Peru The Society and Its Environment
Mochican ceremonial gold mask
PERUVIANNESS (PERUANIDAD) has often been debated by
Peruvian authors who evoke patriotism, faith, cultural
mystique,
and other allegedly intrinsic qualities of nationality.
Peru,
however, is not to be characterized as a homogeneous
culture, nor
its people as one people. Peruvians speak of their
differences
with certainty, referring to lo criollo ("of the
Creole"),
lo serrano ("of the highlander"), and other special
traits
by which social groups and regions are stereotyped. The
national
creole identity incorporates a combination of unique
associations
and ways of doing things a la criolla.
The dominant national culture emanating from Lima is
urban,
bureaucratic, street-oriented, and fast-paced. Yet the
identity
that goes with being a limeño (a Limean) is also
profoundly provincial in its own way. In the first half of
the
twentieth century, the Lima cultural character transcended
class
values and ranks and to a significant degree was
identified as
the national Peruvian culture. The great migrations from
1950 to
1990 altered that personality substantially. By 1991 the
national
character, dominated by the urban style of Lima, was
complicated
by millions of serranos, whose rural Spanish
contrasts
with the fast slurring and slang of the Lima dialect.
Highland
music is heard twenty-four hours a day on more than a
dozen Lima
radio stations that exalt the regional cultures, give
announcements in Quechua, and relentlessly advertise the
new
businesses of the migrant entrepreneurs. The places
mentioned and
the activities announced are in greater Lima, but unknown
to the
limeño. The new limeño, while acquiring
creole
traits, nevertheless presents another face, one with which
the
Lima native does not closely relate and does not
understand
because few true limeños actually visit the
provinces,
much less stay there to live. Nor do they visit the
sprawling "young towns"
(
pueblos jovenes--see Glossary) of
squatters that are disdained or even feared. Urban Hispanic
Peruvians have always been caught in the bind of contradiction, at once
claiming the glory of the Inca past while refusing to accept its
descendants or their traditions as legitimately belonging
in the modern state. In the early 1990s, however, this change was
taking place, desired or not.
Events have been forcing the alteration of traditions
in both
the coast (Costa) and highlands (Sierra) in a process that
would
again transform the country, as did both conquest and
independence. The peoples of the Altiplano and valleys of
the
Andean heartland--long exploited and neglected and driven
both by
real needs and the quest for respect and equity--have
surged over
the country in a "reconquest" of Peru, stamping it with
their
image.
For respect and equity to develop, the white and
mestizo (see Glossary)
elites will have to yield the social and
economic space
for change and reconcile themselves to institutional
changes that
provide fairness in life opportunities. Up to 1991, the
highlanders (serranos) had seized that space from a
reluctant nation by aggressive migration, establishing
vast
squatter settlements and pushing hard against the walls of
power.
As with the Agrarian Reform Law of 1969, the elites and
special
interests that benefited from traditional socioeconomic
arrangements had protected these old ways with few
concessions to
wider public and national needs. For the
cholo (see Glossary),
Peru's generic "everyman," to gain a place of
respect,
well-being, and a sense of progress will be a test of
endurance,
experiment, and sacrifice as painful and difficult as any
in the
hemisphere. With the agony of terroristic and revengeful
revolution perpetrated by the Shining Path (Sendero
Luminoso--SL)
and the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (Movimiento
Revolucionario Túpac Amaru--MRTA), on the one hand, and
the
chaotic collapse of the institutional formal economy, on
the
other, average Peruvians from all social groups were
caught
between the proverbial "sword and wall."
Just as the highland migration to the urban coast was
the
major avenue for social change through the 1980s,
increasing
numbers of Peruvians sought to continue this journey away
from
the dilemmas of their homeland by moving to other
countries.
About 700,000 had emigrated by 1991, with over 40 percent
going
to the United States. Catholic University of Peru
professor
Teófilo Altamirano has documented the new currents of
mobility
that went from Lima, Junín, and Ancash to every state in
the
United States, with heaviest concentrations in New Jersey,
New
York, California, and Florida. In 1990 about 300,000 of
Altamirano's compatriots (paisanos) lived--either
legally
or not--in the United States.
In the early 1990s, Peru's identity as a nation and
people
was becoming more complex and cosmopolitan, while the
distinctive
traits of the culture were being broadened, disseminated,
and
shared by an increasingly wider group of citizens. The
crosscurrents to these trends were configured around the
struggle
for retention and status of the native cultures: the
Quechua, the
Aymara, and the many tribal societies of Amazonia. Whereas
tens
of thousands deliberately embarked on life-plans of social
mobility by altering their persona from indio
(Indian) to
cholo to mestizo in moving from the native American
caste
to upper-middle class, a new alternative for some was to
use
ethnic loyalty and identity as a device of empowerment
and, thus,
an avenue for socioeconomic change. How Peruvian
institutions,
state policy, and traditions adjusted to these trends
would
determine what Peruvians as a society would be like in the
twenty-first century.
Data as of September 1992
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