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New Haven celebrates its 8th annual Caribbean Heritage Festival

Rev. Dr. Janice Hart and David Galligan dance to St. Luke’s Steelband during the 8th Annual Caribbean Heritage Festival on Saturday, June 24, 2023 in New Haven, Conn. The event featured plentiful amounts of regional music, dancing and family entertainment.
Joe Buglewicz
/
ǻ
Rev. Dr. Janice Hart and David Galligan dance to St. Luke’s Steelband during the 8th Annual Caribbean Heritage Festival on Saturday, June 24, 2023 in New Haven, Conn. The event featured plentiful amounts of regional music, dancing and family entertainment.

Caribbean Americans and New Haven residents flooded the New Haven Green on Saturday to celebrate the city’s eighth annual Caribbean Heritage Festival.

This year’s event opened with a prayer, followed by numerous cultural performances showcasing the talent of different Caribbean countries. Performances included drumming sessions and lessons, a steelband rendition, and lots of cultural singing and dancing.

, who was born in Jamaica but moved to the United States in 1987. When she moved, Holness was looking for ways to cling to her culture. She soon aligned herself with different Jamaican organizations, and eventually decided that she wanted a bigger connection to wider Caribbean culture.

. Over the years, the venue has changed to accommodate bigger crowds.

The annual event started off as a way of bringing Caribbean people together and has also become a way to preserve cultures through teachings.

This is especially important to Shermaine Cooke-Edmonds, an event planner for the festival who was born in Dominica.

“The young folks who are born here, they probably don’t get to go home as often or may not have ever gone. So [here] they actually get to see different islands and people that identify with their culture that’s at home,” Cooke-Edmonds said.

Judaen Brown, 30, and a Jamaican-American, is living proof of Cooke-Edmonds’ reasoning, Brown was born in ǻ, but strongly identifies with her Jamaican roots. This is her second year at the festival, and said she enjoying being surrounded by familiar foods and seeing cultural performances.

Performer Gammy Moses leads a short drum lesson during the 8th Annual Caribbean Heritage Festival on Saturday, June 24, 2023 in New Haven, Conn.
Joe Buglewicz
/
ǻ
Performer Gammy Moses leads a short drum lesson during the 8th Annual Caribbean Heritage Festival on Saturday, June 24, 2023 in New Haven, Conn.

This year, she brought her two younger cousins along with her. Her cousins were born in Jamaica, but Brown thought the festival could still be a good opportunity to keep them connected to their culture.

“It’s definitely important to connect to your roots and if you haven’t before, I think this is a great platform to do so,” Brown said.

Most vendors shared and sold Caribbean food, clothing and jewelry, or shared information about a specific country’s culture. One vendor booth, spearheaded by Yale Medicine, focused on providing informational resources about Alzheimer's disease. Planner Cooke-Edmonds says having this booth was a small way of getting Caribbean people to look into their health.

“We turn to teas and herbs, yes, but sometimes it's a bit further along than that. So if we bring the resources out to them, then they have first hand conversations while they’re having fun,” she said.

The event planners said they have already begun organizing next year’s event, and hoping for more representation from other Caribbean countries.

Flag bunting flutters at the Trinidad and Tobago booth during the 8th Annual Caribbean Heritage Festival on Saturday, June 24, 2023 in New Haven, Conn.
Joe Buglewicz
/
ǻ
Flag bunting flutters at the Trinidad and Tobago booth during the 8th Annual Caribbean Heritage Festival on Saturday, June 24, 2023 in New Haven, Conn.

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de ǻ, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programación que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para más reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscríbase a nuestro boletín informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

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You just read trusted, local journalism that’s free for everyone, thanks to donors like you.

If that matters to you, now is the time to give. Join the 50,000+ members powering honest reporting and a more connected — and civil! — ǻ.

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ǻ’s journalism is made possible, in part by funding from Jeffrey Hoffman and Robert Jaeger.