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Artist’s rendering of John Canoe (Jan Kwaw), the Ahanta king who likely inspired the Bahamas’ Junkanoo festival Sankofa Flamingo Foundation / Painted by Rasheed Demeritte

New research reveals links between the 18th-century Ahanta leader John Canoe and the Caribbean festival Junkanoo

Every Christmas, residents of the Bahamas head outdoors, crowding the streets of Nassau in celebration of Junkanoo, the country’s national festival. Tourists and locals alike applaud dancers parading in green and gold costumes to the otherworldly beat of drums, horns and bells.

The most common theory paints Junkanoo’s namesake, Canoe, as a faceless victim of the transatlantic slave trade—a captive trafficked to the Bahamas, where he persuaded the English to gift enslaved Africans Christmas Day off. (Canoe is often described as a former slave trader in his own right.) The enslavers misunderstood the cultural meaning of John Canoe, instead hearing “Junkanoo.” When the holiday became a disruptive bother to the English colonial government, it dubbed them “junk anew” or “junk enough.”

Read the complete Smithsonian Magazine article here.