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Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Caribana a celebration of freedom

by

1008 days ago
20220815
Masqueraders perform during Caribbean Carnival parade in Toronto, Canada on July 30, 2022. 				            		  Pictures AP

Masqueraders perform during Caribbean Carnival parade in Toronto, Canada on July 30, 2022. Pictures AP

TORON­TO (AP)—Feath­ers. Glit­ter. Deca­dent floats. Boom­ing mu­sic.

The vi­brant mas­quer­ade at the Car­ni­val Fes­ti­val in Toron­to is far more than a vi­su­al de­light. It is a cel­e­bra­tion of free­dom—of lib­er­a­tion and ex­u­ber­ance nev­er so nec­es­sary as af­ter two years of the event’s can­cel­la­tion due to the coro­n­avirus pan­dem­ic.

The re­turn of the 55th an­nu­al pa­rade of­fers much-need­ed re­lief for Toron­to’s Caribbean im­mi­grant com­mu­ni­ty, who re­joice, re­con­nect and re­mem­ber eman­ci­pa­tion from slav­ery in ex­trav­a­gant plumage on their streets.

In ma­jor cities across the world, tens of thou­sands of rev­ellers flock to the streets for Car­ni­val cel­e­bra­tions. Toron­to, for its part, has its pa­rade on what the Cana­di­an gov­ern­ment recog­nis­es as Eman­ci­pa­tion Day week­end, the first Sat­ur­day of Au­gust com­mem­o­rat­ing the day slav­ery was abol­ished through­out the British Em­pire in 1834.

The par­tic­i­pants who ham­mer out rhythms on hun­dreds of steel pans and care­ful­ly craft the feath­ered cos­tumes de­scribe the pa­rade as a fun­da­men­tal­ly life-af­firm­ing event, a full-sen­so­ry ex­pe­ri­ence.

“For the new gen­er­a­tions of Trinidad, the car­ni­val is a re­minder of where they come from,” Thadel Wil­son, a steel pan drum­mer, told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press.

“The Caribbean Car­ni­val is for every­one, a day to cel­e­brate the pos­i­tives in your life and let go of the neg­a­tives.”

Some 10,000 cos­tumed fes­ti­val-go­ers took over the ex­hi­bi­tion grounds on Toron­to’s cen­tral Lake Shore Boule­vard, trans­form­ing the site in­to a kalei­do­scope of feath­ered wings and be­jew­elled head­dress­es in every colour imag­in­able.

The city was buzzing—lit­er­al­ly. The so­ca-in­fused bass shook the ground. Drums clanged. Fam­i­lies and friends re­unit­ed af­ter years of pan­dem­ic re­stric­tions. And pea­cock­ing per­form­ers sashayed down the boule­vard to the beat of the mu­sic.

A homeless man dances as participants of the Caribbean Carnival parade pass by in Toronto, Canada.

A homeless man dances as participants of the Caribbean Carnival parade pass by in Toronto, Canada.

A masquerader performs during the Caribbean Carnival parade in Toronto.

A masquerader performs during the Caribbean Carnival parade in Toronto.


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