While Bayano was not the first maroon king from Panamá, he was one of the most successful. He organized and protected a palenque of 1,500, stretching from the Atlantic to Pacific Ocean from 1552-56/1556-58, and has rivers and lakes named in his honor. The descendants of Bayano, the Congo, thus preserve a rich heritage as the earliest practitioners of black liberation through oral history's, dance, attire and more.
Although widely known in Panamá, Congo traditions had been guarded from outside eyes for centuries and simultaneously excluded from national patrimony. In 2015, the Congo attire was first recognized in Panama's Festival of the Thousand Polleras after several years of unsuccessful attempts. In 2016, the 1st Festival de la Polleras Congo was held in Colon province. In 2018, UNESCO declared Congo culture as intangible cultural patrimony to the world. In 2019, the Festival of las Polleras Congo was denied funding by the Institute of Arts and Culture (INAC). Despite setbacks the push by Afrodescendants for recognition and plenary participation, culturally as well as economically and politically continues in Panamá, as it does in all of Latin America.
Other early maroon communities include:
Colombia, 1600 - San Basilio de Palenque, one of the first free space communities still in existence was founded by Benkos Bioho. Inspired a 50 year slave revolt from 1621-1671.
Mexico, 1608- Yanga founded by Gaspar Yanga known for his military and organizational prowess and his community leadership skills forced the Spanish to negotiate
Mosquitia (present day Nicaragua) 1633/1687. King of the Mosquitia.
Colombia, 1634- Leonor, Queen of the Limón palenque near Cartagena
Brazil, 1670 Ganga Zumba king of the Quilombo do Palmares captured along with 5,000 of his men by the Portuguese in Angola.
Zumbi and Dandara dos Palmares 1655-1695 Leaders of the Quilombo Palmares and revered as the godparents of AfroBrazil. Day of Black Consciousness in Brazil dated in honor of the death of Zumbi dos Palmares.
Jamaica - Queen Nanny c. 1686. Leader of the Maroons in the first Maroon War of 1734 and hailed as a Jamaican national hero in 1976
Honduras/Nicaragua/Guatemala/Belize - 1797 Black Caribs/Garifuna fought against being enslaved at all, reaching a truce with the British which exiled them from St. Vincent, Grenadines to Roatan, Honduras.
The most well known slave revolt Haitian Revolution, 1791-1804. The military support by Haitian President Alexandre Petion of Simon Bolivar lead to the end of slavery in Gran Colombia (Panama, Ecuador, Colombia) and Venezuela.
Formal education systems barely teach us black history in any country. Some of the work to educate those less knowledgeable about the Black Americas (often times our own) is on Afrolatinxs. We encourage you to dig deeper and learn about other black diaspora cultures in the Americas, specifically from black diaspora cultures from the Americas. If not, instead of an ally, you become part of the problem of erasure and invisibilization Afrolatinxs and Afrolatinamericans continue to combat.
Additional readings:
Craft, Renée Alexander. When the Devil Knocks: The Congo Tradition and the Politics of Blackness in Twentieth-Century Panama. OSU Press, 2015
Fortune, Armando . “Los Negros en Panamá”, en Revista Lotería 2ª. época, no. 143. (1976, octubre) bdigital.binal.ac.pa › loteria › descarga › 1967_143_LNB
Lindsay, Arturo. “The Research Methods of an Artist-Ethnographer on the Congo Coast of Panama”. Breaking the Disciplines: Reconceptions in Knowledge, Art and Culture. Edited by Martin L. Davies and Marsha Meskimmon. I.B. Taurus, (2003).
Maloney, Dr. Gerardo. “Armando Fortune” . Protagonistas Panamá Siglo XX. (2015, septiembre). http://www.protagonistaspanamasigloxx.com/product/armando-fortune/
Pike, Ruth. "Black Rebels: The Cimarrons of Sixteenth Century Panama," The Americas 64/2 (2007): 245-46, by Ruth Pike citing the original source, Pedro de Aguado, Historia de Venezuela, Book 9, chapter 13.
Pulido Ritter, Luis. “Armando Fortune y la Identidad Cultural Panameña” Tareas, núm. 140, enero-abril, 2012, pp. 83-106 Centro de Estudios Latinoamericanos "Justo Arosemena" Panamá, Panamá https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/5350/535055523007.pdf
Vila Vilar, Enriqueta. “Cimarronaje en Panamá y Cartagena. El costo de una guerrilla en el siglo XVII”. Caravelle. Cahiers du monde hispanique et luso-brésilien. 1987 Vol. 49 pp. 77-92 https://www.persee.fr/doc/carav_0008-0152_1987_num_49_1_2341