Histories of the Caribbean traditionally describe the Taíno as extinct, killed off by disease, slavery, and war with the Spaniards. Contemporary scholarship is more ambivalent, accepting that some degree of Taíno cultural heritage survives in the Caribbean, though many disagree on the extent and meaning of this. Although
Taíno was originally an exonym, contemporary descendants of the Taínos have begun to reclaim the name and publicly assert a shared Taíno Caribbean-Indigenous identity. They typically describe traditions that have been passed on in secret to evade enslavement or persecution. Scholars who remain sceptical that Taíno culture survived in recognisable form point to the process of
mestizaje or
creolisation as evidence of the modern Taíno's actual origins. Most Taíno descendants argue that this is evidence
for their continued survival, rather than evidence against it, since creolisation allowed their culture and identity to persist while evolving and adapting. Despite the recorded extinction of the Taíno across the Caribbean, historian Ranald Woodaman says the survival of the Taíno is supported by "the enduring (though not unchanged) presence of Native genes, culture, knowledge and identity among the descendants of the Taíno peoples of the region". He also notes the Indigenous and African heritage of communities such as the
Maroons, and how these remained distinct from the larger populations while honouring their Taíno predecessors. Taíno-derived customs and identities can be found especially among marginalised rural populations on the Caribbean islands such of
Cuba, the
Dominican Republic,
Jamaica and
Puerto Rico. Reports of Indigenous communities date to the 19th century, from sources as varied as anthropologists, missionaries, military officials and tourists. Abolitionist and British consul to Cuba
David Turnbull who visited the island in the 1830s said the inhabitants of
Guanabacoa, El Caney and
Jiguaní had Indigenous heritage, and he recorded Spanish stories of Taíno who had migrated to "the
Yucatan and
the Floridas". In the 1840s,
José de la Torre reportedly saw 50 "pure blooded" Taíno dancing at El Caney, and researcher Miguel Rodríguez Ferrer reported various Taíno families living in the footholds of the
Sierra Maestra. In the 1880s, author Maturin M. Ballou, a skeptic of Taíno survival, said there were reports of an Arawak-Taíno village living near the copper mines "northwest of Santiago de Cuba", Most famously, Cuban national icon and poet
José Martí reported the aid of "los Indios de Garrido" during the 1895
war of independence. There are also Indigenous communities who migrated to Cuba from Florida and other parts of the mainland, who in some cases intermarried with local Taíno communities. Jason M. Yaremko says there are many organised communities of Amerindians currently living in Cuba, many of whom have an Arawak-Taíno identity, and that a number of these are even "pure bloods". He suggests that Euro-American views from the 18th century onward, which saw race and Indigeneity in terms of
essentialism and "primordiality", insisted on "narratives of disappearance" for Indigenous peoples and imposed upon them alternate identities as "white, black, or mulatto". In his view, Eurocentric perspectives saw the decline of the Indigenous peoples—whether through extinction or dilution—as the inevitable conclusion of the "heroic saga of civilisation". Subsequent attempts to promote a singular Cuban national identity which transcended race and ethnicity, he says, may have "suffocated" more complex identities for the sake of "national unity", impacting both Afro-Cubans and Amerindian Cubans. But he says this Amerindian identity has nevertheless persisted in Cuba, "whether as 'Indios' in
pueblos indios, as individuals in cities and towns, or together in vibrant, if 'invisible' (until recently), rural communities like Yateras". He also suggests that, although the oral histories are "compelling", to address controversies over modern Cuban Taíno identities, this heritage could be "corroborated and reinforced by fieldwork conducted, to begin with, in documentary records contained in Cuba’s former 'Indian towns' and parishes, among other repositories in the country".
Dominican Republic Dominican historian
Frank Moya Pons documented that Spanish colonists intermarried with Taíno women. Over time, some of their mixed-race descendants intermarried with Africans, creating a culture with
Creole features. Census records from 1514 reveal that 40% of Spanish men on Hispaniola had Taíno wives. Scholars note that contemporary rural Dominicans retain elements of Taíno culture including linguistic features, agricultural practices, food ways, medicine, fishing practices, technology, architecture, oral history, and religious views, even though such cultural traits may be considered backward in the cities.
Jamaica Yamaye Taíno communities are based in several towns, and they are often located by the coasts or in mountain regions. The Yamaye Guani (lit. 'Jamaican hummingbird') Taíno People represents Yamaye Taíno people on the island, and advocates for recognition of Indigenous rights for the Jamaican Taíno. The organisation has both enrolled and unenrolled members. Enrolled members may undergo a process where they receive a Yamaye Iri (lit. 'name of the land') to formally recognise their membership and responsibilities. Some Yamaye Taíno groups also have historic ancestral links to
Jamaican Maroons. The Yamaye Council of Indigenous Leaders, originally founded as the Maroon Secretariat, includes both Maroon and Taíno groups.
