News Release
For Immediate Release
July 25, 2008, Friday - 7:40pm
Contact: Bob Cooper - prguynow@yahoo.com, (401) 447-6474 Days/Eves
Rhode Island Puerto Rican Festival Opens on
Time
Impromptu Storytelling and Pride fill the
air
(Providence, RI, USA) The annual Puerto Rican Festival opened at Providence
Piers Friday evening complete with carnival rides, ethnic and American food,
refreshments and a good dose of Puerto Rican culture. The festival is for
three days, and there will be a parade honoring veterans of all nationalities
on Sunday.
But there's more to this story. Four days before opening day, opponents to
festivals at Providence Piers surfaced with issues regarding zoning, licensing
and parking. As more opponents surfaced and objections began to pile up money
grew scarce and it looked like the festival was in serious
jeopardy.
News media and wire services began to pick up the story, and before long
some of the organizers were receiving words of encouragement from people
as far away as Florida , Chicago and Los Angeles . Suddenly finding themselves
in the spotlight it became a matter of Puerto Rican pride. Providence Mayor
David Cicilline was asked to intervene, and he responded by setting up a
special meeting between the city boards and organizers to resolve the
issues.
The city boards demanded paperwork, plans, relocation of fencing and that
the stage be moved within twenty four hours. The weather was poor with driving
rains and flooding making work slow and tedious. Organizers worked tirelessly
while soaked to the skin in order to return the following day with proof
of compliance and the right paperwork in order to receive the liquor license.
When it appeared they would succeed with two hours to go, another demand
was made in the 11th hour for more documentation not mentioned
earlier.
They succeeded, and that evening as the festival opened pride took hold as
festival goers told each other how this was the festival that almost wasn't.
One older man in a Puerto Rican T-Shirt had listeners swelling with pride
as he told the story. "They never gave in and never gave up. They moved fences
and equipment soaked to the skin by heavy rains and flooding. They raised
the money and got the stage company to come back here and move that huge
stage 100 feet across an invisible line some clueless official had come up
with just the day before. They had no equipment to work with and moved everything
by hand. The city bureaucrats had no choice but to grant the licenses out
of respect," he concluded. "These Boricua represented!"
So on the 515th anniversary of the year Columbus set foot on Puerto Rican
soil, another story of determination and vision is being told, and everyone
agrees that if this isn't the biggest Puerto Rican festival Rhode Island
has ever had, it's certainly the one with the most pride.
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News Reporter info page is here: http://www.pressdeptnews.com/blockfest/index.html