Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Race and Class

The Culture of Costa Rica

 
 
 
Costa Rican culture is heavily influenced by Spanish culture, with the exception of Limón and the Cordillera de Talamanca.

The official language of Costa Rica is Spanish. Native languages include Bribrí, as well as others spoken by thousands of Costa Ricans. English is the first foreign language and the second most taught language in Costa Rica, followed by French, German, Italian and Chinese. 

As of 2012 most Costa Ricans are of primarily Spanish ancestry with minorities of German, Italian, French, Dutch, British, Swedish and Greek ancestry. Whites, castizos and mestizos together comprise 83% of the population.

European migrants used Costa Rica to get across the isthmus of Central America as well to reach the USA West Coast (California) in the late 19th century and until the 1910s (before the Panama Canal opened). Other European ethnic groups known to live in Costa Rica include Russians, Danes, Belgians, Portuguese, Croats, Hungarians, Turks, Armenians and Georgians.

As much as 95 percent of Costa Ricans consider themselves "white." "Whiteness" figures importantly in national identity. The indigenous population that survived the conquest was small and, for the most part, rapidly became Hispanic. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, successful males of African, Indian, or mixed ancestry married poorer "Spanish" women, using "whitening" to assure their children's upward mobility. In the nineteenth century, immigration from Europe and the United States "whitened" the population, particularly the elite. During the twentieth century, the definition of "whiteness" became more inclusive, as elites sought to convince mestizos that they were part of a "homogeneous" nation distinct from the "Indians" elsewhere in Central America.   

Costa Rica has four small minority groups:
Mulattos, Blacks, Amerindians and Asians. About 8% of the population is of Black African descent or Mulatto (mix of European and black) who are called Afro-Costa Ricans, English-speaking descendants of 19th century black Jamaican immigrant workers.


Concentrated in Limón Province, Afro-Costa Ricans—the descendants of Jamaican and other British West Indians who immigrated in the nineteenth century for work on the Atlantic Railroad, plantations, and docks—are more widely perceived as "black." (These Afro-Costa Ricans are part of an English-speaking Protestant group extending along the entire Caribbean coast of Central America.) Blacks—denied Costa Rican nationality until 1948—were blocked by law and discrimination from working elsewhere, so Limón remained culturally distinct until the mid-twentieth century.

In 1873 the Atlantic Railroad imported 653 Chinese indentured laborers, hoping to duplicate the success of rail projects that used Chinese labor in Peru, Cuba, and the United States. Asians represent 1% of the Costa Rican population, mostly from China, Taiwan and Japan.

There are also over 60,000 Native American or indigenous inhabitants, representing 0.8% of the population. Most of them live in secluded reservations, distributed among eight ethnic groups: Quitirrisí (in the Central Valley), Matambú or Chorotega (Guanacaste), Maleku (northern Alajuela), Bribri (southern Atlantic), Cabécar (Cordillera de Talamanca), Guaymí (southern Costa Rica, along the Panamá border), Boruca (southern Costa Rica) and Térraba (southern Costa Rica).

In Guanacaste and northern Puntarenas, much of the population is descended from Indians and colonial-era slaves. They are Hispanic in culture and language, though their pronunciation resembles Nicaraguan more than central Costa Rican Spanish.   

A considerable portion of the Costa Rican population is made up of Nicaraguans.There are also a number of Colombian refugees. Moreover, Costa Rica took in many refugees from a range of other Latin American countries fleeing civil wars and dictatorships during the 1970s and 80s – notably from El Salvador, Chile, Argentina, Cuba and recently from Venezuela.

Other Central Americans had long come to Costa Rica to work in agriculture, especially in the banana zones. In the 1980s, Nicaraguans and Salvadorans fled violence and economic crises to work as farmhands, laborers, servants, and street vendors.

Many foreigners have taken advantage of the Pensionado Law, which grants residency to investors and exempts them from import duties. Most are retired United States citizens, but Chinese, Iranians, Arabs, Europeans, and Latin Americans also settled in Costa Rica under this law.
By the late twentieth century, allusions in textbooks and political discourse to "whiteness," or to Spain as the "mother country" of all Costa Ricans, were diminishing, replaced with a recognition of the multiplicity of peoples that make up the nation.



The Tican Identity

 

Every nationality has its own sense of identity. Costa Ricans have their own unique traits that derive from a profoundly conscious self-image which orients much of their behavior as both individuals and as a nation.
 
The Ticos--the name is said to stem from the colonial saying "we are all hermaniticos (little brothers)"--feel distinct from their neighbors by their "whiteness" and relative lack of indigenous culture. Ticos identify themselves first and foremost as Costa Ricans and only Central Americans, or even Latin Americans, as an afterthought.
 
They're extremely critical of themselves, as individuals and as a society. Costa Ricans, too, regardless of wealth or status, act with utmost humility and judge as uncouth boasting of any kind. Their behavior and comments are dictated by quedar bien, a desire to leave a good impression. Like the English, they're terribly frightened of embarrassing themselves, of appearing rude or vulgar (tactless and crude people are considered "badly educated") or unhelpful. As such, they are exceedingly courteous, almost archaically so (they are prone, for example, to offer flowing compliments and formal greetings). It is a rare visitor to the country who returns home unimpressed by the Costa Ricans' celebrated cordial warmth and hospitality.
 
Ticos are also as tranquil as doves. Violence of any kind is extremely rare. The religious fervor common in Mexico and the Central American isthmus is unknown. And the law-abiding Ticos respect and have faith in their laws, their police force, and state institutions (except, it seems, on the roads). In fact, a distaste for anything that impinges on their liberty or that of their nation is just about the only thing that will make their hackles rise. Attempts to modernize the police force, for example, bring floods of editorial columns and popular outrage protesting "militarism."
 
Democracy is their most treasured institution, and the ideal of personal liberty is strongly cherished. Costa Ricans are intensely proud of their accomplishments in this arena and show it at 6 p.m. on each 14 September, on the eve of Independence Day, when the whole nation comes to a halt and everyone gustily sings the national anthem. A progressive people, Ticos revere education. "We have more teachers than soldiers" is a common boast and framed school diplomas hang in even the most humble homes. Everyone, too, is eager for the benefits of social progress.
 
 
 
Sociologists, however, suggest that Costa Ricans are very conservative people, suspicious of experimentation that is not consistent with a loosely held sense of "tican tradition." Changes, too, supposedly should be made poco a poco, little by little. Ticos share the fatalistic streak common to Latin America: one that accepts things as they are and promotes resignation to the imagined will of God.
 
Many old virtues and values have faltered under the onslaught of foreign influence, modernity, and social change. Drunkenness, drug abuse, and a general idleness previously unknown in Costa Rica have reared their ugly heads. And theft and burglary are seriously on the rise. But most Costa Ricans remain strongly oriented around traditional values based on respect for oneself and for others.
 
The cornerstone of society is still the family and the village community. Social life still centers on the home and family bonds are so strong that foreigners often find making intimate friendships a challenge. Nepotism--using family ties and connections for gain--is the way things get done in business and government.
 
You can count on a Tico's loyalty, but not on his punctuality. Private companies, including most travel businesses, are efficient and to a greater or lesser degree operate hora americana: punctually. But don't expect it. Many Ticos, particularly in government institutions, still tick along on turtle-paced hora tica. "[[questiondown]]Quien sabe?" ("Who knows?") is an oft-repeated phrase. So too "[[exclamdown]]Tal vez!" ("Perhaps!") and, of course, "[[exclamdown]]Mañana!" ("Tomorrow!").

 

 Blacks in Costa Rica


Costa Rica's approximately 40,000 black people are the nation's largest minority. For many years they were the target of racist immigration and residence laws that restricted them to the Caribbean coast (only as late as 1949, when the new Constitution abrogated apartheid on the Atlantic Railroad, were blacks allowed to travel beyond Siquerres and enter the highlands). Hence, they remained isolated from national culture. Although Afro-Caribbean turtle hunters settled on the Caribbean coast as early as 1825, most blacks today trace their ancestry back to the 10,000 or so Jamaicans hired by Minor Keith to build the Atlantic Railroad, and to later waves of immigrants who came to work the banana plantations in the late 19th century.