United States, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands Indigenous peoples are recorded later in Puerto Rico than on many other Caribbean islands. The Puerto Rican census of 1777 listed 1,756
indios, while the 1787 census listed 2,032. It is not clear, however, which groups were counted as indios at the time and how accurate the census data were—some indios may have remained hidden or lived in isolated and remote communities to avoid enslavement or worse. Puerto Rican historian Loida Figueroa has suggests that all Native Puerto Ricans were considered Indian until the beginning of the 19th century, when they were subsequently labelled
pardos by Governor don Toribio Montes, who struggled to fit the multiethnic non-whites into American racial categories. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Puerto Rico was subjected to various attempts at
Americanisation, including through educational institutions.
State-sponsored education promoted a rural
jibaro culture – primarily figured as white, Catholic and Hispanic – as a symbol of Puerto Rican culture, seeking to distance Puerto Ricans from political nationalism and promote values of humility and Americanised self-help. Some Puerto Rican children were also sent to the
Carlisle Indian Industrial School, the flagship among
American Indian boarding schools, including children with Taíno heritage. At the
2010 U.S. census, 1,098 people in Puerto Rico identified as "Puerto Rican Indian", 1,410 identified as "Spanish American Indian", and 9,399 identified as "Taíno". In total, 35,856 Puerto Ricans identified as Indigenous. A consistent explanation given by modern Taíno/Boricuas for their survival is that their families lived, at least for a time, close to the mountainous interior of the island, which they call
Las Indieras ("the place of the Indians"). Anthropologist Sherina Feliciano-Santos says these areas typically have an increased prevalence of Indigenous foods, customs and vocabulary than elsewhere. People with Indigenous heritage in Puerto Rico may call themselves
Boricua, after the Indigenous word for the island, as well as or instead of Taíno. Local Taíno/Boricua groups have also begun attempts to reconstruct a distinct Taíno language, called
Taíney, often extrapolating from other Arawakan languages and using a modified version of the Latin alphabet. The
Guainía Taíno Tribe has been recognised as a tribe by the
governor of the US Virgin Islands.
Taíno revivalist communities In 1976,
The Millville Daily of New Jersey reported that the Puerto Rican Culture Club of Culver School was engaging in the study of Taíno heritage. A 1988 opinion piece in
The Daily Journal of Vineland, New Jersey, noted the existence of Taíno revivalism, stating that archaeologists were investigating Puerto Rico's Taíno heritage and that "Boricuas flock to ceremonial grounds such as the one found in Tibes...in search of a tie with the past." The piece states that while Puerto Ricans have historically been proud of their Spanish ancestry, some Puerto Ricans in recent years had begun to reassess the Spanish role in colonialism and embrace Indigenous heritage. As of 2006, there were a couple of dozen activist Taíno descendant organisations from Florida to Puerto Rico and California to New York with growing memberships numbering in the thousands. These efforts are known as the
Taíno restoration, a revival movement for Taíno culture that seeks to revive and reclaim Taíno heritage, as well as official recognition of the survival of the Taíno people. Historian Ranald Woodaman describes the modern Taíno movement as "a declaration of Native survival through
mestizaje (genetic and cultural mixing over time), reclamation and revival". Scholar Yolanda Martínez-San Miguel sees the development of a
Neo-Taíno movement in Puerto Rico as a useful counter to the domination of the island by the United States and the Spanish legacies of island society. She also notes that "what could be seen as a useless anachronistic reinvention of a 'Boricua coqui' identity can also be conceived as a productive example of Spivak's 'strategic essentialism'". Scholar Gabriel Haslip-Viera suggests that the Taíno revival movements which emerged among marginalised Puerto Rican communities, especially from the 1980s and 1990s, are a response to US racism and
Reaganism, which produced hostile political and socioeconomic conditions in the Caribbean.
DNA studies In 2018, a
DNA study mapped the
genome of a tooth belonging to an 8th- to 10th–century "ancient Taíno" woman from the Bahamas. The research team compared the genome to 104 Puerto Ricans who participated in the
1000 Genomes Project (2008), who had 10 to 15 percent Indigenous American ancestry. The results suggest they were more "closely related to the ancient Bahamian genome" than to any other Indigenous American group. Although most do not identify as such, DNA evidence suggests that a large proportion of the current populations of the
Greater Antilles have Taíno ancestry, with 61% of Puerto Ricans, up to 30% of Dominicans, and 33% of Cubans having
mitochondrial DNA of Indigenous origin. Some groups have reportedly maintained Taíno or
indio customs to some degree. Sixteen
autosomal studies of peoples in the Spanish-speaking Caribbean and its diaspora (mostly Puerto Ricans) have shown that between 10% and 20% of their DNA is Indigenous. Some individuals have slightly higher scores, and others have lower scores or no Indigenous DNA at all. A recent study of a population in eastern Puerto Rico, where the majority of persons tested claimed Taíno ancestry, shows that they had 61%
mtDNA (distant maternal ancestry) from Indigenous peoples and 0%
Y-chromosome DNA (distant paternal ancestry) from the Indigenous people. This suggests part of the Creole population descends from unions between Taíno women and European or African men. ==See also==