C’bean nationals set for Labour Day Parade
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Mayor Bloomberg met with West Indians at
Gracie Mansion |
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NEW YORK:
Caribbean residents in New York are gearing up for one of the
biggest events in the American cultural calendar – the West Indian
American Day Labour Carnival to be held on Monday, September 7,
2009.
At a reception last week at Gracie Mansion – the official residence
of New York City’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg – hundreds of Caribbean
community influencers joined the mayor and his staff to celebrate
the 42nd anniversary of the parade which attracts millions of
revelers and onlookers each year on to Brooklyn’s Eastern Parkway.
“Labor Day in New York is where Caribbean culture takes center stage
and Caribbean nationals - from Guyana to Grenada – display
solidarity and diversity as well as the creativity of one of the
most remarkable regions of the world,” said Lorine St. Jules of the
St. Lucia Tourist Board in New York, who said her nation is working
closely with Caribbean-American audiences to promote tourism,
investment and economic development in St. Lucia and the wider
Caribbean.
big celebration
“The West Indian American Day Carnival and Parade (is) the city’s
big end-of-summer party, and it brings millions of people to
Brooklyn from all over the United States, Canada, and certainly from
the West Indies. The parade is a wonderful celebration of the
diversity that makes New York the greatest city in the world,” said
mayor Bloomberg as he addressed Caribbean-Americans at Gracie
Mansion.
Carnival association president, Yolanda
Lezama-Clark, said that while the association fulfills its mission
of celebrating Caribbean heritage and culture on the world stage,
spotlighting social and economic issues was also extremely
important. “This year we have chosen cancer awareness and Census
2010,” she said, announcing “Jump for the Cure, Jump Up and Be
Counted!” as the theme of this year’s carnival.
To this end, the association is partnering with the American Cancer
Society in a social awareness campaign to get people tested, while
the alliance with the US Census Bureau will spread the message of
the importance of being counted in the upcoming 2010 Census. “This
is a particularly important issue for Caribbean people who have
traditionally been undercounted. But more so, being counted is about
our economic power. (It is) important in order to ensure increasing
community resources in the areas of housing, (healthcare), and
education,” she said.
Six Caribbean personalities were honored at the mayor’s reception,
including five Trinidadians: mas designer Clyde Bascombe, community
leader Gemma Bidjou, steelband founder Cyrus Busby, costume maker
and educator Monica Carrington, and one of the earliest supporters
of the carnival Horace Morancie. NYPD Detective Nivrose Duncan from
Haiti was also recognized for playing a key role in making sure the
parade runs smoothly and safely.
Also attending the reception were members of the St. Lucian carnival
band, Karma, which is set to make a splash on the parkway next
month.