Costa Rica's early black population was "dramatically upwardly mobile" and by the 1920s a majority of the West Indian immigrants owned plots of land or had risen to higher-paying positions within the banana industry. Unfortunately, they possessed neither citizenship nor the legal right to own land. In the 1930s, when "white" highlanders began pouring into the lowlands, blacks were quickly dispossessed of land and the best-paying jobs. Late that decade, when the banana blight forced the banana companies to abandon their Caribbean plantations and move to the Pacific, "white" Ticos successfully lobbied for laws forbidding the employment of gente de color in other provinces, one of several circumstances that kept blacks dependent on the largesse of the United Fruit Company, whose labor policies were often abhorrent. Pauperized, many blacks migrated to Panama and the U.S. seeking wartime employment. A good proportion of those who remained converted their subsistence plots into commercial cacao farms and reaped large profits during the 1950s to '60s from the rise of world cacao prices.



West Indian immigrants played a substantial role in the early years of labor organization, and their early strikes were often violently suppressed (Tican folklore falsely believes in black passivity). Many black workers, too, joined hands with Figueres in the 1948 Civil War. Their reward? Citizenship and full guarantees under the 1949 Constitution, which ended apartheid. Costa Rica's black population has consistently attained higher educational standards than the national average and many blacks are now found in leading professions throughout the nation. They have also managed to retain much of their traditional culture, including religious practices rooted in African belief about transcendence through spiritual possession (obeah), their rich cuisine (codfish and akee, "rundown"), the rhythmic lilt of their slightly antiquated English, and the deeply syncopated funk of their music.
 

Indians in Costa Rica


Costa Rica's indigenous peoples have suffered abysmally. Centuries ago the original Indian tribes were splintered by Spanish conquistadores and compelled to retreat into the vast tracts of the interior mountains (the Chorotegas of Guanacaste, however, were more gradually assimilated into the national culture). Today, approximately 9,000 Indian peoples of the Bribrí, Boruca, and Cabecar tribes manage to eke out a living from the jungles of remote valleys in the Talamanca Mountains of southern Costa Rica, where their ancestors had sought refuge from Spanish muskets and dogs. There are currently 22 Indian reserves for eight different Indian groups.


 


Although various agencies continue to work to promote education, health, and community development, the Indians' standard of living is appallingly low, alcoholism is endemic, and they remain subject to constant exploitation. In 1939, the government granted every Indian family an allotment of 148 hectares for traditional farming, and in December 1977 a law was passed prohibiting non-Indians from buying, leasing, or renting land within the reserves. Despite the legislation, a majority of Indians have gradually been tricked into selling their allotments or otherwise forced off their lands. Poor soils and rough rides have not kept colonists in search of land and gold from invading the reserves. Banana companies have gradually encroached into the Indian's remote kingdoms, buying up land and pushing campesinos onto Indian property. Mining companies are infiltrating the reserves along newly built roads which become conduits for contamination, like dirty threads in a wound.

In 1991, for example, an American mining company was accused of illegally exploring within the Talamanca Indian Reserve. And hotel developers are violating the protective laws by pushing up properties within coastal reserves. Indigenous peoples complain that the National Commission for Indigenous Affairs (CONAI) has proved particularly ineffective in enforcing protections. "When the moment arrives for CONAI to stand up for the Indian people, they don't dare. They duck down behind their desks and wait for their paychecks to arrive," says Boruca Indian leader José Carlos Morales. The various Indian clans cling tenuously to what remains of their cultures. The Borucas, who inhabit scattered villages in tight-knit patches of the Pacific southwest, have been most adept at conserving their own language and civilization, including matriarchy, communal land ownership, and traditional weaving. For most other groups, only a few elders still speak the languages, and interest in traditional crafts is fading. Virtually all groups have adopted elements of Catholicism along with their traditional animistic religions, Spanish is today the predominant tongue, and economically the Indians have for the most part come to resemble impoverished campesinos.



 

 

Other Ethnic Groups


Immigrants from many nations have been made welcome over the years (between 1870 and 1920, almost 25% of Costa Rica's population growth was due to immigration). Jews are prominent in the liberal professions.

There is a Quaker community of several hundred people centered on Monteverde, where they produce goudas, cheddars, and monterico cheeses. Germans have for many generations been particularly successful as coffee farmers. Italians have gathered, among other places, in the town of San Vito, on the central Pacific coast. Tens of thousands of Central American refugees from El Salvador, Guatemala, and Nicaragua still find safety in Costa Rica, where they provide cheap labor for the coffee fields. The Chinese man quoted in Paul Theroux's Old Patagonia Express (see p. xiii) is one of several thousand Chinese who call Costa Rica home.

Many are descended from approximately 600 Orientals who were imported as contract laborers to work on the Atlantic Railroad (an 1862 law prohibiting immigration by Asians had been lifted on the understanding that the Chinese would return home once the work was complete). The Chinese railroad workers were worked miserably and paid only one-fifth of the going wage. In recent years many chinos have immigrated freely and are now conspicuously successful in the hotel, restaurant, and bar trade (Theroux's Chinese man owned one of each), and in Limón as middlemen controlling the trade in bananas and cacao.

 

Classes and Castes

Many upper-class families are descended from a few Spanish conquistadores. Levels of interaction between social classes were nonetheless high well into the twentieth century. Members of prominent families intermarried with other groups, especially wealthy European, Latin American, and North American immigrants. In Guanacaste and northern Puntarenas more rigid patterns of class relations are the norm.

The coffee elite, which dominated politics and society from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century, derived most of its wealth from coffee processing and the export trade, not from ownership of plantations. Coffee also gave rise to a rural middle class. The Costa Rican middle class constitutes a larger proportion of the population— perhaps one-quarter—than in other Central American countries.

Costa Rica is no longer a country of peasants. The opening of the University of Costa Rica in 1940 and the expansion of the public sector after 1948 provided new opportunities for upwardly mobile young people. Yet poverty remained significant, affecting one-fifth of the population at the close of the twentieth century.

Nonetheless, in 1999, the United Nations ranked Costa Rica fourth among developing nations worldwide that have made progress in eliminating severe poverty.
         
Costa Rica has made remarkable strides in improving living standards. Most Costa Ricans enjoy access to free health care, basic education, and social services.  Free-market policies have forced reductions in spending, but health and education indicators remain impressive.   

Costa Rica Attractions and Adventures

Top Costa Rica Attractions: Nature
 
 
 

 Costa Rica has some of the best natural sights and attractions on Earth. The beautiful country boasts some of the best and finest beaches imaginable, plus much more. There are also many adventures that can be done in Costa Rica...


Manuel Antonio National Park: This park features some of the most beautiful beaches in Costa Rica which are featured in most advertising and promotion of tourism in Costa Rica. It’s also one of the last refuges of spider monkeys in Costa Rica. The park is gorgeous and receives nothing but rave reviews from all who’ve been there.


  • Monteverde Biological Cloud Forest Reserve: Well preserved, with a variety of good trails, Monteverde provides a unique experience. Hiking through the dense forest in the morning everything is in a misty haze and wild birdcalls ring throughout the treetops. Delicate orchids and dramatic bromeliads adorn giant tree branches jutting out into the fog. This is an excellent area to take a canopy tour in and fly down some zip lines whilst suspended from giant trees.



  • Nicoya beaches: The most beautiful beaches in Costa Rica can be found on the Nicoya Peninsula, and it’s easy to find your own private swath with no one around for kilometers.




  • Tortuguero National Park: Called the “mini-Amazon”, this coastal park features a network of canals and 11 ecological habitats that are home to lots of water birds, sloths, and caiman, among other critters.


