Connecting with the Indigenous Taino community in New York City
<p>Ra Ruiz León was about four or five when her mother took her to an Indigenous Taino areyto or ceremony. She remembers being near a river in the mountain region of Puerto Rico. After chants and prayers, her mother was given a clay necklace of a Taino sun and passed it to little Ra.</p>
<p>“And that was the moment for me. ‘Oh, I’m Taíno. This is my identity,’” she said.</p>
<p>Years later, when she was about seven or eight, the necklace fell and broke. “And I thought I’m not Taino anymore,” Ra remembered. She ran to her mother and she laughed. “No, no. Of course you’re Taino,” Ra’s mother said to her. “That’s only a representation, like an extension, to show your culture. But you’re Taino. Necklace, no necklace.”</p>
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