90th St Antonio Procession June 2, 2024, Providence, Rhode Island

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 24 ก.ย. 2024
  • Cape Verdeans who live, work, play, and contribute to Rhode Island’s rich,
    ethnic diversity joined together with many from Massachusetts, Connecticut, and beyond on June 2, 2024 to revive a cherished tradition - the St. Antonio Procession.
    The St. Antonio Cape Verdean Association, Rhode Island’s first Cape Verdean beneficent society, provided health and death benefits to its members and is renowned for its 27 Power Street dances and feasts that nurtured the social, cultural, and spiritual needs of their community. It was established 90 years ago in 1934 at the height of the Great Depression
    by Janencino Mello, Frank Freitas and other Cape Verdean men and women immigrants who lived in the Fox Point area of Providence previously known as Tockwotton.
    Tockwotton was the first settlement in Rhode Island for Cape Verdeans, and they were the first voluntary immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa. Their community grew from the late 19th century before being displaced by Route 195, urban renewal and gentrification.
    “This procession commemorates our traditions of unity, collaboration and resilience,” said filmmaker and historian Claire Andrade-Watkins, PhD whose grandmother Celestina Andrade was one of the founding members of the association. “Women are the culture bearers of our community, and I am proud to be part of the Tockwotton Fox Point Cape Verdean Heritage
    Place (TFPCVHP) team that organized this and past processions. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the last procession was held in 2019.”
    Continued Andrade-Watkins, “The Tockwotton Fox Point Cape Verdean experience that we are uplifting is both a uniquely Providence story and one with national resonance. This procession showcases some of our community’s rich history as well as our significant role as Cape
    Verdean men and women in the culture, economy and life of Providence and beyond.”
    The theme of the procession is Following In Their Footsteps, and continues the traditions of the St. Antonio Association founders. It starts with the 11:30AM mass at Our Lady of the Rosary Church, 21 Traverse Street. The procession steps off at 1:00PM from the corneof Benefit and Wickenden Streets, then goes up Wickenden Street to East Street, and finally
    crosses the walkway bridge into India Point Park where we will gather at the proposed site of the Tockwotton Fox Point Cape Verdean Heritage Place commemorative memorial.
    Many of the Tockwotton Fox Point residents in the mid-70s helped in producing the proof of concept for India Point Park being viable as a park for the community. They worked with others to stand up the first Festival on the River at India Point Park in 1975. The Festival evolved into the annual Cape Verdean Independence Day celebration.
    The procession includes spoken word performances, Cape Verdeans who served our country, a military salute, and drummers from the St. Antão Culture and Soccer Club, of Pawtucket, Batukada Otu Level, of New Bedford, and renowned djembefola Sidy Maigi, of Providence. At the park, there will also be a drumming circle to commemorate the ancestors and share reflections.
    Also highlighted within the procession is the Sheldon Street Church, Local 1329 of the International Longshoremen's Association (I.L.A), and Boys & Girls Club alumni. Sheldon Street Church, established in 1905, was the first Cape Verdean Protestant Church in the United States and is the last remaining Cape Verdean institution from Tockwotton. Tockwotton’s many longshoremen were part of Local 1329, founded in 1933, and many of its descendants continue to work in the Port of Providence. The Fox Point Boys & Girls Club, previously located on South Main Street, is the oldest continually operating Boys & Girls Club in the country.

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