Caribbean
Carnival
Most
of the islands in the Caribbean celebrate
Carnival. The largest and most well-known
celebration is held in Trinidad and Tobago.
Haiti, Antigua, Aruba, Cayman Islands,
Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica,
Sint Maarten, Saint Lucia, Saint Kitts,
Saint Thomas and Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines are also known for lengthy
carnival seasons and large celebrations.
Carnival
is an important cultural event on the
Dutch Antilles islands of Curaçao,
Sint Maarten, Saba, Sint Eustatius (Statia),
and Bonaire. Festivities include "jump-up"
parades with beautifully colored costumes,
floats, and live bands as well as beauty
contests and other competitions. Carnival
on these islands also includes a middle-of-the-night
j'ouvert (juvé) parade that ends
at sunrise with the burning of a straw
King Momo, cleansing the island of sins
and bad luck. On Statia he is called Prince
Stupid.
Carnival
has also been celebrated in Cuba since
the 18th century. The costumes, dances
and pageantry grew with each passing year,
with the participants donning costumes
from the cultural and ethnic variety on
the island. After Fidel Castro's Communist
Revolution, carnival's religious overture
was suppressed. The events remained, albeit
frowned upon by the state. Carnival celebrations
have been in decline throughout Cuba since
1960. |