Today is Cinco de Mayo, the 5th of May, the holiday that celebrates Mexico's victory over the Second French Empire at the Battle of Puebla in 1862. This is not a big holiday in Mexico, mainly just celebrated in the City of Puebla, but it was also observed beginning in the 1860s by Latinos in California, Nevada, Oregon, and Texas. The Chicano movement began celebrating Cinco de Mayo in the second half of the twentieth century, and the holiday gained nationwide popularity beyond the Mexican American community in the 1980s due to advertising by beer, wine and tequila companies. Here in Denver, the largest Cinco de Mayo celebration in the state took place around Civic Center Park this past weekend. There were three stages featuring music and other entertainment, lots of artisans selling merchandise, and many food booths, as seen in the photograph on the left.
Most of Civic Center Park is currently undergoing a major restoration, and so this year the festival took place almost entirely on the streets surrounding the park, which seemed to work out just fine. But since all the big Cinco de Mayo celebrations took place this past weekend, are there any other celebratory events taking place today, the actual holiday? Definitely. It is a tradition here in Denver for many in the Hispanic community to get in their cars and cruise down Federal Boulevard, waving Mexican flags out the windows, honking horns, blasting loud music, etc. Once, a number of years ago, I somehow wound up driving down Federal on Cinco de Mayo. As I recall, you could only go south on this street, and all the cross streets were blocked off, forcing you to continue down Federal for what seemed like miles in bumper-to-bumper traffic. Tonight, 3 to 5 inches of snow is forecast, so who knows what the turnout will be? Wish I could be there, but as they say about the rodeo, once is interesting, twice is a mistake.



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