Call & Times

Philadelph­ia’s Cinco de Mayo festival canceled amid fears of an ICE raid

- By AVI SELK

Every year, as the weather warmed, hundreds of people would transform a lot in south Philadelph­ia into a frenetic re-enactment of their ancestors' glory: the great battle of May 5, 1862, when the Mexican army defeated French invaders.

Revelers would squeeze onto the grass between low-slung apartment blocks, dancing beneath a colorful explosion of muskets, flags, feathers and masks.

No one re-enacted the subsequent battle of 1863 – when the French came back, won and occupied Mexico.

This year, they won't be celebratin­g anything.

After immigratio­n raids across the country and reports of White House deportatio­n plans, Philadelph­ia's largest Cinco de Mayo celebratio­n has been canceled.

"Everyone's pretty much afraid because they're saying that, basically, ICE is just going to come in out of nowhere," resident Florencia Gonzalez told NBC 10 on a quiet, wet street that El Carnaval de Puebla used to fill in late April.

Even Mayor Jim Kenney was bummed. "I'm devastated to hear that ICE has had such a chilling effect that Philadelph­ians no longer feel comfortabl­e engaging in this public celebratio­n," he told the news station.

An ICE official told the station that the agency "does not conduct sweeps or raids that target aliens indiscrimi­nately."

But many immigrants have been in a state of panic after news of operations such as a nationwide sweep that detained 700 people in one day or the public arrest of a Los Angeles man near his daughter's school.

And after promising during the 2016 campaign to deport millions of people who were in the country illegally, Trump's administra­tion has proposed hiring thousands of new immigratio­n agents, building a border wall and speeding up removals.

An organizer told NBC 10 that up to 15,000 people used to watch the festival in years past, as hundreds of marchers paraded through south Philadelph­ia's streets.

"We have people who travel all the way from Chicago, Connecticu­t and New York," Edgar Ramirez said. "We don't want anything to happen to them."

So organizers unanimousl­y decided to cancel.

An official with the Mexican Consulate tried to calm the community's fears, NBC reported.

A carnival founder told Al Día News that the cancellati­on was not strictly a matter of caution – but also meant to "raise a voice of protest" against the White House's immigratio­n policies. In any event, as this year's anniversar­y of the Battle of Puebla rolls around, an empty city block will remain just that.

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