El Museo Del Barrio celebrated their 47th annual Three Kings Day parade in Spanish Harlem on Friday, Jan. 5 despite frigid temperatures.
Photo ET Rodriguez
If you saw camels walking through Spanish Harlem on Friday, Jan. 5, your eyes werenโt playing tricks on you. For the 47th year, El Museo Del Barrio at 1230 Fifth Avenue celebrated its annual Three Kings Day parade.
Founded in 1969 with a focus on Latino artists, El Museo has been honoring the traditionally Hispanic celebrated holiday since 1977.
โThereโs 60 million Latinos in the U.S. and this is a way of celebrating and a way of showing that this is a diverse city and that Latinos are part of the cultural fabric of New York,โ said Patrick Charpenel, executive director of El Museo who is from Mexico and lead the parade from 106th to 115th streets along Park Avenue.
This yearโs theme was, โTradiciones: Keeping Our Stories Alive,โ as poets, educators and writers were invited to be the honorary kings, padrinos (godfathers) and madrinas (godmothers) of the parade. Some notable names were honorary king, Leticia Rodriguez, executive director of La Casa de la Herencia Cultural Puertorriqueรฑa (House of Puerto Rican Cultural Heritage); 2021 Bronx Poet Laureate, Haydil Henriquez; author and playwright, Darrel Alejandro Holnes and others.
Three Kings Day is big amongst the Hispanic community and traditionally celebrated on Jan. 6 which marks the day of Epiphany in the Gospel of Matthew when the three wise men, also known as the three kings or the Magi, arrived at the newborn baby Jesus bearing gifts of frankincense, myrrh and gold. Caspar, Melichior and Balthasar traveled 12 days and nights across the desert to greet the son of God and their journey is the basis of the โ12 Days of Christmas.โ
The holiday is revered with small gifts and the cutting of the King Cake also known as la Rosca de los Reyes โ (rosca is a sweet bread traditional in Spain, Mexico and other Latin American…
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