Current:Home > NewsThousands to parade through Brooklyn in one of world’s largest Caribbean culture celebrations -CapitalWay
Thousands to parade through Brooklyn in one of world’s largest Caribbean culture celebrations
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:18:22
NEW YORK (AP) — New York City’s West Indian American Day Parade will kick off Monday with thousands of revelers dancing and marching through Brooklyn in one of the world’s largest celebrations of Caribbean culture.
The annual Labor Day event, now in its 57th year, turns the borough’s Eastern Parkway into a kaleidoscope of feather-covered costumes and colorful flags as participants make their way down the thoroughfare alongside floats stacked high with speakers playing soca and reggae music.
The parade routinely attracts huge crowds, who line the almost 2-mile (3.2-kilometer) route that runs from Crown Heights to the Brooklyn Museum. It’s also a popular destination for local politicians, many of whom have West Indian heritage or represent members of the city’s large Caribbean community.
The event has its roots in more traditionally timed, pre-Lent Carnival celebrations started by a Trinidadian immigrant in Manhattan around a century ago, according to the organizers. The festivities were moved to the warmer time of year in the 1940s.
Brooklyn, where hundreds of thousands of Caribbean immigrants and their descendants have settled, began hosting the parade in the 1960s.
The Labor Day parade is now the culmination of days of carnival events in the city, which includes a steel pan band competition and J’Ouvert, a separate street party on Monday morning commemorating freedom from slavery.
veryGood! (78855)
Related
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Planned Parenthood mobile clinic will take abortion to red-state borders
- House GOP rules vote on gas stoves goes up in flames
- $80,000 and 5 ER visits: An ectopic pregnancy takes a toll
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- A town employee quietly lowered the fluoride in water for years
- Today’s Climate: July 5, 2010
- Eyeballs and AI power the research into how falsehoods travel online
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Fracking the Everglades? Many Floridians Recoil as House Approves Bill
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Brain cells in a lab dish learn to play Pong — and offer a window onto intelligence
- Do Hundreds of Other Gas Storage Sites Risk a Methane Leak Like California’s?
- Omicron boosters for kids 5-12 are cleared by the CDC
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- New York business owner charged with attacking police with insecticide at the Capitol on Jan. 6
- How this Brazilian doc got nearly every person in her city to take a COVID vaccine
- 66 clinics stopped providing abortions in the 100 days since Roe fell
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
A public payphone in China began ringing and ringing. Who was calling?
A town employee quietly lowered the fluoride in water for years
IVF Has Come A Long Way, But Many Don't Have Access
Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
Matty Healy Joins Phoebe Bridgers Onstage as She Opens for Taylor Swift on Eras Tour
Millions of Americans are losing access to maternal care. Here's what can be done
Why Disaster Relief Underserves Those Who Need It Most