The Sentinel-Record

Toronto’s Caribana a celebratio­n of freedom

- KAMRAN JEBRELLI

TORONTO — Caribana. A Celebratio­n of Freedom.

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 revelers flock to the streets for Carnival celebratio­ns. Toronto, for its part, has its parade on what the Canadian government recognizes 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 bejeweled headdresse­s in every color 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 July 30 as participan­ts of the Caribbean Carnival parade walk by.*
A homeless man dances July 30 as participan­ts of the Caribbean Carnival parade walk by.*
 ?? (AP/Kamran Jebreili) ?? A masquerade­r performs July 30 during the Caribbean Carnival parade in Toronto.
(AP/Kamran Jebreili) A masquerade­r performs July 30 during the Caribbean Carnival parade in Toronto.
 ?? ?? A Carnival masquerade­r performs during the King and Queen Showcase.
A Carnival masquerade­r performs during the King and Queen Showcase.
 ?? ?? Kenney Coombs, a retired government employee, works on his latest design, titled Queens & Goddesses, on July 24 at the Carnival Nationz’s Mas Camp in Toronto.
Kenney Coombs, a retired government employee, works on his latest design, titled Queens & Goddesses, on July 24 at the Carnival Nationz’s Mas Camp in Toronto.
 ?? ?? Carnival costumes arrive July 28 for the preparatio­n of the King and Queen Showcase for the Carnival parade at Lamport Stadium in Toronto.
Carnival costumes arrive July 28 for the preparatio­n of the King and Queen Showcase for the Carnival parade at Lamport Stadium in Toronto.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States