
Scenes from the closing day Puerto Rican Parade of past Puerto Rican Festivals. In its 58th year, the annual Puerto Rican Festival of Massachusetts will bring live performances by local and international artists, food, arts and crafts, mechanical rides and a variety of activities to Franklin Park on July 26 and 27 for “a tradition rooted in unity, resilience and cultural pride.”
The festival also offers a health expo for the community. On the closing day, the festival has the big finale of the Puerto Rican Parade, where the community puts a spotlight on its rich culture through floats, colorful dance troupes, singers, dancers and appearances by distinguished honorees.
According to its website, the Puerto Rican Festival of Massachusetts was born in 1967 in Boston’s South End. Under the leadership of the late Jorge “Chico” Muñoz, a small group of Puerto Rican pioneers became the first festival committee.
The website also states that with the commitment of many community stakeholders, the first committee worked to make sure to “promote a sense of belonging and cultural affirmation for Puerto Ricans living across the Commonwealth.” Their hard work paid off, as the first event took place in Blackstone Park with approximately 2,500 in attendance, launching the Puerto Rican Festival of Massachusetts.
Today,
the Puerto Rican Festival of Massachusetts organization is more than
just the annual event, as it is now also a “non-profit cultural and
community-building organization” that hosts many additional events and
programming each year. Among these are Puerto Rican Heritage Night at
Fenway Park, a Puerto Rican flag-raising ceremony, a cultural pageant
program, professional development
workshops, artistic opportunities for young people, athletic tournaments
and community service opportunities.
Marilyn Rivera, the current president of the organization, talked about the importance of holding this festival annually.
“We
really want to continue our tradition, to see people playing dominoes,
seeing people enjoying a day that is a free event to the public and open
to everybody. You can see people go back to their culture for that
moment. They feel like they are in Puerto Rico,” she said. “The other
part is that we bring resources to people that don’t know how to find
these resources.”
She
also said that one major aspect she is excited about this year is the
unveiling of a monument to festival founder Jorge “Chico” Muñoz at O’Day
Park in the South End, which they worked to get installed for the past
two years.
Along with
the monument, Rivera said she is also looking forward to seeing the
elders dancing, which is her favorite part of the festival.
“I
love to see the elderly dancing. It brings them back from growing up,
being teenagers, hearing that music…seeing them dancing, doing line
dancing with salsa. It’s amazing,” she said. “To see the happiness, I
can’t explain how great it feels to see so many people enjoying those
moments that they look forward to all year-round.”
Rivera
encourages all community members to attend the festival even if they
are not Latino, as they will gain so much knowledge about the culture
while having fun doing so.
“You’re
going to learn traditional music, to dance—bomba, salsa. (You’ll) see
the energy, how people have this energy to dance. …We’re going to have
authentic Puerto Rican food,” she said. “So, it’s learning the culture
and opening eyes about why Puerto Ricans celebrate our culture so much.”
ON THE WEB
Learn more at puertoricanfestivalofma.org