Olga Natividad Martinez Lima English Transcription
Interviewee: Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Interviewer: Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Where: Interamerican University of Puerto Rico
Date: 29 de junio del 2023
Duration: 00:38:00
Study: Puerto Rican Bomba Fashions
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Today is June 29, 2023, my name is Amanda Ortiz and for my research project titled, “Puerto Rican Bomba Fashions: Consumption, Presentation and Meaning Making,” I will be interviewing Olga Natividad Martínez Lima. Thank you for being here Olga, it’s a pleasure to have you.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
A pleasure.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
The purpose of this study is to collect and document information from Puerto Rican Bomba participants about their experience with Bomba and the Bomba dress to understand the deeper meanings and uses of this dress. Let’s start with the demographic data questions, Olga, how old are you?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
I am 66 years old.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿And where do you live currently?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Carolina, Puerto Rico
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿Have you always lived there?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Yes.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿What do you do for a living?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
I am retired.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
What type of education did you complete and where did you complete it?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
I have a bachelor’s degree in biology, a master’s degree in postsecondary management, a master’s degree in guidance and counseling, and have doctoral credit.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿From where?
Ola Natividad Martinez Lima
From the Interamerican University of Puerto Rico.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿What gender do you identify with?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Woman.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿How would you describe your sexuality?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Heterosexual.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Are you in a romantic relationship?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿Do you have children?
—- [ask mom que dice ella ahí]
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿Where is your family from?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, okay, my parents are Cuban and I was born in Cuba, but I came since I was 4 years old. My brother was born here.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
¿Where?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
In Carolina, well Santurce, to put it that way, but we have always lived in Carolina, first we lived in Country Club and now we are living in Villa Fontana. My brother has our family’s original house and I bought the house behind it in Villa Fontana. His is a ground floor, mine is a 2 story. My oldest nephew lives in Bayamón with his wife and children. My middle nephews live in Caguas with two little dogs who are their children, and my niece lives in Carolina, in Metrópolis she is the only one who stayed in Carolina, everyone left, but we have a very, very close relationship.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Talk to me about your family, how big is it?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
My original family was small, my dad, my mom, my brother and me. My mother died in 2021 of cancer and my father, forgive me, in 2001 of cancer, and my father in 2014. My brother is married, he had 3 children who are already married, the oldest is also the one who has two children. The others have not been able to have children. And I am the titi, grandmother, godmother and everything.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And do you have any physical disabilities?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No, mine is at the vascular level, a neurosm that I got in 2015.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And could you share your current household income?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Of retirement.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Do you have any religious or spiritual affiliation?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Catholic.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And what elements or characteristics connect you with your Puerto Rican identity?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
The music, the food, I love going to Guabate, I’m not very, and I go to Luquillo, for the bacalaítos, because I’m not a big fan of fried foods. And I could tell you that…the way…to socialize. We are, we are very, I say I have a combination because the Cubans are also very, very prone to, but I who have grown up here, we are very prone to, we are kind and we are prone to help, due to the circumstances we are experiencing, well, unfortunately one gets a little self-conscious, but in essence, you can see it in the marathons, in the walks, maybe they don’t give, they don’t give as much money, but they are there in solidarity, solidarity is the word and that to me identifies me as Boricua too.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Has there been a moment where you have felt more or less sure of your Puerto Rican identity?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
All the time, I am Puerto Rican period.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
You have never felt less sure, no one has made you feel less sure.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Not at all, not at all, like I said, no one knows unless they see my passport or I say it.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
They don’t know.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
I mean, my closest friends, who knew my parents, that, a very close relationship, that has a very close relationship with me, they know that part, if not, I am Puerto Rican, no one, no one questions it.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Very good. Now tell me a little about your participation in the Bomba, your experiences with the Bomba.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Okay, my experience in Bomba…first it is a genre that manifests passion, all kinds of emotions, passion, jealousy, betrayal…sadness, I mean, there is in, in that, in that dance, you can manifest everything according to how you move. Initially in elementary school we did an activity, later in high school we did a representation in a week of the, of the Puerto Ricanness of a baquine, baquine is a children’s funeral where what is played is Bomba. We did that representation, I studied at the Santa Teresita Academy on Loiza Street and we did that representation in that Puerto Rican week and that’s when I got more hooked, I knew what it was, I knew what it was.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