  • Corcovado National Park: This is some of the last Pacific primary forest to be found in Central America. What’s more are the 116 species of reptiles and amphibians, 139 of mammals, and 400 of birds, 20 of which are only found here. Among those species of bird is the largest concentration of Scarlet Macaws in Central America. It’s also one of the only bastions left for the Harpy Eagle, the largest of all eagles. Four species of turtles also nest here: the green, leatherback, Ridley olive, and the hawksbill. The eight different habitats here leave much to be explored.

  • Jaco Beach:    Jacó is a developed beach town with a reputation for being a "party beach". The town is spread along Jacó Beach, which is 3km/1.8mi long and offers many hotels and restaurants. The town center is crowded and gets very busy during weekends.
    Jacó Beach is a major destination for surfers, and several outfitters are found in the town center. Horseback riding, cycling and riding mopeds are also popular activities in Jacó, and there are several discos in town.   








  • Top Costa Rica Attractions: Adventure Activities

     
  • Canopy Tour: Zip through the trees on a cable and discover what it feels like to fly. The less frightening bridges offer another way to get your bird’s eye view of the forest canopy. These tours can be found throughout the country.


  • Diving: The Catalina Islands and Bat Islands (Islas Murcielagos) offer fantastic diving and the opportunity to see giant manta rays. The Bat Islands are also home to some fearsome looking bull sharks. I saw my first one here and she was about nine feet long.


  •  Fishing: Billfish are king in the waters of Costa Rica. Yearly tournaments are held here drawing professional anglers from around the world. Other game fish are plentiful too, like dorado (dolphin fish or mahi mahi), wahoo (ono), tuna, jacks, tarpon, and snapper among others including freshwater species.

  • White water rafting: For a thrill of a lifetime hop join a rafting trip down one of the many rivers here, some of which offer Class IV-V rapids.

  • Surfing: Already renown as a Central American surfer mecca, there are tons of amazing breaks here up and down the Pacific Coast, including the famous Witch’s Rock as featured in the documentary Endless Summer. Also, there’s a ridiculously long left hand break at Pavones and hard charging Caribbean surf at Salsa Brava in Puerto Viejo de Talamanca.



  •  

    Top Costa Rica Attractions: Towns

    Tamarindo: The most developed beach resort town on the Nicoya Peninsula, this is a great town with lots of tourist amenities and a laid-back surfer vibe. Speaking of which, its also a great place to learn how to surf. There are lots of surf shops in town offering lessons in the forgiving surf. More advanced surfers can find bigger, less crowded surf just to the north and south.


    Puerto Viejo de Talamanca: Looking for a mellow, reggae vibe? Then this is your place. Located on the beautiful Caribbean, this place has a great party atmosphere that is still pretty chill.



    Montezuma: Lots of people come here and don’t want to leave. Beautiful beaches, a slightly hippy feeling, and a wildlife refuge just to the south provide for an excellent coastal town. The fact that gorgeous waterfalls are within walking distance doesn’t hurt either.

    La Fortuna: This fun, very Costa Rican town sits under the dramatic and looming cone of Arenal Volcano. With beautiful Lake Arenal nearby, relaxing hot springs, and lots of adventure opportunities close by, it’s a definite must on any itinerary.

    Top Costa Rica Attractions: Volanoes

     

    Irazu Volcano National Park

      Irazu Volcano is the highest Costa Rica volcano at 11,260 feet. All of the national park (5705 acres) is above the frost line and most of the summit area is above the tree line with temperatures around freezing, constant winds, and saturating humidity. There is very little wildlife in this harsh environment. Still, the views from the summit on a clear day will take your breath away! You can see a chartreuse green crater lake, both the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean, magnificent views of mountains in every direction, and the gases and steam from the fumaroles . The landscape at the Irazu Volcano summit is very much like a moonscape due to volcanic activity and constant wind. A paved road goes all the way to the top where you can purchase beverages.

    Irazu Volcano’s most recent eruption period was from 1963 – 1965. Currently the only activity is the fumaroles which release toxic steam and pressure from inside the volcano. Camping is not allowed in the park, but it is an easy day trip from anywhere in the Central Valley and can be combined with a visit at nearby coffee plantations and botanical gardens.
    There are hiking trails in Irazu Volcano National Park through oak and pine forest with nice picnic areas.

    Admission is $10 and the park is open from 8 – 3:30pm Tuesday – Sunday.

    Arenal Volcano National Park



    Arenal Volcano National Park is one of the most popular and largest parks in Costa Rica. Located in the northern central part of the country, the park is comprised of 7,212 acres, and was established in 1994. Until recently, Arenal was the most active volcano in the country with mini, lava spewing eruptions at regular intervals. It was also one of the top 10 most active volcanoes in the world.

    Arenal Volcano National Park is a primary tropical rain forest with abundant flora and fauna and wildlife, including howler monkeys, white-faced monkeys, wild cats, toucans, and hummingbirds. A great way to end a day of bird watching, hiking, rappelling, zip lining, rafting, or horseback riding would be soaking in one of the many soothing hot springs in the area.

    Arenal Volcano National Park is located about 80 miles north of San Jose (about a 2 ½ hr trip by car) and near the village of La Fortuna.

    The average temperature is 75 – 90 degrees F, with the dry season running from January through April. This is the best time of year for viewing Arenal. The area has an annual rainfall of 195″ and can be chilly in the higher elevations in the evening.

    Although Costa Rica national park entrance fees do change often, plan on $10 park admission fee – open 8am-4pm Tuesday through Sunday.



    Top Costa Rica Attractions:Museums

    Costa Rica boasts a wide selection of museums, due largely to its standards of high education and long history of peace and prosperity. Most of these museums can be found in the Central Valley (Valle Central), especially in and around the capital city of San José. Some of these include:
     
         El Museo de los Niños (The Children's Museum): the building is a former city jail. People decided to make the best out of such the tragic history of the location and turn it into something useful for the future generations. This museum holds impressive hallways that honor the advances of technology over the years.


      El Museo de Oro Pre-Colombino (The Museum of Pre-Columbian Gold): This is a wonderful place where you can enjoy pre-Columbian Gold crafted jewelry from the indigenous of the past in perfect and almost perfect conditions. The gallery preserves pieces thatdate from the 500’s BE.

      El Museo de Jade Fidel Tristán (The Fidel Tristán Jade Museum): Located in the INS building by the Parque Morazan the Jade museum features an extense collection o preciously carved jade figures. All of this pieces belong the past indigenous regenerations are proves of the history of the pre-Columbian era. The name comes from its founder Fidel Tristan who was the first executive president of the Instituto Nacional de Seguros (INS) and advocated in favor of acquiring the archeological pieces.

        El Museo Nacional De Costa Rica (The National Museum of Costa Rica): Built in 1917, the Cuartel the Bellavista (original name of the building) was the former headquarters of the abolished Costa Rica army. Now it has permanent and temporary expositions of the Costa Rica history and natural resources. The building still conserves the colonial decorations and it is a sanctuary for important historical pieces.

      El Museo de Arte Costarricense (The Costa Rican Art Museum): This museum was created in 1977 and is located in the Parque Metropolitano La Sabana. On the inside you can behold magnificence of Costa Rica contemporary art pieces that include pictures and sculptures by the most talented artists in Costa Rica. This museum also holds conferences and special events in what is called the “Golden room” and provides seminars and workshops for plastic artists on regular basis.


      El Museo de Ciencias Naturales La Salle (The La Salle Natural Sciences Museum): La Salle has taken seriously over the years the importance of natural science, this Costa Rica museum preserves a rich collection of biological links of nature and portraits interesting facts on the natural species of Costa Rica.



    Being those the main museums, there smaller galleries that emphasize the importance of different areas of culture such as: the Criminology Museum, The Museum of Insects at The University of Costa Rica, the Entomology museum and a few serpentariums that show the endurances of the country on their specific areas. Visiting a museum in Costa Rica is an interesting a fulfilling activity, please contact our travel advisors for further information on the museums and galleries and their exhibitions.


