Congo Religion in Cuba (1999) - doc

A 33-minute documentary about Palo Monte — the Kongo-derived Afro-Cuban religion — exploring its rituals, music, dance, and relationship to other Cuban traditions. Directed by Luis A. Soto with research by Tato Quiñones.

What It Covers

The film (original title: Nganga Kiyangala: Congo Religion in Cuba) explores the nganga — the ritual cauldron/altar at the center of Palo practice — along with ceremonies, initiations, and the specific percussion and song forms used in Palo ritual. It contrasts Palo's Kongo-derived traditions with Lucumí (Santería) and Abakuá, showing how these distinct African lineages coexist in Cuban religious life. Practitioners and priests explain their tradition in their own words.

Why Dancers Should Watch It

Afro-Cuban religious traditions are not separate from Cuban popular dance — they are its foundation. The body vocabulary, the relationship between percussion and movement, the call-and-response structure: all of these originated as religious practices before becoming secular dance. Understanding Palo alongside Lucumí and Abakuá gives you a complete picture of the African religious landscape that shaped Cuban movement culture.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3