
Another winner from Winnipeg! Congratulations Marcus for being first to report receipt of your round #12 postcard. "The Postcard Race" has now officially concluded. All that remains is for us to search the abundant antique and craft tables in Montevideo to find something especially for you and mail it off. Brent and Jaik will be acting as special consultants in selecting an appropriate prize.
We have been keeping post offices around the world busy this year; countless postcards have been sent, as well as many packages of various dimensions. In addition to prizes mailed to winners of "The Postcard Race", so far 13 packages; we have mailed other boxes and padded envelopes home. In total 49 packages, soon to be 50, were sent (always choosing the slowest and the cheapest postage), though some packages are still in transit, as far as we know ALL packages have been received in a very timely fashion.
"The Postcard Race" would like to thank:
-Postal workers worldwide for their patience and for being part of this amazing network that, for the most part, still does house calls!
-Postcard and stamp designers and sellers.
-Linda and Jody for receiving packages we mailed to ourselves.
-All our contestants and especially those who sent responses even though they knew they were not winners.
The Montevideo Round
-Candombe (can-dome-bey) is an Afro-Uruguyan percussion rhythm that has been an important part of Uruguayan culture for over two hundred years. This rhythm traveled to Uruguay from Africa with black slaves and is still going strong in the streets, halls and carnivals of this country.
-Uruguay with a population of approximately 3.2 million is a small country located in South America bordered by its two massive neighbors Brazil 162 million to the East and Argentina 34 million to the West.
-The Carnival in Uruguay is the longest of the world. The main attraction of Uruguayan Carnival is a parade called Desfile de Llamadas (Calls Parade), a candombe-summoning parade, which incorporates Bantu and Angolan Benguela cultures brought by slaves in colonial times. During the eighty days of celebration, popular theaters called tablados are built in many places throughout the cities. Carnival groups perform popular opera at the tablados, singing and dancing songs that relate to social reality and the political situation in the country.
-Montevideo was founded in 1730 by the Spanish to keep the Portuguese out, and the nation of Uruguay was created in 1830, with British Intervention, as a buffer state to keep Brazil and Argentina from fighting over the territory.
-The only place, outside of France, where Cognac can be made is in Uruguay. After World War II, France paid its debts to Uruguay with Ugni- Blanc, know-how for making Cognac, and the right to use the denomination."
-In 2005, Uruguay unveiled the first monument in Latin America honoring sexual diversity. The rose-colored block of granite shaped in the form of a triangle is in Montevideo’s old city. Set atop a concrete column, the monument is inscribed with the words: "Honoring Diversity is Honoring Life."
-The Charrúa were indigenous people of Uruguay. They were nomadic and sustained themselves through fishing and foraging. Following the arrival of European settlers, the Charrúa were progressively killed and integrated into the prevailing colonial cultures. Most of the remaining ones were massacred at Salsipuedes (literally "Get-out-if-you-can") Creek in 1831 by a group led by Bernabé Rivera, nephew of the first president of Uruguay, after they were invited to a meeting and ambushed. Only a few escaped this massacre. Four of them were taken to France in 1833, including Tacuabé, to whom there is a monument in Montevideo, Uruguay.
-Uruguay and Paraguay are both named from Guaraní, the language of native people from the region. The ending "guay" means to, or from water. "Gua", meaning to/from, the simple one letter word "y" being the Guarani for "water". For Paraguay; para ("river"), gua ("from"), i ("water") meaning "river that comes from the water", referring to the bog in the north of the country, which is actually in Brazil. And for Uruguay; uru (a kind of bird that lived near the river); gua ("to proceed from"); and i ("water"), which tourism Uruguay has made more poetic by saying “River of Colorful Birds.”
-José Alberto Mujica Cordano known as El Pepe, is a Uruguayan politician and former Tupamero guerrilla fighter. He was elected president in the 2009 presidential election and will take office on 1 March 2010. The Tupamaros, were an urban guerrilla organization in Uruguay in the 1960s and 1970s. (see Costa Gravas “State of Siege”). El Pepe was imprisoned during the military dictatorship 1973 -1984, where he served 14 years, this included being confined to the bottom of a well for more than two years.
-It has been over 30 years since the tragic 1972 plane crash in the Andes that left most of a Uruguayan Rugby team stranded on a mountain and then caught in an avalanche. The incredible story of their survival is the subject of many films (see “I have come from a plane that has crashed on a mountain”). The survivors still live in the neighbourhood they grew up in Montevideo and since 1975 play the Friendship Cup, a rugby game Montevideo and the Old Christians and the Old Boys from Santiago.
-The OLPC (One Laptop Per Child) project has sought to develop and distribute a low-cost and rugged computer to children around the world in a bid to raise global standards of living. The government of Uruguay was very enthusiastic about the project, and created "Plan Ceibal" (Education Connect) to fund and distribute laptops to every state-funded elementary school in the country. Uruguay was the first country to deploy 380,000 laptops. Over the last two years, laptops have been distributed to every student between the ages of six and twelve.