The cultural and political expansion that eventually led to formation of the Portuguese state began there during the twelfth century. Many of the sailors who navigated the Indian Ocean in the sixteenth century were minhotos, as were many Portuguese who explored and farmed Brazil in the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries.
Minho today is a busy, industrious area where the small, independent farmer, deeply attached to the land he owns and cultivates, thrives. The primary crops are wine grapes--the famous vinho verde, which grows on pergolas--and maize, which is grown on small, irrigated terraces carved out of the hillsides. Minho is the most active and enterprising industrial region of Portugal. But it is also overpopulated, and during the twentieth century, minhotos have spread throughout the world in search of better-paying jobs. In the Alto Minho--the northern, hillier part of Minho--there is little industry. Most of the largely peasant population in that region lives by farming, with the help of money sent by relatives working abroad.
There is no clearer sign that a peasant culture is dying than when the new occupants of the land begin to forget those who have preceded them. When a peasant is no longer concerned with those who owned the land he farms, who lived in the house he inhabits, and who belonged to his parish, then the old peasant culture is doomed.
In Minho today, the contrary is precisely the case. A deep attachment to local community goes hand in hand with a profound concern with the dead. This is
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