Escriba wrote:Oh, yes, yes, I understand that. But I can belive somebody named it "Santurce". Madrid, Guadalajara, Santander... even Bilbao. But Santurce... I bet it was something like this:
"EXPLORER" 1: How can we name it?
"EXPLORER" 2: (joking) Why not "Santurce"?
"EXPLORER" 1: You don't have balls to call it "Santurce".
"EXPLORER" 2: What? Of course I have!
"EXPLORER" 1: I bet you a beer that you won't call it Santurce.
"EXPLORER" 2: Bet accepted.
Because everybody knows that the best way to force a Basque to do something is making a bet with him/her. We can't resist a bet.
I wonder how many more districts and barrios in San Juan are named for places in raunchy Spanish songs?
leslina wrote:As I understand it from various Caribbean and Spanish History courses I've taken a majority of the sailors that sailed with Columbus and the other Spanish explorers to the island colonies were from a region in the southern part of Spain that were considered outcasts and degenerates and the Spanish they spoke did not have the characteristic Spanish lisp you hear amongst Spaniards.
In the first trip, yes, they were. Later the "conquistadores" were from all the places in Spain and not just criminal (you know, there was a continent, it wasn't a suicidal mission anymore.)
::nod:: Indeed. That explains my uppity paternal relatives who feel that their fair hair and eyes make 'em above everyone else.

My maternal relatives are of the fairer persuasion as well and had a bit of land and property and weren't

nauseating assholes about it.
The inheritance scandal was a whole separate issue. But that's more the fault of my grand aunts and uncles and not my great grandparents. My great grandfather had something like 10 or 13 children from three or four "wives". My grandfather was one of his eldest children from his first wife and for a rather
Casanova type of person, my great grandfather was generous with all his children and before he died he divided his land and property amongst
all of them.
However,
my grandfather was a drunk, and there were times when he would disappear on a bend. When his father died he wasn't anywhere to be found, but instead of passing his part of his inheritance to my grandmother and their children, my grand aunts and uncles kept it all for themselves. My mother's family never received anything. Not a penny, acre of land, let alone a trinket. My grandmother, being the quiet and forgiving person that she was never made an issue of it and my mother claims to have forgiven them a long time ago, but when I hear the story and other events surrounding it,
it pisses me off. Especially since one of my grand aunts lives not ten miles from where I do in a big fancy house she bought with a large portion of that inheritance. I'm not nearly as forgiving a person as my grandmother or mother. Whenever there's a family function or gathering or my grand aunt invites us to her house I make an excuse not to go. I just can't bite my tongue and nod and smile like my mother does. It makes me crazy.
leslina wrote:Escriba are you Basque or Spanish? I know that Basque is nothing and sounds NOTHING at all like Spanish. In fact the differences are quite remarkable, I was quite shocked when I first heard it spoken in a Basque soap opera several years ago.
That's quite a political question

But you can say I'm the two things, Basque and Spanish. I know the two languages, at least. And yes, Basque and Spanish doesn't look anything alike.
I know, and I was trying to figure out a way to ask without being offensive or political! But after watching that Basque soap opera I had a better understanding of the separatist perspective and how different the two cultures are. Not to compare the two, but it does share some similarities with the
Independistas in Puerto Rico, who were extremely political and radical in the 40's and 50's. Idealistically I would love to see an independent Puerto Rico, but I fear for the economic and social ramifications. Things on the island are HARD enough, and that's
with American aid. So, I'm a conformist and would rather things remain as is or statehood.
You watched a Basque soap opera? How come? I only know one (my grandma's favorite: "Goenkale".)
Oh yeah, in college. The university TV station/channel would run all sorts of international programming throughout the day. I was up in the student lounge late one night and the TV was on and they were playing what looked like a daytime drama, but I couldn't make out the language the actors were speaking until the programs station symbol flashed and it said " something something BASQUE". That gave it away.