    Costa Rica National Parks, Reserves and Refuges:

    National Parks of Costa Rica
    Acuiferos Guacimo and Pococi
    Agua Buena Wildlife Refuge
    Alberto Manuel Brenes Biological Reserve
    Arenal Volcano National Park
    Arenal Volcano Emergency Forest Reserve Aviarios del Caribe Wildlife Refuge
    Ballena National Marine Park
    Barbilla National Park
    Barra del Colorado Wildlife Refuge
    Barra Honda National Park
    Bosque Alegre Wildlife Refuge
    Braulio Carrillo National Park
    Cabo Blanco Absolute Natural Reserve
    Cacyra Wildlife Refuge
    Cahuita National Park
    Camaronal Wildlife Refuge
    Cano Island Biological Reserve
    Cano Negro Wildlife Refuge
    Caraigres Protected Zone
    Carara National Park
    Carate Wildlife Refuge
    Cariari National Wetlands
    Cataratas Cerro Redondo Wildlife Refuge
    Central Volcanic Forest Reserve
    Cerro Atenas Protected Zone
    Cerro Chompipe Protected Zone
    Cerro Dantas Wildlife Refuge
    Cerro de la Cangreja Protected Zone
    Cerro Jardin Forest Reserve
    Cerro La Cruz Protected Zone
    Cerro Las Vueltas Biological Reserve
    Cerro Nara Protected Zone
    Cerros de la Carpintera Protected Zone
    Cerros de Escazu Protected Zone
    Cerros de Turrubares Protected Zone
    Chirripo National Park
    Cipanci Wildlife Refuge
    Cocos Island National Park
    Corcovado National Park
    Corredor Fronterizo Wildlife Refuge
    Costa Esmeralda Wildlife Refuge
    Cuenca Rio Abangares Protected Zone
    Cuenca Rio Banano Protected Zone
    Cuenca Rio Siquirres Protected Zone
    Cuenca Rio Tuis Protected Zone
    Cueva Murcielago Wildlife Refuge
    Curena Forest Reserve
    Curi Cancha Wildlife Refuge
    Curu Wildlife Refuge
    Diria National Park
    Donald Peters Hayes Wildlife Refuge
    Dr. Archie Carr Wildlife Refuge
    El Chayote Protected Zone
    El Rodeo Protected Zone
    Ensenada Wildlife Refuge
    Fernando Castro Cervantes Wildlife Refuge
    Finca Baru Pacifico Wildlife RefugeFinca Hacienda Avellana Wildlife Refuge
    Finca La Virgen
    Gandoca Manzanillo Wildlife Refuge
    Golfito Wildlife Refuge
    Golfo Dulce Forest Reserve
    Grecia Forest Reserve
    Guanacaste National Park
    Guayabo Islands Biological Reserve
    Guayabo National Monument
    Hacienda Copano Wildlife Refuge
    Hitoy Cerere Biological Reserve
    Horizontes Experimental Forest
    Iguanita Wildlife Refuge
    Irazu Volcano National Park
    Jaguarundi Wildlife Refuge
    Joseph Steve Friedman Wildlife Refuge
    Juan Castro Blanco National Park
    Junquillal Bay Wildlife Refuge
    La Amistad International Park
    La Cangreja National Park
    La Ceiba Wildlife Refuge
    Lacustrino Bonilla Bonillita Wetlands
    Lacustrino Pejeperrito Wetlands
    Lacustrino Tamborcito Wetlands
    Laguna Las Camelias Wildlife Refuge
    Laguna Madrigal Wetlands
    Laguna Maquenque Wetlands
    Laguna Azul Wildlife Refuge
    La Marta Wildlife Refuge
    Las Baulas National Marine Park
    La Selva Protected Zone
    Las Tablas Protected Zone
    Limoncito Wildlife Refuge
    Lomas de Barbudal Biological Reserve
    Los Santos Forest Reserve
    Manuel Antonio National Park
    Marino Ballena National Park
    Mata Redonda Wildlife Refuge
    Miravalles Volcano Protected Zone
    Montes de Oro Protected Zone
    Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve
    Negritos Islands Biological Reserve
    Nicolas Wessberg Absolute Natural Reserve
    Nicoya Peninsula Protected Zone
    Nosara Protected Zone
    Osa Wildlife Refuge
    Ostional Wildlife Refuge
    Pacuare Matina Forest Reserve
    Pajaros Island Biological Reserve
    Palo Verde National Park
    Palustrino Corral de Piedra Wetlands
    Palustrino Laguna del Paraguas Wetlands
    Paramo Wildlife Refuge
    PejePerro Wildlife Refuge
    Penas Blancas Wildlife Refuge
    Piedras Blancas National Park
    Playa Blanca Marine Wetlands
    Playa Hermosa Wildlife Refuge
    Poas Volcano National Park
    Portalon Wildlife Refuge
    Preciosa Platanares Wildife Refuge
    Punta Leona Wildlife Refuge
    Puntarenas Estuary Wetlands
    Punta Rio Claro Wildlife Refuge
    Quillotro Wildlife Refuge
    Quitirrisi Protected Zone
    Rancho La Merced Wildlife Refuge
    RHR Blancas Wildlife Refuge
    Riberino Zapandi Wetlands
    Rincon de la Vieja National Park
    Rio Canas Wetlands
    Rio Grande Protected Zone
    Rio Macho Forest Reserve
    Rio Navarro Rio Sombrero Protected Zone
    Rio Oro Wildlife Refuge
    Rio Pacuare Forest Reserve
    Rio Piro Wildlife Refuge
    Rio Tiribi Protected Zone
    Rio Toro Protected Zone
    Romelia Wildlife Refuge
    San Lucas Island Wildlife Refuge
    Santa Elena Cloud Forest Reserve
    Santa Rosa National Park
    San Vito Wetlands
    Surtubal Wildlife Refuge
    Taboga Forest Reserve
    Tamarindo Wildlife Refuge
    Tapanti National Park
    Tenorio Volcano National Park
    Terraba Sierpe National Wetlands
    Tivives Protected Zone
    Tortuguero National Park
    Transylvania Wildlife Refuge
    Turrialba Volcano National Park
    Werner Sauter Wildlife Refuge


    Other famous Costa Ricans

    Laura Chinchilla

    Laura Chinchilla Miranda (born 28 March 1959; is a Costa Rican politician and the first female President of Costa Rica. She was one of Óscar Arias Sánchez's two Vice-Presidents and his administration's Minister of Justice. She was the governing PLN candidate for President in the 2010 general election, where she won with 46.76% of the vote.[She is the sixth woman to be elected president of a Latin American country and the first woman to become president of Costa Rica.  She was sworn in as president of Costa Rica on May 8, 2010.
    Chinchilla was born in Carmen Central, San José in 1959. Her father was Rafael Ángel Chinchilla Fallas (a former comptroller of Costa Rica) and her mother was Emilce Miranda Castillo. She married Mario Alberto Madrigal Díaz on 23 January 1982 and divorced on 22 May 1985. She had a son in 1996 with José María Rico Cueto, a Spanish lawyer who also holds Canadian citizenship; Chinchilla married him on 26 March 2000.
    Chinchilla graduated from the University of Costa Rica and received her master's degree in public policy from Georgetown University.  Prior to entering politics, Chinchilla worked as an NGO consultant in Latin America and Africa, specializing in judicial reform and public security issues. She went on to serve in the José María Figueres Olsen administration as vice-minister for public security (1994–1996) and minister of public security (1996–1998). From 2002 to 2006, she served in the National Assembly as a deputy for the province of San José.

    Chinchilla was one of two vice-presidents elected under the second Arias administration (2006–2010). She resigned the vice-presidency in 2008 in order to prepare her run for the presidency in 2010. On 7 June 2009 she won the Partido Liberación Nacional (PLN) primary with a 15% margin over her nearest rival, and was thus endorsed as the party's presidential candidate.
    Chinchilla opposes any amendment of the constitution aimed at separation of church and state in Costa Rica. The constitution currently defines the Republic of Costa Rica as a Roman Catholic nation. Her position contrasts with that of former President Óscar Arias Sánchez, who supports establishing a secular state.

