Archive for the ‘Parades’ category

Ankling to the Pakistan Independence Day Parade

August 26, 2007

Today was the celebration of Pakistan’s 60th year of independence.  Technically, the anniversary was Tuesday, August 14, so you may have had your own celebrations earlier.  As part of today’s celebration, there was a NYC parade and Famous Ankles, a known habitue of such parades, couldn’t have been kept away with a stick.  Okay, maybe if it were a big stick, but then I would have missed an enjoyable time.

The parade was held on Madison Avenue between 41st Street and 27th (the parades on Madison Ave. typically go north to south).  My home and office are in the general area so it was a very easy commute to the site.

What did I expect from the parade?  My favorite parades are always the small ones and the biggest point is to see things other than the parade itself.  My “Famous Ankles” name comes from the Greek Independence Day parade in which my ankles became relatively famous by being next to two adorable little girls who received more pictures taken of them by official parade photographers (and people on the floats with cameras) than I could count.

As odd as it may seem for a Christian, my two favorite parades of all time are related to Moslem issues/countries.  First, the Shiite parade last year on Park Avenue was amazing for the intensity, friendliness, and neighborliness of the participants (several people in the march came to me, the most northern European of all spectators, to let me know what the parade was about, what everything symbolized, the history of the issues, and everything).  Second, the Persian Day parade from earlier this year had me interviewed by a Persian film crew who were thunderstruck that I knew why the parade was going in (they celebrate their New Year at the vernal equinox) and that I was delighted to see the incredible panoply of Persian culture including dancing girls and Zoroasterians.

So, to make a long story short:  I was looking forward to the Pakistan Independence Day parade and it didn’t let me down.  It was a small item that captivated me, but it was one that I enjoyed thoroughly and hope to be able to relate.

I showed up about 20 minutes before the start of the parade.  I was near the beginning of the parade so I did run into the NYC parade starting group:  cops and horses.

Cops and horses

The first marching group…wasn’t quite Pakistani…it was a marching band…playing Sousa!

Pakistan Day marching band

Okay, that’s not astonishing.  Even now, Sousa has a place at most parades.  And to get technical, this really wasn’t a Moslem parade.  It was a nationalist parade.  Sousa’s good for that:  nice marching music.

The next group was a group of police officers, apparently of Pakistani origin.  My picture didn’t come out.  Sorry, NYPD.

And then the dignitaries.  I did get a number of pictures, but I haven’t the foggiest as to who these people were.

Pakistan Day Parade - dignitaries 1

There is one item about the dignitaries that I don’t understand.  Who are the Black guys on each end?  They don’t look of an age that would lend themselves to being long-time supporters and friends of the Pakistani community.  They carried themselves more like bodyguards or something.  But that makes even less sense.

Another dignitary issue:  I’ve been to oodles of these parades.  Congressman Anthony Weiner is always a member of the nationality (at least for the day).  I know who he is because he loves to have people standing right behind him with a sign saying “Congressman Anthony Weiner”, just to make sure people know.  Maybe they wouldn’t give him a bullhorn today (and he does love a good bullhorn).  The mayor loves to come to these things.  No show today.  Both NY senators (Schumer and Clinton) come to them.  No show today.  It’s enough to make you feel for the Pakistanis.  To be snubbed by Weiner…  Of course, the obvious answer for all of the politicians is that they may not want to be associated with a country that is so Moslem and run under a military dictatorship.  But I would tend to say that today’s crowd would have been receptive to a democratic and tolerant message.  Hey, there were a lot of American flags being waved in addition to the Pakistan flag.

And that leads me to my absolutely favorite part of the parade.

As I stood waiting for the start, a family showed up to my immediate right.  Among the members were a doting dad and two cute little girls.  I had flashbacks to the Greek parade.  But, it turns out that the star wasn’t the little girls; it was “dad”.

Being little girls (one being “the girly-girl” and the other being “the tomboy”), they were as cute as you would expect and I asked “dad” if I could take their pictures.  He agreed, and even posed.

Pakistan Day Parade - dad 1

The second little girl was a lot more elusive, but they did get together and they did get the attention of official photogs.

Pakistan Day Parade - dad 4

(That’s “mom” collecting the kids.)

Pakistan Day Parade - photographer

For the most part, the girls just weren’t into the parade, but “dad” was.

