Dominican Exhibition Claims Origin of Iconic Guayaberas (or Chacabanas)

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A report from the Latin American Herald Tribune.

Our thanks to Peter Jordens for bringing this item to our attention.

The Dominican origin of an iconic tropical shirt, known as “guayabera” or “chabacana” and popularized by acclaimed Colombian writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez, is being showcased in a photo exhibition in Santo Domingo.

One of the most widespread notions about the guayabera – which is made of light fabrics, such as linen or cotton – is that the name stems from the habit of Cuban peasants of stashing guavas (“guayaba” in Spanish) inside the shirt’s wide pockets.

Although Cuba – whose government declared the shirt the official garment for use at diplomatic and state events in 2010 – claims to be its birthplace, Dominicans tell a different story.

Folklorists and historians allege that the chabacana – as it is known in the Dominican Republic – was first made in the southeastern Dominican city of Bani as a lighter, cooler take on the traditional military shirt.

According to Francisco Rodriguez, president of the Dominican Association of Chabacana Artisans (ACHADOM), Creole historians believe that the shirt was taken to Cuba by Dominican General Maximo Gomez, a Bani-born hero of Cuban independence and one of the founders of the Honduran army.

The exhibit is open to the public in the capital’s emblematic Independence Park and showcases a total of 63 photographs depicting the history of the iconic shirt, as well as the people who made it famous “from the military guerrilla to the version we see nowadays,” Rodriguez said.

“We want the world and the Dominican people to understand that the chabacana is Dominican,” he added. “It’s the only garment born in the Dominican Republic and, therefore, it should be the shirt worn at the country’s official events.”

The exhibition will be open to the public until April 20.

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