    She is against legalizing the morning after pill, which is banned in Costa Rica. Many pro-life supporters in Latin American countries oppose the morning after pill because they believe it to be an abortifacient. This position contradicts the World Health Organization's (WHO) statement that emergency contraception cannot be an abortifacient, because it will not work in cases when the woman is already pregnant.

    Environmental protection and sustainability is very important for the President, and she continues Costa Rica's level of leadership in these areas, for example, in May 2011 she declared Odyssey 2050 The Movie of 'Public and Cultural Interest'.

    Jose Maria Castro Madriz

     
    Jose Maria Castro Madriz.jpg
    September 1, 1818 – April 4, 1892

    José María Castro Madriz (September 1, 1818 – April 4, 1892) was a Costa Rican lawyer, academic, diplomat, and politician. He served twice as President of Costa Rica, from 1847 to 1849, and from 1866 to 1868. On both occasions he was prevented from completing his term of office by military coups. During his first administration, on 31 August 1848, he formally declared Costa Rica an independent republic, definitively severing Costa Rica's ties to the moribund Federal Republic of Central America.

    Castro was born in Jamaica and educated at the University of León, in Nicaragua, where he graduated as bachelor of philosophy and doctor of law. He occupied many public offices throughout his life, both before and after serving as President. He was the rector of the national University (which he had helped to create) for sixteen years, and served several administrations as cabinet minister and ambassador. He also presided over the judiciary (as chief judge of the Supreme Court of Justice from 1860 to 1866 and from 1870 to 1873) and the legislature (as president of the Congress of Deputies in 1844-1845 and of the fourth Constitutional Convention in 1859), making him the only other Costa Rican besides Ricardo Jiménez to have headed all three branches of the government.

    An active Freemason, Castro was consistently critical of the political influence of the Roman Catholic Church. He was also a strong defender of freedom of the press at a time when many Costa Rican governments practiced widespread censorship. His constitutional reform of 1848, however, established the most restricted suffrage that ever existed in independent Costa Rica. As president his lack of a committed political base made him an easy target for overthrow by the military. As the minister of foreign affairs, education, justice, public aid, and religious affairs, Castro was the most influential figure in the government of his brother-in-law, President Próspero Fernández (1882–1885), and he was largely responsible for the anti-clerical legislation adopted by that government.
    He was married to Pacífica Fernández, who designed the Costa Rican flag. Their grandson, Rafael Yglesias, served as President of Costa Rica from 1894 to 1902.

    Was once the president of the Congress and the Supreme Court of Costa Rica. He co-founded the Santo Tomas University and started one of the first newspapers of the country, “El Mentor Costarricense”. He was elected chief of state in 1847 and made Costa Rica an independent nation on 1848 and became the first president of the Independent Republic from 1848 to 1849. During his presidency he created a school for girls and established the actual Costa Rica flag.



    Juan Santamaria


     
    August 29, 1831 - April 11, 1856

    Juan Santamaría (August 29, 1831 - April 11, 1856), is officially recognized as the national hero of the Republic of Costa Rica. A national holiday in Costa Rica, Juan Santamaría Day, is held every April 11 to commemorate his death.

    Santamaría was born in the city of Alajuela. When U.S. filibuster William Walker overthrew the government of Nicaragua and attempted to conquer the other nations in Central America, including Costa Rica, in order to form a private slave-holding empire, Costa Rican president Juan Rafael Mora Porras called upon the general population to take up arms and march north to Nicaragua to fight against the foreign invader. Santamaría, a poor laborer and the illegitimate son of a single mother joined the army as a drummer boy. The troops nicknamed him "el erizo" ("the Porcupine") on account of his spiked hair.

    After routing a small contingent of Walker's soldiers at Santa Rosa, Guanacaste, the Costa Rican troops continued marching north and reached the city of Rivas, Nicaragua, on April 8, 1856. The battle that ensued is known as the Second Battle of Rivas. Combat was fierce and the Costa Ricans were not able to drive Walker's men out of a hostel near the town center from which they commanded an advantageous firing position.

    According to the traditional account, on April 11, Salvadoran General José María Cañas suggested that one of the soldiers advance towards the hostel with a torch and set it on fire. Some soldiers tried and failed, but finally Santamaría volunteered on the condition that, in the event of his death, someone would look after his mother. He then advanced and was mortally wounded by enemy fire. Before expiring he succeeded, however, in setting fire to the hostel, thus contributing decisively to the Costa Rican victory at Rivas.

    This account is apparently supported by a petition for a state pension filed on November 1857 by Santamaría's mother, as well as by government documents showing that the pension was granted. Various historians, however, have questioned whether the account is accurate, and if Santamaria died or not during that battle or another one. At any rate, towards the end of the 19th century, Costa Rican intellectuals and politicians seized on the war against Walker and on the figure of Juan Santamaría for nationalist purposes.

    Juan Santamaría is honored by a statue in a park bearing his name in the central canton of Alajuela one block south of the Central Park, and by a museum that was a former garrison in the same city. Two statues of Juan Santamaria larger than the life are in Costa Rica: one in Alajuela and other in the front of the Congress in San Jose. The Statue was commissioned by the Costa Rican Government in 1891, under sworn statement or affidavit of several witness of his deed in Rivas, a perpetual memorial archive has been preserved. As a drummer of the armed forces he wore a uniform, that evidently was of French design, since in the 19th century most the of the high-ranking officers were trained in France.

    The main international airport in Costa Rica is named after him.


     

     Oscar Arias Sanchez


     
    Óscar Arias Sánchez (born 13 September 1940) is a Costa Rican politician who was President of Costa Rica from 2006 to 2010. He previously served as President from 1986 to 1990 and received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1987 for his efforts to end civil wars then raging in several other Central American countries.

    He is also a recipient of the Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism and a trustee of Economists for Peace and Security. In 2003, he was elected to the Board of Directors of the International Criminal Court's TrustFund for Victims. He is also currently a member of the Club de Madrid, a nonprofit composed of 81 former leaders of democratic states, that works to strengthen democratic institutions.

     Raised by an upper class family in the province of Heredia, Óscar Arias concluded his secondary schooling at the Saint Francis College in the capital city of San José. He then went to the United States and enrolled in Boston University with the intention of studying medicine, but he soon returned to his home country and completed degrees in law and economics at the University of Costa Rica. In 1967, Arias traveled to the United Kingdom and enrolled in the London School of Economics. He receive a doctoral degree in political science from the University of Essex in 1974. Arias has received over fifty honorary degrees, including doctorates from Harvard University, Princeton University, Dartmouth College, Oberlin College, Wake Forest University, Ithaca College and Washington University in St. Louis.

    Arias joined the National Liberation Party (PLN), Costa Rica's main social democratic party. In 1986 he ran successfully for president on that party's ticket. Arias's presidency saw the transformation of Costa Rica's economy from one based on the traditional cash crops (coffee and bananas) to one more focused on non-traditional agriculture (e.g., of exotic flowers and fruits) and tourism. Some within the PLN criticize his administration for abandoning the party's social democratic teachings and promoting a neoliberal economic model. He is now often regarded as a neoliberal although he is a member of a nominally social democratic party.

    Arias received the 1987 Nobel Peace Prize with the help of John Biehl, his peer in England, and Rodrigo Madrigal Nieto for his work towards the signing of the Esquipulas II Accords. This was a plan intended to promote democracy and peace on the Central American isthmus during a time of great turmoil: leftist guerrillas were fighting against the governments in El Salvador and Guatemala, which were backed by the United States under the auspices of the Cold War; the Contras, supported by the United States, were fighting an insurgency against the Sandinista government in Nicaragua; Honduras, only recently wresting political power from its military, was caught in the middle as a base for U.S. military forces; and on Costa Rica's other border, Panama faced the oppression of Manuel Noriega's military dictatorship. With the support of Arias, the various armed conflicts ended within the decade (Guatemala's civil war finally ended in 1996).