What year was this?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
That was in 75.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
How old were you?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
17, 18, my birthday is in December so that was, that was in November and, I was around 17 years old. From there then I just pointed out to you that after that, while I was at university, I took courses with Doña Beba Cepeda, there in Piñones at her academy. Their basic course at that time, I understand that now it extends a little longer, at that time the basic course lasted 6 months, 6 months.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And can you tell me what it was that, like you said, that made you, that caught your attention about Bomba?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, as I told you before, I mean, it is a genre whereh you can manifest passion, joy, sadness, confusion, I mean all, all, all the emotions, I mean how you move, how you move the, the, the, the skirt, the sound, I mean the sound of sadness is not the same as the sound of joy. That is why I tell you that everything manifests. All kinds of emotion.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And did you just dance or did you learn other things?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No, no, my thing was dancing. I am clumsy at playing instruments. Ah well, I can play the maracas, I can play the maracas.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And did you learn, you know how there are different regions of Bomba…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
They, they…the Cepeda, Cepeda’s academy covers the eastern area. Therefore, it includes Loíza. Ponce’s is similar, but it is different. But the one in which I have participated and promoted has been the one of the eastern area.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And now…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Loíza, it is Loíza.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And you took classes and gave presentations, tell me?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, there was a show and from then on, that was 76, 77, I dance at a popular level, you know, but it’s no longer a question of, what to participate in.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And tell me about, right, what you did on the tv channel…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Oh okay, in the presentation of Santa Teresita, our theater director, who was the one who put it together, had a good connection with channel 6, and so we took it to the channel. The baquiné, we took that presentation of the baquiné to the channel and, and a video was taken and it was later shown. It seems to me that it was broadcasted on November 19th on channel 6. I am trying to, although it has been many years, I’ve been trying to see if we can get that video. If I get it for you, well, I would have it, we would have it for us because the class president was the first one I contacted and she told me, “if you get it, we have to duplicate it because that would be the best,” because we don’t have anything and not even the yearbook has a photo of, of that presentation.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
When was the last time you participated in Bomba?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
That, that I practiced it, that I practiced it. Officially in, in high school and later when I took classes, we are talking, 76, 77. Every time there is a party, I dance Bomba y Plena, forget about it, la calle San Sebastian in, in La Perla.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And what do you wear when, right, when you are going to dance in those contexts?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, official Bomba clothing, no, no, but I try depending on where it is, well I try to wear something more or less that represents.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Like a skirt…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No skirt, no, those activities, no, no, you shouldn’t wear a skirt and even less a Bomba skirt.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Why?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Because of the number of people there and the heat, I mean, Bomba skirts are skirts to dance that genre, period. It’s not for you to go around vulvulating around. First, it is attractive and it is, and it is representative. And second, I mean, for you to go to a party, to La Perla, you are not going to go with a Bomba skirt, understand.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
But when you did your presentations, did you wear skirts?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Oh well of course, yes my mother and it was my mother who was the one who made, and my mother was the one who did everything for me because my mother sewed.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
But and it was like, the clothing was more traditional, what is seen as traditional, the white…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Definitely, in the baquiné, if I remember correctly, the shirt was white, but the skirt was blue, baby blue, because it’s not indigo blue or anything like that, it’s baby blue.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
The light one.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Baby blue is the one that is used, that is, because it is the traditional one, which is all white or there are some intervals where white can be combined with light blue. And if I remember correctly, it had flowers.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Oh like with a flower pattern.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
It was, it was, on the skirt, it had flowers with the, with the blue. I don’t remember if they were poppies. No, it was another type of flower, but I don’t remember which flower. It would be nice to see that video, because then one remembers many things, many things, especially the clothing.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And your mother only made the costumes for you or the group?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No no, no, no, no, no, my mother only sewed for me.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And how did she learn to make that type of costume?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, because she accompanied me to classes and Mrs. Elsa also showed her clothes because they have their clothes there at school, or they tell you where you can get them. So my mom bought the fabric. And I even went to the Imperio store and bought fabric, and then, since she already had the measurement for me, we would go to Tomas or to the Imperio store and I would buy the fabric then since she already had the measurement for me.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
She already knew how to do it.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Yes, exactly, in fact, she worked with Fernando Pena.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Do you still have does dresses?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No, between moving and moving. I don’t have them.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And right, when you put on the clothes or when they put on the skirt or nowadays when you dance with the clothes you have, what do you feel? How do you feel?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Happy, I mean, the rhythm enters your feet and you feel it, you have to feel it. When you hear the drum, if you don’t feel it, forget it, you’re not going anywhere, nothing is going to come out of you.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And no…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
And as if something got into your body, you understand what I mean.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And do you think what you’re wearing affects how you feel when you’re dancing, like…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
The dress?
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Aha when you dance with the skirt, with the traditional costume…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Indistinctly, indistinctly. It even has evolved so much that there are short pants. I researched this at the Institute of Culture.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Can you tell me a little bit about that?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Of the shorts, I mean, some shorts and what sticks out is the blouse.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Is it a specific blouse?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
A blouse with, with the colors of, of, of, of evolution or the school it corresponds to.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
According to…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
The school or who is dancing, I mean, you can wear a flowery blouse and you have all the colors. Maybe someone tells you, “ah, that’s representing the gay flag,” but it has nothing to do with it, it has nothing to do with it, it has no connection.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Do you buy those pants or do you make them?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
You can make it or you can buy it.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And do you know which, what year did it become more popular?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
The research does not say.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
It is pretty modern though, right?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
The cultural evolution….let me see.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes, no problem.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
with singing, the music, complement the music….no, no it doesn’t say.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
No problem, we can infer it is pretty modern.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Yes, definitely, I don’t know a specific year, but within the evolution it must be, as the youth emerges, young people within the genre, within the genre it evolves and it, and, I mean it is, it integrates.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And have you done more research like this or did you do that for this interview?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No, I mean, from when, when I showed you, I communicated to you my interest in participating, I took on the task of investigating more about how it has evolved and if, and if, the genre, I mean, I know what happens on a daily basis, but when we agreed, I took on the task of investigating a little more and how it has evolved, that’s why I went directly to the Institute of Culture.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And the knowledge that you had before about clothing was through, the school of…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
It was from the school, that’s right, and even from the instruments too. About the instruments.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Of the instruments?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
I mean, the drum, the cua, the [inaudible]. Everything was, that knowledge was acquired at the Cepeda school.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Because they teach you and tell you…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, I mean, they, they talk to you about, before, before you start, before you start to execute, they tell you the meaning of each one of the instruments and clothing. It would be good if you visited the school.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes, especially because they give you the meaning of the clothes, but they divide it up like the skirt, the scarf…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, sure, sure, sure. They tell you, and each one has a meaning, it’s not you put the dress on that way just because. I mean, each one has a meaning.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And do you remember some of those meanings?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Oh dang…
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
If it’s not right, I’ll do my homework…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait…the instruments…. the clothing… The traditional, the clothing, the traditional clothing is the white dresses for women, for women, and sometimes they are accentuated with colors recurrent like blue and red. The men wear colored shirts tied at the waist with ankle-length pants. Men sometimes adorn themselves with a straw Panama-style hats. While women leave their heads bare or with headwraps.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And that was from the Institute of Culture?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
That was, that was under the Institute of, I went directly to the Institute of Culture. And, then I also have the instruments.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And do you think your experience with Bomba clothing and your knowledge of Bomba clothing affects how you feel about your Puerto Rican identity?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Why?
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
There are people who have told me that it connects them to their culture, to their ancestors, but if it doesn’t affect you, then it doesn’t affect you.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
On the contrary, it strengthens your identity more, I mean in my, in my perception, I mean.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes, yes.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
And since I am welcomed here, I mean, my, my, my knowledge of identity, the idiosyncrasy of being Puerto Rican, strengthens me more, and from and with definitely also in connection with the ancestors, I mean because it comes from Africa, directly. I mean, the blacks brought it and then the workers added to it. To then bring your lament and your complaint and your devotions to express your emotions.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes, it still has that element of expression.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
That’s definitely key. That’s why I tell you if you don’t feel it. It’s not going to happen, it’s not happening.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And with your interactions with other people, right? What kind of information have you learned about clothing? With other people, I mean, you talked about your interaction with the Cepeda school, have you had other interactions where you have been able to learn?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
With the Ayala brothers. I go to Loiza a lot and to their activities.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Mhm you learned from them.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Yes, definitely because they have, they have another vision.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
What do you mean by another vision?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Let me explain. Cepeda has, has, like, like a school, but the Ayala brothers have what is genuine, what is native. In combination with the vejigantes, with the masks. And that is, that is more authentic. In the case of Cepeda, well, it’s more, it’s more individual, let’s put it like this.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes but equally educational.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
But, but definitely you, there you take, absorb knowledge and it’s refreshing and I mean, it’s very interesting, it’s very interesting.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
What types of messages do you think the Puerto Rican society promotes about Bomba?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Can you explain? Can you elaborate, I didn’t understand well.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Maybe as Puerto Ricans, in general, know the Bomba, how do they promote Bomba to others…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
As part of, as an entire genre. It’s our genre.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
I am asking because…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
The caveat is that in most towns in the Caribbean and Latin America there is Bomba. I mean, where a black person arrived, there is Bomba, but he acclimatized and differentiated himself in clothing and the instrument. I mean, the leathers here are not the same as those in Colombia. The reservation must be made. But the genre exists, but diversified and authenticated according to the country. So ours has very particular characteristics.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes, they are unique to Puerto Rico.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
From here. They are unique from here. Maybe one of those factors occurs in Colombia. One of those emotions manifests itself in the Bomba. [inaudible] let’s put it, how they beat the drum, the dancer shows it and the drummer shows it, jealousy. understand?
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes, even the clothes are also similar, but the one from Puerto Rico… I have two, which I jumped here.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Well, but let me answer them.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Do you have any of the Bomba rhythms that, you know there is the Yuba, the…right, the Holandes, if you have any rhythm that you identify with? Or that you like to participate more than others, dance more than others?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
No.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
You like them all the same.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
All. Remember that I perfected it in a school where they teach you everything. Since I am not active, nor am I an artist. As long as I can play it, I dance, you understand, with what I know, and with what I am born with. You know what, be it the Oyuba, or the Oca, whatever, forget it, a lot of mixes there. Everyone mixes.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
And the last one I didn’t ask you because I felt like you were answering it, but I’m going to give you the opportunity to, to, to...
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
Answer it.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
What does Bomba mean to you?
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
I understand that it is a cultural expression of being Puerto Rican.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
That’s what Bomba means.
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
And I think that for those who are Puerto Rican and it is essential to our culture. And now a few years ago the plena joined together, and they make a complement.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Well, those were, those were all the questions. As for the video, when you have it…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
If I get it, if I get it, I’ll share it with you quickly.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Oh well yes, thank you for your response and thank you for sharing your knowledge and…
Olga Natividad Martinez Lima
At your service.
Amanda Ortiz Pellot
Yes and thank you for yout time, too.