Pakistan Day Parade - dad 2 

Pakistan Day Parade - dad 3

In that last picture, note that he has two American flags.  That’s the interesting part.  During the parade, he called to one of the people handing out placards and the like (they were inside the parade barricades).  He motioned her over and started speaking and then pointed out into the street.  About 25 feet away to my left was a fallen American flag, apparently dropped from one of the floats.  At his behest, the woman went out and picked up the flag and brought it back to “dad”.  Once he had it, “dad” didn’t let go of it.  “Dad” is a real American.  Yeah, it’s a small thing, but it strikes me just right.

The parade had started out on a quiet note.  A marching band playing some Sousa and then some bagpipers.

Pakistan Day Parade - bagpipers 1

And lots of floats.

 Pakistan Day Parade - floats 1

Pakistan Day Parade - float 05

I do kinda like the slogan “Life Comes At You Fast”.  It turns out to be a Nationwide Insurance Company slogan.  I had no idea it was a company float as the people obscured the logo, but it turns out that there is a small “Nationwide” sign there plus the company’s other slogan.  But, I didn’t see those during the march and thought the first sentence might be a homegrown/local slogan.  I shoulda known.  After all, I was on Madison Avenue, the home of advertising.

Finally, someone cranked up the music (which had been loud, but not too loud) and the dancing started.

Pakistan Day Parade - dancers 1

Pakistan Day Parade - dancers 2

The dancing lasted…one float.

An item I learned at the parade was who Allama Muhammad Iqbal was:  “the thinker of Pakistan”.  Actually, he turns out to have been a poet-philosopher who pushed to have a separate Moslem country split off from India.  He died in 1938, well before the independence of India from Britain and the partition of Pakistan from India.

Pakistan Day Parade - float 8

And then, it was over.  The whole parade was scheduled from 1pm to 3:30pm.  The actual parade lasted 18 minutes.  Well, it is a minor parade.  But it was pleasant.

-H

The annual Dominican Day Parade in NYC (will they vote for Miguel?)

August 12, 2007

Today (Sunday) was the annual NYC Dominican Day parade for the Dominican Republic.  I have to be specific because there is an island nation called Dominica, but they don’t seem to rate big, noisy, raucous, big, and noisy parades.  Wow!

The parade was on Sixth Avenue (AKA “Avenue of the Americas”, which no New Yorker calls it, but is appropriate for today).  The parade was from 1pm to 5pm and started at 36th Street and went, I believe, to 62nd Street (that’s right next to Central Park).  I knew it would be big, but I’ve been to big parades:  Puerto Rican Day, Thanksgiving, St. Patricks, among others.  I figured this would be well attended.  It was more than “well attended”.  It seems that everyone who even knows someone in the Dominican Republic was there.  Huge crowds.

I took my trusty new camera and immediately had problems.  Not with the pictures, though.  Instead, I decided to test out the video camera portion of it.  It worked great.  But, I couldn’t seem to get back to regular picture-taking mode.  I was hitting every button on the camera and trying every combination of setup and the like.  Finally, it started working again.  However, I did manage to get about 15 megabytes (about 1 minute) of video that does capture the crowd pretty well.  I’m not posting that.

Anyway, the Dominicans in attendance did seem to have an affection for whistles.  There was also some instrument that resembles nothing so much as a circular cheese grater.  It sounded a bit like the shake of a tamborine.  Some of the whistlers blew in a sort of tune with a cheese grater guy, but that was just a couple of people.  Usually, they just blew the whistles long and hard.

Dominican Day big crowds

I was at Bryant Park, the corner of 42nd Street and 6th Avenue.  There’s an elevated part and I managed to get to the top of the stairs, about 3 feet higher than the crowd in front of me.  Overall, the crowd in front of me was 6 or 7 people deep.  That’s the deepest I’ve seen any parade except Thanksgiving (which is a special case).

As usual, I was the whitest white guy there.  Although I was at a position that was off to the side, there was a near constant flow of people walking through the crowd around me to get to the sidewalk area that the cops were keeping moving.  I figured that maybe I was something of a beacon, “Let’s push through to that guy and then get to the sidewalk.”  “Which guy?”  “The really white guy.  You can’t miss him.” 

Almost all of the people cutting through were faultlessly polite.  Some had no need for politeness.  They had other means to get the crowds to part.

Guy with snake

Yes, that’s a snake around his neck.  We parted like the Red Sea.  He was one of three guys with snakes around his neck walking through the crowd (you can see another of them right behind him).  After the parade, I saw two more.

Anyway, the parade started at 1pm and the crowd, which was already pretty wound up, cranked the noise level to 11.

