Cameroon - place

The Cameroon–Congo region was home to the Bantu and Kongo peoples whose descendants were brought to Cuba as enslaved people, primarily between the 17th and 19th centuries. Their cultural heritage survives in Cuba through Palo Monte, and in the dances Makuta and Yuka.

The Kongo / Bantu Connection

The broad Bantu language family extends from Cameroon through Central Africa to the Congo basin. In Cuba, enslaved people from this region were grouped under the name "Congos". Their Cuban descendants formed cabildos — mutual aid societies — that preserved their traditions.

Palo Monte (Regla de Palo)

The primary Kongo-derived religion in Cuba. Unlike SanterĂ­a (Yoruba-derived), Palo Monte centers on the power of the dead, the forest, and material objects (ngangas) charged with spiritual force. It retains elements of the Kikongo language and has specific drum patterns and ritual dances.

Makuta

An Afro-Cuban secular dance derived from Kongo traditions, historically associated with cabildo gatherings of Congo-descent communities in Cuba. Performed with large barrel drums, it features vigorous, grounded movement vocabulary.

Yuka

A Kongo-derived dance considered a precursor to Cuban Rumba. Yuka uses three drums (caja, mula, cachimbo) and features partner dancing with the vacunao — the pelvic gesture later central to Guaguancó.

Influence on Rumba

The Congo contribution to Cuban Rumba — especially the Columbia style and the physical vocabulary of Guaguancó — is the deepest African root of the genre. The grounded posture, pelvic isolations, and competitive male solo display all trace back to Kongo traditions.

The CarabalĂ­ (Cross River Region)

From the Nigeria– Cameroon border came the Carabalí — Efik and Ejagham peoples from the Cross River region. In Cuba they formed the Abakuá secret society, which survives today in Havana and matanzas"> Matanzas.