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  • Out There

    Time Out Chicago / Issue 68 : Jun 15–21, 2006

    Taste of Humboldt Park

    For the the 25th official Puerto Rican Festival, we take a look back—and ahead to what’s next.

    By Casey Sanchez

    FLAG ’em Left, on Saturday 17, there will be parades both downtown, and in Humboldt Park, right.

    With an estimated 1.8 million attendees last year, the six-day-long Puerto Rican Festival in Humboldt Park is outranked only by the Taste of Chicago as the city’s largest festival. The salsa beats and reggaeton rhythms of the Fiestas Puertorriqueñas, which started on June 13 and runs through Sunday 18 in Humboldt Park, draws a crowd far beyond the Chicago-area’s 150,000 Puerto Ricans. The grassroots People’s Parade along Division Street on Saturday 17, after the downtown parade earlier that day, operates separately from the fest. The festival is also widely attended by Dominicans, Central and South Americans, and Cubans, says Cesar Rolon of the Puerto Rican Parade Committee. “No other ethnicity has this kind of festival.”

    Then
    Puerto Ricans have been immigrating to Chicago since the 1920s, but unlike other immigrants, Puerto Ricans are full-fledged American citizens, as the island is a U.S. commonwealth. In the early 1960s, a Chicago group of Puerto Rican civic leaders—called Los Caballeros de San Juan—organized the first unofficial Puerto Rican parade on 63rd Street in the Woodlawn neighborhood. In 1981, organizers turned the party up a notch and joined with the Chicago Park District to host a weeklong festival of Boricua art, music, food and culture in Humboldt Park. What, exactly, is being commemorated? In Puerto Rico, residents traditionally hold a weeklong fiesta around the feast day of their town’s patron saint. The feast day for San Juan, the patron saint of the island’s capital and largest city, falls on June 24, so U.S. residents of Puerto Rican heritage chose that time of year to celebrate.

    Now
    The Fiestas Puertorriqueñas is alcohol-free, but the 300,000-plus crowd that shows up daily doesn’t come to drink: They come for the steady flow of internationally-known tropical artists. This year’s lineup includes salsa crooners Frankie Negrón and Hector Tricoche; reggaeton up-and-comers Trebol Clan and Polaco; Latin house and freestyle DJ White Knight; and performers of bomba y plena, a folkloric forerunner of modern-day salsa. Food booths dish out a mix of fresh-cooked Puerto Rican, Cuban, Mexican and Brazilian dishes or the virgin piña coladas, served in pineapples. The festival also features the city’s largest carnival-style amusement with game booths and rides.

    This year marks the 40th anniversary of the Division Street Riots. On June 12, 1966, a young Puerto Rican man was shot in the leg by a Chicago police officer. According to People’s Parade coordinator Leony Calderon, police said he was armed; witnesses said he wasn’t. The shooting spurred three days of neighborhood riots—but ultimately led to massive neighborhood development, Calderon says, leading to the creation of educational, housing and cultural institutions that remain in Humboldt Park to this day.

    On Friday 16, the Puerto Rican Cultural Center will bring together local activists, as well as U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, to reflect on the four decades of post-riot progress at a symposium called “The Case of Puerto Rican Chicago From 1966 to the Present.” The event takes place at 6pm at the PRCC Auditorium at 2700 W Haddon Street.

    Future
    The Puerto Rican community has moved in and out of different neighborhoods, including Lincoln Park, throughout the years. While the fest has been held for the last 25 years in Humboldt Park—a neighborhood marked by huge steel Puerto Rican flags erected in 1995 along Division Street between Western and California Avenues—gentrification has caused many Puerto Ricans to move further northwest into the city’s Belmont-Cragin neighborhood, or into suburbs like Cicero and Elgin. Each year, rumors abound that the Puerto Rican festival is going to move out of Humboldt Park, but that’s not true, say festival organizers. “We’re guaranteed for the next 10 years,” says Rolon, who says organizers have signed a contract with the Chicago Park District. As further proof that they’re here to stay, the Puerto Rican Parade Committee plans to start this winter on a massive expansion of the Casa Puertorriqueña, a community center and the festival headquarters on California Avenue, across from the park. The new center will feature space for 2,000 people, an outdoor deck, a small business center and a youth-run community radio station.




    • Comments
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    • 8411 porsche Mon, Jun 16, at 12:35pm
      print

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7788 Carmen Wed, Jun 11, at 01:18pm
      http://puertoricanpower.net/events/index.htm

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7742 Elsie Gonzalez Tue, Jun 10, at 01:14pm
      Does anyone know the line up for the fest this year?

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7733 annie Tue, Jun 10, at 07:18am
      how do i find out whos going to perform at the park...what singers can u help me with that...thank you

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7665 nidia Sun, Jun 08, at 06:50pm
      when is the puerto rican fest for 2008?

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7655 angie Sun, Jun 08, at 01:56pm
      so when is the parade this yr 2007

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7659 AYANA` Sun, Jun 08, at 01:36pm
      WHEN IS THE CARNIVAL THIS YEAR? (2008)

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7628 Pegz Fri, Jun 06, at 04:03pm
      This year (2008) will be my first year attending, and I'm soooooo excited!

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 7581 Natalie Galarza Thu, Jun 05, at 09:34pm
      i cant wait til next week!! im bringing a friend of mine this year cuz i told her i go every year and she said she wanted to come this year to see how it is. even though i moved out of chicago, my dad still lives there and he is going to take me and my friend katee. i would definitely tell someone who hasnt gone that they should go at least one day just to see how it is and to see our beautiful culture that we have. i gurantee they will have fun and enjoy the food. VIVA LAS PIEDRAS, PUERTO RICO!

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 6497 EVE MONARREZ Tue, May 13, at 11:27am
      Hi, I manage a record label and have 2 hip-hop artist that I would like to perform. Parkay has a hot new single on rotation "Hit it girl" with over one thousand spins so far.

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 6498 EVE MONARREZ Tue, May 13, at 09:32am
      Hi I manage a record label and have 2 hip-hop artist I would like to perform. Parkay has a hot new single "Hit it Girl" on rotation and currently has over one thousand spins. you can check out our websites www.myspace.com/forillarecords www.myspace.com/thebuttaboy www.myspace.com/gvgchico. please let me know what we need to do. I am also interested in renting a booth, to sell and give out product. thank you so much for your time. 773-827-7600

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 5440 Corinna Sun, Apr 13, at 12:53pm
      Hello I was wondering how to get in contact with someone who does booking for the festival. I have a great Brazilian funk folk band that would love to play at the festival in the future. If someone would get back to me with some info it would be gretly appreciated.

      Flag as inappropriate


    • 2453 jAZZy Tue, Dec 18, 07, at 1:30pm
      l0vin da drama in humbolt park cuz yo soy 100% puertorican

      Flag as inappropriate




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