From
Africa to Latin America – yes all about FIFA
2014 …. It was Colombian Singer Shakira’s "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)" that
enraptured the fans. Its lyrics encouraged
one to aim for their goals like a
soldier on a battlefield. Back home, in IPL – there was this promotion – for (of course) the popular CSK (Chennai Super
Kings)
….the song that rant the air ‘Chennai
super kingsku periya whistle adinga. enga ooru chennaiku periya whistle adinga.
Enga thala dhoniku periya whistle adinga …’
… on a day when we went to see the match
(IPL 6 – in IPL 7 none of the matches were played at Chepauk) – they painted
the stadium yellow by distributing ‘yellow CSK T shirts’ with words ‘whistle
podu’ …. –as one entered the stadium after a long queue and elaborate
check-ups, a person was distributing
small whistles inside the gate and a few yards later another, was confiscating
them … both doing their jobs !
At Sao Paulo, it is of a
different kind - likened to a hand grenade with brass knuckles, ridiculed as a
"glorified rattle," and many praising it. Meet the ‘caxirola’, Brazil's answer to the vuvuzela, the elongated
plastic horn that sounded like a bellicose water buffalo and was unleashed on
mankind's eardrums during the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. "If you thought
vuvuzelas were bad, wait until you hear the caxirola," groused the
Guardian newspaper in Britain.
The
caxirola (pronounced ka-shee-role-ah) is making noise in the marketplace. The
caxirola is a Brazilian percussion
instrument created by Carlinhos Brown and consisting of a closed plastic basket
with a flat-bottom filled with small synthetic particles. The World Cup's official marketers are busily
selling the caxirola online as one of "10 Must Have" items for the
well-equipped fan. It reportedly is available at big- box stores like Wal-Mart
and select airport duty-free shops, according to its manufacturer, Chicago-based
The Marketing Store ~ it is priced around : $14. Designed by Brazillian musician Carlinhos
Brown, it's been certified by the Brazilian Ministry of Sport and FIFA and emblazoned
with the FIFA logo as the "official noisemaker".
Despite the noisemaker being blessed by some, including
Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, and an endorsement by FIFA, soccer's world
governing body, federal officials have barred the caxirola from all 12
of the Brazilian soccer grounds where World Cup matches will be played ~ and
hence the joys of wielding the instrument will be limited to those watching at
home or in pubs and clubs. Caxirolas remain banned by Brazil's
Ministry of Justice after spectators threw them at players during a game in
2013, initiating a redesign which created the current softer version.
The new rattlers
aren't the only thing banned from the Brazil games with FIFA publishing a
lengthy stadium code of conduct for the 2014 World Cup recently. Spectators are
banned from bringing weapons, fireworks or ladders and stools; large quantities
of paper and powders; flags larger than three square metres. ……… and borrowing
idea from IPL at Chepauk – spectators are not allowed to bring food and drink
purchased outside the stadium into the complex.
Authorities have expressed
concern on the potential unpleasing sound of the official instrument of the
Cup, as it happened with the vuvuzelas of the previous tournament. According to
him, "the caxirola respects the sound limits. It reproduces sounds of
nature, of the sea, because of that, we worked with the best acoustic engineers
so that the sound was nice, pleasant. The instrument was presented at the
opening of a festival called "O Olhar que Ouve" (The Look that
Hears), made up of 19 works of art by Brown. The caxirolas were tested by
Brazilian president Dilma Roussef, who claimed they were "more beautiful
than the vuvuzelas". Its maker Carlinhos [Brown] is an author and a great
artist and in the words of Ms Dilma, he expresses a diverse world, but very
specific, of Brazil, and
specially of Bahia.
In March 2013,
FIFA tried to forbid the usage of the instrument during games, claiming it
could be used as a weapon or as a method of publicity. The instruments resemble
the shape and design of hand grenades. Indeed, during the Derby
between the two greatest clubs in Salvador,
Bahia and Vitória in April 2013, the first match in which the caxirola was
given to the public, Bahia supporters threw
hundreds of them on the field of Arena Fonte Nova as an answer for the team's
5-1 loss to their greatest rival. That is not all - people who work towards the
preservation of traditional cultures of Brazil, have criticised that the caxirola is nothing
but a copy of caxixi, simply adding slots for the fingers (such as brass
knuckles) and that the native and ancient cultures of Brazil should be
recognized as the true creators of the instruments and, as such, be benefited
with that.
To recall,
‘vuvuzela’ in news in FIFA 2010 is a plastic horn, about 65
centimetres (2 ft) long, which produces a loud monotone note- the intensity of these outputs
depends on the blowing technique and pressure exerted. Traditionally made and
inspired from a kudu horn, the vuvuzela was used to summon distant villagers to
attend community gatherings. The vuvuzela became the subject of controversy at football
matches as the mass usage by spectators and resultant high sound pressure
levels at close range can lead to permanent hearing loss for unprotected ears
after exposure; Vuvuzela was the
unofficial symbol of the 2010 World Cup – seemingly loved and hated in equal measure…. So which team are you going to whistle for ….. for some only
Cricket is the sport !
With regards – S. Sampathkumar
17th June
2014.