I have a question...The lead dancer appears to be Japanese. Does this dancer, and others I've seen in other videos of 'Arte Y Solera', are native born Japanese women who decided to learn and become Flamenco dancers, or is the lead dancer (and others who appear Japanese in other videos) descendants of the Samurai Warrior who was converted to Christianity by a Spanish monk missionary, back before Japan formally opened it's door to the West, and accompanied the monk to Spain, then the Vatican in Italy, to open trade & missionary opportunities to Japan? This ambassadorial plan, unfortunately, was rejected by the Vatican, but the Samurai decided to stay in Europe, eventually settled in Spain and married there. His descendants still live there, and it was documented in a documentary several years ago.
Me encanta veros y oíros. Saludos desde la Córdoba española.
que arte OLE
美しい
私が演奏してるミララカラとは・・・
勉強になります
是非参考にしてみてください!
I have a question...The lead dancer appears to be Japanese. Does this dancer, and others I've seen in other videos of 'Arte Y Solera', are native born Japanese women who decided to learn and become Flamenco dancers, or is the lead dancer (and others who appear Japanese in other videos) descendants of the Samurai Warrior who was converted to Christianity by a Spanish monk missionary, back before Japan formally opened it's door to the West, and accompanied the monk to Spain, then the Vatican in Italy, to open trade & missionary opportunities to Japan? This ambassadorial plan, unfortunately, was rejected by the Vatican, but the Samurai decided to stay in Europe, eventually settled in Spain and married there. His descendants still live there, and it was documented in a documentary several years ago.