    Arias then called for a higher level of integration in the Central America region and promoted the creation of the Central American Parliament (Parlamento Centroamericano). During his current administration, Arias has declared that Costa Rica will not enter the Central American Parliament. Arias also modified the country's educational system. The most notable action in this respect was the reintroduction of standardized academic tests at the end of primary and secondary school.

    The Costa Rican constitution had been amended in 1969 to include a clause which forbade former presidents seeking re-election. Arias challenged this at the Sala IV, the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Justice of Costa Rica, which initially rejected his application in September 2000. In 2003, a group of Arias supporters presented an unconstitutionality challenge against the 1969 constitutional amendment forbidding re-election, and this time the ruling in April 2003 struck down the prohibition against non-consecutive re-election.  This decision was denuncied as a "state blow" or "coup d'état" by ex-president Luis Alberto Monge.

    Arias announced in 2004 that he intended to run again for president in the February 2006 general elections. Though for years private polling companies and several news media published polls predicting Arias would win by a wide margin, the election was initially deemed too close to call. A month later, on 7 March, after a manual recount, the official results showed Arias beat center-left contender Ottón Solís by 18,169 votes (1.2% of valid votes cast). He took the oath of office at noon on 8 May 2006 at the National Stadium. In his speech on 15 September 2008, he admitted that he was tired because of the criticism of his opponents.

    On 1 June 2007, he switched Costa Rica's diplomatic recognition from the Republic of China (Taiwan) to the People's Republic of China, making Costa Rica the 167th nation in the world to do so. Subsequently, under diplomatic and financial pressure from Beijing, he induced the Dalai Lama, a fellow Nobel Peace Prize laureate, to postpone indefinitely a proposed and much anticipated visit during Beijing's suppression of controversial riots in Tibet.

    At the 5th Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago, on 18 April 2009, Arias gave a speech on the topic "We've been doing something wrong". Directed at fellow Latin American leaders, he decried Latin America's lack of development compared to other parts of the world, calling for pragmatism, and more resources directed at education rather than militaries.

     

    Franklin Chang Diaz





    Franklin Ramón Chang Díaz (born April 5, 1950) is a Costa Rican American mechanical engineer, physicist and former NASA astronaut. He is currently president and CEO of Ad Astra Rocket Company. He is a veteran of seven Space Shuttle missions, making him the record holder as of 2008 for the most spaceflights (a record he shares with Jerry L. Ross). He was the third Latin American to go into space. He is the first naturalized US citizen to become an astronaut and he is a member of the NASA Astronaut Hall of Fame.


    He was born Franklin Ramón Chang Díaz in San José, Costa Rica on 5 April 1950 to a father of Chinese descent, Ramón Angel Chang Morales (born 1919), an oil worker whose own father fled China during the Boxer Rebellion. His mother is Costa Rican, María Eugenia Díaz Romero (born 1927). One of six children, he has a younger sister, Sonia Rosa (born December 1952), and his mother, brothers, and sisters live in Costa Rica. His elder daughters are Jean Elizabeth (born December 1973), and Sonia Rosa (born March 1978) who is a member of the Massachusetts Senate. He married Peggy Marguerite Doncaster in the United States on 17 December 1984 and his younger daughters are Lidia Aurora (born March 1988) and Miranda Karina (July 1995), both born in Houston, Texas.

    He graduated from Colegio de La Salle in San José in November 1967, then moved to the United States to finish his high school education at Hartford Public High School in Connecticut, in 1969.  He went on to attend the University of Connecticut, where he earned a Bachelor of Science in mechanical engineering and joined the federal TRIO Student Support Services program in 1973. He then attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he earned a Doctor of Plasma Physics in applied plasma physics in 1977.  For his graduate research at MIT, Chang Díaz worked in the field of fusion technology and plasma-based rocket propulsion.

    Chang Díaz was selected as an astronaut candidate by NASA in 1980 and first flew aboard Space Shuttle mission STS-61-C in 1986. Subsequent missions included STS-34 (1989), STS-46 (1992), STS-60 (1994), STS-75 (1996), STS-91 (1998), and STS-111 (2002). During STS-111, he performed three spacewalks with Philippe Perrin as part of the construction of the International Space Station. He was also director of the Advanced Space Propulsion Laboratory at the Johnson Space Center from 1993 to 2005. Chang Díaz retired from NASA in 2005.

    Franklin Chang Díaz was inducted into the NASA Astronaut Hall of Fame on May 5, 2012 in a ceremony that took place the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex. Also, due to his career and scientific success, he has been decorated multiple times in Costa Rica and named Honor Citizen by the national legislature. The Costa Rican National High Technology Center (CeNAT), among other institutions, is named after him.


     

    Claudia and Silvia Poll


        



    Claudia Maria Poll Ahrens (born 21 December 1972) Costa Rican swimmer who competes in the 200 m to 800 m freestyle events. She is Costa Rica's only gold-medalist, having won the country's first Olympic gold medals at the 1996 Olympics in the 200 meter freestyle. She is a multiple national record holder in the freestyle events.

    Her sister, Silvia, won Costa Rica's first Olympic medal at the 1988 Games. Also as of 2009, Claudia and Silvia are the only Costa Ricans to have won a medal at an Olympics. Claudia also competed at the 2000 Olympics, where she won two bronze medals. Moreover, she was the first person from Central America to win a gold medal, and the only until the 2008 Olympic Games when Panama won a gold medal.

    Claudia Poll began swimming in 1979 under coach Francisco Rivas and quickly became one of the best in Central America, winning many regional titles.

    At the 1996 Atlanta Olympics she won the gold medal in the 200 m freestyle event. The win was the first gold medal for Costa Rica in the Summer Olympic Games. It was a surprising win because she beat the favorite German Franziska van Almsick. Dagmar Hase, also from Germany, won the bronze.
    In 1997, she was named by Swimming World Magazine as the Female Swimmer of the Year.

    At the Sydney 2000, Poll continued with her medal run and won two bronze medals. In Athens 2004, she just missed out on the 400 m freestyle final, finishing ninth in the heats.

    In 2002 she was given a four-year doping ban after a failed test for norandrosterone, a metabolite the steroid nandrolone. Her ban was later reduced by FINA to two years. Poll claimed that the test and sampling methods were flawed and protested her innocence.[1]

    At the 2006 Central American and Caribbean Games, she set the Games Records in the 200 and 400 freestyles (2:00.19 and 4:15.01), bettering the time her sister Silvia set at the 1986 Central American and Caribbean Games.

    Poll served as a swimming analyst for the U.S. Telemundo network's Spanish-language coverage of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London, though she and most of the Telemundo broadcast crew performed their duties at the network's studios in Hialeah, Florida, accompanied by video provided by Olympic Broadcasting Services.

    Claudia graduated in Business Administration from the Universidad Internacional de las Américas, San José, Costa Rica, in 1998. Poll became a mother for the first time on August 8, 2007. Her daughter's name is Cecilia. Claudia's older sister Silvia Poll Ahrens was also a competitive swimmer who won a silver medal in 1988, Costa Rica's first ever Olympic medal.

    Sylvia Poll Ahrens (born September 24, 1970) in Managua, Nicaragua) is an Olympic and National Record holding swimmer from Costa Rica. At the 1988 Olympics, she won Costa Rica's first Olympic medal, when she garnered the silver in the women's 200 free. As of 2009, she and her younger sister Claudia are Costa Rica's only Olympic medalists. Sylvia also swam for Costa Rica at the 1992 Summer Olympics.

    She also won a total number of 8 medals at the 1987 Pan American Games; and 2 of her times from those Games still stand as Costa Rican Records in 2009 (100 free and 100 back).

    Poll was born in Managua,Nicaragua. Her parents were Germans and they settled in Nicaragua where Sylvia and her younger sister Claudia were born. After the 1972 Nicaragua earthquake 1972 earthquake of Managua and rising political tensions, Sylvia's parents decided to move south to Costa Rica.

    Sylvia Poll is a famous backstroker and freestyle swimmer for Costa Rica, who won the silver medal in the Swimming at the 1988 Summer Olympics Women's 200 meter freestyle at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. Her silver medal was the first medal ever for a Costa Rican athlete.

    At the 1986 Central American and Caribbean Games she set the Games Records in the women's 200 and 400 frees (2:02.80 and 4:17.98). Both records would last 20 years, until her sister Claudia bettered the times at the 2006 Games. Also at the '86 CACs, Silvia set the Games Record in the 100 m and 200 m backstroke (1:04.43, 2:19.32) that also stood until 2006.

    Sylvia Poll is now a member of the ‘Champions for Peace’ club, a group of 54 famous elite athletes committed to serving peace in the world through sport, created by Peace and Sport, a Monaco-based international organization.


     

    Joaquín Gutiérrez

    Joaquín Gutiérrez (1918 - 2000) is an emblematic figure of Costa Rican literature, being one of the most internationally known of its authors. He was a member of the Academia Costarricense de la Lengua, and won the Premio Nacional de Cultura, the top literary award in his country. The University of Costa Rica gave him the Honoris Causa doctorate in recognition to his contribution to national culture. Furthermore, La Nación, the most important newspaper in the nation, named him the most important literary figure of the century in 1999.

    Gutiérrez sympathized with Communism to the point that he arranged for a Russian spy named Iosif Grigulevich to obtain a falsified Costa Rican passport in 1949, under the name Teodoro B. Castro. Grigulevich would go on to represent Costa Rica diplomatically while remaining involved in assassination attempts against Leon Trotsky and Josip Broz Tito.[1] Gutiérrez also traveled extensively in communist countries as a journalist, even interviewing Ho Chi Minh in an article titled "With Uncle Ho," in reference to Uncle Sam.[2]

    He was candidate for vice-president in two elections. His bronze statue is exhibited permanently in the National Theater.

    He published six novels: "Manglar", Puerto Limón, La Hoja de Aire, Cocorí, "Murámonos Federico" and "Te Acordás, Hermano?".

    Gutiérrez was also a poet; his poetry was published in the books "Poesía", "Jicaral" and "Te Conozco Mascarita". Of his many travels he wrote four journals: "Del Mapocho al Vístula", "La URSS Tal Cual", "Crónicas de Otro Mundo" and "Vietnam: Crónicas de Guerra". The author was also responsible for important translations of Shakespeare's plays into Spanish: King Lear, Hamlet, Macbeth and Julius Caesar, published several times in many Latin countries. In China he also translated works by Mao Zedong and Lu Sün.

    Puerto Limón, La Hoja de Aire and Cocorí were his most popular works, translated into twelve languages, and winning him prizes in Chile, Cuba, Nicaragua, Poland and Costa Rica.
    He is the grandfather of director Ishtar Yasin Gutierrez.

     

    Chavela Vargas 

     
     
    Isabel Vargas Lizano (April 17, 1919 – August 5, 2012), better known as Chavela Vargas, was a Costa Rican-born Mexican singer. She was especially known for her rendition of Mexican rancheras, but she is also recognized for her contribution to other genres of popular Latin American music. She has been an influential interpreter in the Americas and Europe, muse to figures such as Pedro Almodóvar, hailed for her haunting performances, and called "la voz áspera de la ternura", the rough voice of tenderness. The Latin Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, presented her with a Latin GRAMMY Statuette in 2007 after receiving a Lifetime Achievement Award on behalf of that organization.
     
    Isabel Vargas Lizano was born in San Joaquín de Flores, Costa Rica, on April 17, 1919. She went by Chavela, which is a pet name for Isabel. At 14, she abandoned her native country due to lack of musical career opportunities, seeking refuge in Mexico, where an entertainment industry was burgeoning. For many years she sang on the streets but in her thirties she became a professional singer. In her youth, she dressed as a man, smoked cigars, drank heavily, carried a gun and was known for her characteristic red jorongo, which she donned in performances until old. She sang in the streets as a teenager until she ventured into a professional career in the 1930s.

    Her first album, Noche de Bohemia (Bohemian Night), was released in 1961 with the professional support of José Alfredo Jiménez, one of the foremost singer/songwriters of Mexican ranchera music. Vargas recorded over eighty albums since then.[5] She was hugely successful during the 1950s, 1960s and the first half of the 70s, touring in Mexico, the United States, France and Spain and was close to many prominent artists and intellectuals of the time, including Juan Rulfo, Agustín Lara, Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Dolores Olmedo and José Alfredo Jiménez. She partly retired in the late 1970s due to a 15 year-long battle with alcoholism, which she has described in her autobiography (Y si quieres saber de mi pasado [And if you want to know about my past], published in 2002) as "my 15 years in hell" At 81 years old, she publicly declared that she was a lesbian.
     
    Vargas returned to the stage in 1991, performing at the venue "El Hábito" in Coyoacán, Mexico City. She debuted at Carnegie Hall in 2003 at the age of 83 at the behest and promotion of Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, a long-time admirer and personal friend of Vargas.
     
    She is featured in many Almodóvar's films, including La Flor de mi Secreto in both song and video. She has said, however, that acting is not her ambition, although she had previously participated in films such as 1967's La Soldadera. Vargas appeared in the 2002 Julie Taymor film Frida, singing "La Llorona" (The Weeping Woman). Her classic "Paloma Negra" (Black Dove) was also included in the soundtrack of the film. Vargas herself, as a young woman, was alleged to have had an affair with Frida Kahlo, during Kahlo's marriage to muralist Diego Rivera. She also appeared in Alejandro González Iñárritu's Babel, singing "Tú me acostumbraste" (You Got Me Used To), a bolero of Frank Domínguez.
     
    Vargas died on August 5, 2012, in Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico, after she was admitted to a hospital for heart and respiratory problems.

     


    Nery Brenes
     
      Nery Antonio Brenes Cárdenas (born September 25, 1985) is a Costa Rican sprinter. He is one of Costa Rica's up-and-coming athletes and reached the semi-finals at the 400 m sprint in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.
     
     Brenes won the gold medal at the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Istanbul, setting a new national and championship record. "Brenes improved his personal mark by approximately one second, something nobody expected on a championship, taking the gold medal", cited his personal trainer and motivator Andrés Oro Fijo Calderón.
     
    He has participated in major events like the 2007 World Championships in Athletics in Osaka, Japan, and achieved a 4th place finish at the 2008 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Valencia, Spain. He also finished in 3rd place at the 2008 ÅF Golden League meet in Oslo, Norway.
     
     
     
     

     

    Celebrities Born in Costa Rica

    Giannina Facio

     

    Giannina Facio Franco
    in San Jose, Costa Rica

    Actress, Producer, Soundtrack
     
    Giannina Facio (born September 10, 1955) is a Costa Rican actress, who has appeared in a number of films by British film director and producer Ridley Scott. She first worked with Scott in White Squall (1996); since the filming of Gladiator (2000), she has been Scott's partner. The film marked the first of two collaborations with Russell Crowe in which she plays wife to his character (the other being Body of Lies, 2008). Overall, she has acted to date in a total of ten films by Ridley Scott, all of them minor roles/cameo appearances.
     
    Her father, Gonzalo Facio, who was a diplomat of her native country, Costa Rica, lived many years in Guatemala.   

    Filmography

    Actress (22 titles)

    2012/IPrometheus
    Shaw's Mother
    2010Robin Hood
    Lady-in-Waiting
    2006A Good Year
    Maitre D'
    2003Matchstick Men
    Bank Teller
    2001Black Hawk Down
    Stephanie Shughart (uncredited)
    2001Hannibal
    Verger's Fingerprint Technician
    2000Gladiator
    Maximus' Wife
    1999The Hunger (TV series)
    Vivica
    The Night Bloomer(1999)… Vivica
    1998Spanish Fly
    Antonio's Date #2
    1992Extralarge: Cannonball (TV movie)
    Secretary
    1991L'odissea (TV movie)
    Elena di Troia
    1990Nel giardino delle rose(as Giannina Maria Facio)
    1985Miami Vice (TV series)
    Model
    The Prodigal Son(1985)… Model
    1984Poppers
    Lola (as Gianina Facio)
    Actress (22 titles)
    2012/IPrometheus
    Shaw's Mother
    2010Robin Hood
    Lady-in-Waiting
    2006A Good Year
    Maitre D'
    2003Matchstick Men
    Bank Teller
    2001Black Hawk Down
    Stephanie Shughart (uncredited)
    2001Hannibal
    Verger's Fingerprint Technician
    2000Gladiator
    Maximus' Wife
    1999The Hunger (TV series)
    Vivica
    The Night Bloomer(1999)… Vivica
    1998Spanish Fly
    Antonio's Date #2
    1992Extralarge: Cannonball (TV movie)
    Secretary
    1991L'odissea (TV movie)
    Elena di Troia
    1990Nel giardino delle rose(as Giannina Maria Facio)
    1985Miami Vice (TV series)
    Model
    The Prodigal Son(1985)… Model
    1984Poppers
    Lola (as Gianina Facio)
    Hide HideProducer (3 titles)
    ????Monopoly(producer) (pre-production)
    2006Tristan + Isolde(producer)
    2003Matchstick Men(co-producer)
    Producer (3 titles)
    1990Delta Force Commando II: Priority Red One(performer: "Any Way")
    ????Monopoly(producer) (pre-production)
    2006Tristan + Isolde(producer)
    2003Matchstick Men(co-producer)
     
     
     
     

    Harry Shum Jr.


    Harry Shum Jr.
    Born: April 28, 1982  in Puerto Limón, Costa Rica
     
     
    Harry Shum was born in Puerto Limón, Costa Rica on April 28, 1982. His mother is a native of Hong Kong, and his father is from Guangzhou, China. They relocated to Costa Rica, where Shum and his two older sisters were born. When Shum was six years old, the family moved to San Francisco, California. He states, "I feel I have the best of so many worlds. I speak Chinese and Spanish. Spanish is actually my first language before I learned Chinese and English".In an interview, he said that his earliest motivations to dance were from Ginuwine, Dru Hill, and Usher, before becoming influenced by iconic dancers like Gene Kelly and Michael Jackson.
     
    Shum graduated from Arroyo Grande High School in 2000. He started dancing with his high school dance company team and continued his career in San Francisco under several different studios. He incorporates various different styles into his dance, including popping, tutting, waving, locking, breaking and also contemporary.
     
    Shum was accepted into San Francisco State University, but only stayed there three months before deciding to pursue a career in dance and entertainment.
     

    Filmography

    Actor (24 titles)
    2009-2013Glee (TV series)
    Mike Chang / Joe Hart
    Episode #4.9(2012)… Mike Chang
    Thanksgiving(2012)… Mike Chang
    2012Already Gone (short)
    Scott Lee
    2012White Frog
    Chaz Young
    2011Top 100 Number Ones (TV movie)
    2011/I3 Minutes (short)
    Harry - Hunter #1
    2010The Fran Drescher Show (TV series)
    Episode #1.9(2010)
    2010Our Family Wedding
    Harry (as Harry Shum)
    2008iCarly: iGo to Japan (TV movie)
    Yûki
    2008Center Stage: Turn It Up
    Club Dancer
    2008Greek (TV series)
    OX Brother / Omega Chi Brother / Vance
    Hell Week(2008)… Vance
    No Campus for Old Rules(2008)… Omega Chi Brother
    2008Rita Rocks (TV series)
    Zack
    Flirting with Disaster(2008)… Zack
    2008The American Mall (TV movie)
    Dancing Taco
    2008Zoey 101 (TV series)
    Roy
    Trading Places(2008)… Roy
    2008The Onion Movie
    Lollipop Love Dancer
    2007Viva Laughlin (TV series)
    Construction Dancer
    Pilot(2007)… Construction Dancer
    2007High School Musical 2 Dance-Along (TV movie)
    Dancer (uncredited)
    2007Stomp the Yard
    Other Crew Dancer
    2005Committed (TV series)
    Chinese Delivery Guy #1
    The Apartment Episode(2005)… Chinese Delivery Guy #1
    2004You Got Served
    Dancer
    2003Boston Public (TV series)
    Fletcher
    Chapter Sixty(2003)… Fletcher 
     

    Ruby O. Fee, Actress

     
    Ruby O. Fee

    Born:  in San Jose, Costa Rica

     

     Filmography

    Actress (5 titles)

    2011-2012Allein gegen die Zeit 2.0 (TV series) (post-production)
    Sophie Kellermann
    Neunzehn Uhr(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    Zwanzig Uhr(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    Achtzehn Uhr(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    Siebzehn Uhr(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    Fünfzehn Uhr(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    2010-2012Allein gegen die Zeit (TV series)
    Sophie Kellermann
    19:00(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    20:00(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    17:00(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    18:00(2012)… Sophie Kellermann
    15:00(2012)… Sophie Kellermann

     
     

    Maribel Guardia

     
    Maribel Fernández García

    in San Jose, Costa Rica
     
    Maribel del Rocío Fernández García (born May 29, 1956  is a Costa-Rican actress, who works in Mexico, and currently lives and resides in Mexico. Maribel was elected Miss Costa Rica in 1978, going on to represent her country at the 1978 Miss Universe beauty pageant (did not place but was selected as Miss Photogenic), and the 1978 Miss World beauty pageant (placed as a top 15 semi-finalist). The Miss Universe pageant had been held in Acapulco, and she received offers by Televisa producer Sergio Bustamante to develop a career there, but she returned to her country. Months later she accepted the offer and returned to Mexico, leaving her mother and boyfriend.
     Maribel lived five years with Joan Sebastian and had a son with him.

    Filmography

     Actress (56 titles)
    2012Corona de lágrimas (TV series)
    Julieta Vázquez
    Lucero defiende a Refugio(2012)… Julieta Vázquez
    Mole de olla(2012)… Julieta Vázquez
    Nana(2012)… Julieta Vázquez
    Divorcio(2012)… Julieta Vázquez
    Refugio revela su secreto(2012)… Julieta Vázquez
    2012Como dice el dicho (TV series)
    Alondra
    Un clavo saca otro clavo(2012)… Alondra
    2010Niña de mi corazón (TV series)
    Pilar Alarcón
    2009Desmadruga2 (TV series)
    Various
    Lucía Méndez(2009)… Various
    2007Al diablo con los guapos (TV series)
    Rosario / Rosela Dillano
    Al diablo con los guapos(2007)… Rosela Dillano/Rosario
    2006¡Qué madre, tan padre! (TV series)
    Maribel Galicia
    Los nuevos inquilinos(2006)… Maribel Galicia
    Qué madre sin padre(2006)… Maribel Galicia
    El día del padre(2006)… Maribel Galicia
    El picnic(2006)… Maribel Galicia
    Me enamoré de Mauricio(2006)… Maribel Galicia
    2006Muévete (TV series)
    Host
    2004Misión S.O.S. aventura y amor (TV series)
    Ximena Aranda
    Episode #1.1(2004)… Ximena Aranda
    2003La decada furiosa (TV movie)
    Host
    2003Gran musical (TV series)
    2001Aventuras en el tiempo (TV series)
    Flor del Huerto
    Episode #1.1(2001)… Flor del Huerto
    1999Serafín (TV series)
    Carmen
    1998¿Qué nos pasa? (TV series)
    Episode #1.17(1998)
    Episode #1.19(1998)
    Episode #1.21(1998)
    Episode #1.30(1998)
    Episode #1.34(1998)
    1996Tu y yo (TV series)
    Estela
    1994Prisionera de amor (TV series)
    Cristina Carvajal / Florencia Rondán
    Episode dated 24 August 1994(1994)… Cristina Carvajal / Florencia Rondán
    1994La pura
    Pura
    1987Relampago
    Monica
    1986Seducción (TV series)
    Marina (1986)
    1986Un hombre violento
    Lucia Castillano
    1985Terror and Black Lace
    Isabel Martinez
    1984Pedro Navaja
    Rosa
    1982El Bronco
    1973El diablo en persona
    La Zarca