No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveAugust is Black Culture Festival Month in Costa Rica

August is Black Culture Festival Month in Costa Rica

This month marks the celebration of the ninth annual Black Culture Festival in honor of Black Culture Day, Aug. 31.

First up in San José is “A Night to Remember,” an event featuring dinner and dancing as well as a fashion show and a performance by international singer and showman Gillo from Barbados.

Sponsored by Black Women in Action and Limón Roots magazine, the event will take place tomorrow at 7 p.m. at the Hotel Corobicí in Sabana Norte, on the west side of San José.

Activities are scheduled across the country, from the northwestern province of Guanacaste to San José to the Caribbean slope. Most of the festival’s events, however, will take place in the Caribbean port city of Limón. The festival really gets going around Aug. 21 and culminates with a gala parade through the streets of Limón Aug. 31.

Other highlights include the crowning of “Lady Black Beauty” Aug. 25 in Limón and a number of shows and concerts, including performances by Trinidadian calypso king Mighty Sparrow in San José Aug. 28 and in Limón Aug. 31, after the parade.

Marcelle Taylor, coordinator for the Black Ethnic Civic Committee of Limón, said the city is “the capital of culture in Costa Rica,” and the heart of the country’s African roots.

Ramiro Crawford, festival organizer and editor of Limón Roots magazine, said the festival was a time for reflecting on what was being celebrated, including the things that make Afro-Costa Rican culture unique, how far blacks have come through a history of hardship and things that still need to be accomplished.

Crawford also pointed out that this August marks the 120th anniversary of the birth of Jamaican black activist and nationalist Marcus Garvey.

Garvey lived in Costa Rica from 1910 to 1911, working as a timekeeper for United Fruit Company before he founded the black newspaper La Nación, not to be confused with today’s daily. He went on to form the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) in Harlem, New York, in 1914.

Founded in 1922, Limón’s Liberty Hall (the Black Star Line building), where Mighty Sparrow will be playing, was the headquarters of the UNIA in Costa Rica, and has been a spot of black cultural preservation, pride and awareness ever since. Several festival events are set to take place here.

Trending Now

Costa Rica’s Tourism Sector Alarmed Over Rising Violence and U.S. Criticism

Tourism leaders in Costa Rica are warning that rising crime and international criticism could damage the country’s reputation as one of Latin America’s safest...

Costa Rica’s Sibö Chocolate Wins Bronze at Int’l Awards

Chocolate Sibö once again stood out at the International Chocolate Awards, the largest fine chocolate competition based in New York. The Costa Rican brand...

Costa Rica Replaces One-Lane Bridges as Traffic and Population Grow

As the infrastructure of Costa Rica advances, with new four-lane highways and a series of bypasses around San José that avoid the narrow, congested...

Earthquake Shakes Costa Rica’s Central Valley

An earthquake shook Costa Rica early Friday morning. The tremor occurred at 12:45 a.m. with a magnitude of 4.4. Its epicenter was located 1...

Costa Rica President Confronts Calls to Strip Immunity

Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves denounced today an “attempted judicial coup” as he appeared before a congressional committee that must recommend to the full...

End of Air Canada Strike Brings Relief for Costa Rica-Bound Passengers

Air Canada flight attendants ended their strike Tuesday after reaching a tentative agreement with the airline, paving the way for flights to resume gradually....
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica