Hola
Bienvenida
Welcome

Tango protest to the government:

We need sanitary protocols!

Tango protest  Image from Tango organizers
A letter inviting all people to the protest.

It seems like years ago when I reread this, but then we realize it’s only been a couple of years.

Tango protest  image courtesy Ruthoffen.com
Tango protest about the return to Tango in the city of Buenos Aires

The protesters were amicably chatting with their tango signs in groups of 2 or 3 people. All wore masks and observed social distancing

Tango protest Image courtesy Ruthoffen.com

Reading the handwritten paper Tango protest signs with the messages:

We have not danced in a year.

Tango is a culture. Tango is our work.

Mostly the protest signs in Spanish read:

We need to return to work.

We need to return to dance.

Tango protest image courtesy travelingtango.com
Holding Tango protest placards in the street in front of the city hall of Buenos Aires

The organized tango protesters spoke to the city government and said…

Tango protest image courtesy Ruthoffen.com
Tango protest about the return of Tango in the city of Buenos Aires

We NEED the government of BsAs to specify what protocols are needed for the tango world to be in place. We need to go back to work. We have not worked in a year. We are culture. We are Buenos Aires.

tango protest image courtesy of Ruthoffen.com
Waiting on Avenida de Mayo

Tango Protest

The protest lasted about an hour. Tango music played on the sound system. The protesters demonstrated a few different dance stances. No actual dancing occurred. Many photographers and media outlets showed up. In the Buenos Aires Times, nothing has shown up about the protest. It’s the only English language paper here. Will research and see if any other papers have any mention.

This is an important issue in Buenos Aires, as many teachers, organizers, performers, and students await a return to Tango. Honestly, expecting the old normal ways now is not important. What is important is to return to dancing Tango.

Currently, there are many outdoor milongas around the city in various parks, somewhat sanctioned as all observe sanitary protocols, including wearing masks and using lots of hand sanitizers.

Many tango dancers do not like dancing in open embrace, as many feel, including me, that this is not tango. Again and again, the most important issue is the government’s issue of sanitary protocols. Return to the embrace again. To hear the tango music streaming into the clubs and spaces of Buenos Aires.

Now we wait. We see if something happens.

tango protest Image courtesy Ruthoffen.com

https://travelingtango.com

 


Discover more from Traveling Tango

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Published by Ruth Offen

I chose tango as my dance because I love the lifestyle, embrace, and, yes, dressing up. In my tango series, I share images shot worldwide, in the places where I have danced: Spain, France, Germany Turkey,Canada,Italy Greece, and the USA, but mostly in Buenos Aires, Argentina. With my written stories, I try to share some of the experiences that have stayed with me... An amazing embrace, a beautiful meal, a slightly uncomfortable life moment at a stay a train station or airport. These are the moments we remember. As to my personal info, I was born in New Jersey eventually, after living in New York, Boston, and San Francisco, most recently on San Juan Island in Washington state, I moved to Buenos Aires in January 2020. For 38 years, years I curated a contemporary art gallery, where I refined my skills and became a visual editor. Always with a camera or some picture-capturing device in tow [including much heavy equipment], I started my travel at approximately the same time, was introduced to tango about 12 years ago. VIsual storytelling begins with a moment. Some internal mechanism is triggered by a scene or event or movement and ...there's your photo. Other times, it’s about a sliver of color or something else odd or ordinary that captures the eye. As I am now fluent in Spanish, it is my desire that my stories and photos reach the broader tango community and other travelers. Travelingtango offers translations into Spanish, Italian, and German. Abrazo!!!

2 thoughts on “Tango protest to the government:

Let me know if you like this story by adding a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from Traveling Tango

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

Discover more from Traveling Tango

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading