Ecuador People and Culture
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Ecuador Culture and the Ecuadorian People
Ecuador's population is
estimated to be 12,646,095, with a less than 2% annual growth rate.
The population is ethnically mixed: 55% mestizo (mixed indigenous
- Caucasian), 25% Indigenous, 10% Caucasian, 9% African, and 1%
other.
Although the population
was heavily concentrated in the Andes highlands region a few decades
ago, today it is divided about equally between that area and the
coast. Migration toward cities - particularly Quito and Quayaquil
- in all regions has increased the urban population to more than
50%. The rainforest region to the east of the mountains remains
the most sparsely populated of Ecuador's three continental regions
and contains only about 3% of the population.

Ecuador's many different peoples coexist peacefully.
Photo by Casa Matico.
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Ecuador Culture
Amazonian frontier towns,
Pacific coast fishing villages, rambling old haciendas, packed markets,
and colonial cities provide the stage on which Ecuador's cultures
intermingle; each striving to maintain its own identity and history
while also charting a meaningful path into the future. Even outside
these cultural crossroads, in a day, because of Ecuador's compactness,
one can experience any number of Ecuador's distinct cultures.

Achuar
girl wearing traditional face paint. Photo by Sincha
Sacha.
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Eleven different peoples
make up Ecuador's Indigenous population. By far the largest of these
is the Andean Quichua, who number more than 2 million. In addition
to the Quichua, the Otavalenos, Salasacas, and Saraguros - all modern-day
couriers of the ancient tongue of the Incas - reside in the Ecuadorian
Andes.
The Amazon basin is equally
as rich in indigenous culture as the highlands. Despite increasing
pressures from the industrialized world, shamanistic traditions
still thrive within the rainforest worlds of the Huaorani, Zaparo,
Cofan, lowland Quichua, Siona, Secoya, Shuar, and Achuar.

Semana
Santa celebration in Quito. Photo by Jason Halberstadt
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In addition to the numerous
native cultures, Ecuador is home to a Mestizo culture, and a sizable
Afro-Ecuadorian culture (approximately ½ million), the descendants
of African slaves who worked on coastal sugar plantations in the
sixteenth century. Today's Afro-Ecuadorians are famous for their
marimba music and dance festivals.
Modernization has not robbed
Ecuador's cities and towns of their distinct local flavors largely
because it is people not just historic sites that give these places
their character. Otavalo, long famous for its warm, enterprising
indigenous people, continues its friendly tradition in the twenty-first
century. Banos, with its hot springs and agreeable climate, welcomes
visitors day in and day out with unwavering smiles. And Quito, the
country's political center, has developed into a cosmopolitan city
while maintaining its small town candor and geniality.
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