The parade featured a number of different participants, but the radio stations seemed to be the all-out favorites.  The crowd wanted loud, loud music; and the politicians really didn’t provide it.

There were a few new sights at this parade.  There were groups of what I can only describe as “colorful characters”.  I’m sure they are symbolic of some folk traditions, but I don’t know what they might be.

Colorful

Some of them had horns (really long horns) and some had devilish masks, and some just had bullwhips.  Yep, bullwhips.  That’s a new one on me.  At one point, about 20 characters came out cracking their whips and the crowd loved it.  Me, too.  Then there was a small group of others and then a group of kids with bullwhips.  They were really into it, but they just couldn’t crack the whips like their elders.

A standard sight at most NYC parades:  the large flag.
Large flag

And a non-standard sight, an unadorned rental truck (well, except for the grafitti).  I honestly have no idea what it was about.  It had no real place in the parade and was almost as if they had pulled out from a garage into the parade route.  If so, they had the ride of their lives.
rental truck

One thing I always seem to note in NYC parades.  I call it the “men-in-skirts” phenomenon.  With a bunch of the ethnic parades, I know what the men-in-skirts is about.  For example, the St. Patricks and the Scottish parades have men in kilts.  The Greek parade has their traditional army uniform.  Others have national dress stuff that looks like “skirts”.  I always expect something along these lines and the Dominicans supplied it.  I tried to get a picture.  I really tried.  The crowd went too wild when he was there and I couldn’t photograph him.  Who?  I haven’t the foggiest idea, but he was a bearded man in a woman’s dress (not a traditional outfit that I could tell) who also wandered about (more liked leaped and rushed about) with a parrot on his head.  Maybe an homage to a pirate?

Another sight of note:  a guy with an evil clown tattoo.  A big tattoo, that is.  Definitely an evil clown.  It still isn’t the most horrendous tattoo I’ve seen in NYC.

Another sight of note:  the cops were some of the biggest instigators of the crowds loudness.  A nearby cop was throwing toy cars and keychains up in the air and kept causing occasional lunges by crowd members.

Another sight of note:  my favorite moment in the parade (the snake was a close second) was a group of maybe 80 kids in bright, bright dress doing a run and jump routine.  Nicely done.  Very colorful and very invigorating.

A special moment:  it took 55 minutes before the first marching band.  Every parade has marching bands.  Constant ones.  The Dominicans had no need.  The second marching band came at 1 hour and 20 minutes into the parade.  I didn’t see any other after that.

The low point of the parade was when one of the political figures’ started to have their time in the sun.  I don’t know who Miguel is, but he’s running for president (I presume of the Dominican Republic) and his supporters put on the biggest damper around.  The crowd didn’t get quiet (no way for that), but there was about a 75% reduction in enthusiasm over the 25 minutes or so of the Miguel group’s march.  They just kept coming and they had no music.  The crowd wanted music!  Then, there was a bit of music coming from Miguel’s group, but it quickly passed.  Yawnsville ensued.  Finally, another group in the devils’ costumes came in and the music started anew and the crowd came back to life.

The low point outside of the parade:  at around 3pm, I was just standing there and a fight broke out right next to me.  It appeared that some people were, once again, trying to cut through the crowd and somebody resisted and somebody else threw a couple of punches.  Within an instant, there were two twenty-ish guys on the ground and then they popped up and one took off.  The other reached into his pocket for something, but it was only for something like a phone or camera that he handed to a friend and then took off after the first guy.  Not fast enough to catch him though.  My camera was ready.  I could have taken a picture, but I realized that my camera does flash automatically and I really didn’t want to draw their attention.  I didn’t move when it broke out and the crowd to my right stayed in place, but everyone to the left of me bolted about 1 second after the start.

That became another annoyance.  The old crowd was replaced by a new one.  This time, a young woman and her boyfriend were next to and in front of me.  The girl kept talking and talking (at one point, she called a friend on her cell phone and was screaming over the music).  Forgive me, but her voice sounded so much like a duck that I could barely contain myself.  I had to leave after a while.

And so, I ankled my way back to my co-op and managed a short nap.

-H

Why are my ankles famous?

July 15, 2007

This is an inside joke from one of my previous “adventures” in Manhattan.  One thing that I’ve found out about myself is that I pretty much enjoy parades.  Not so much for the parades, but for what happens in them and the general aura of people-watching that it brings out in me. 

On April 22, 2007, I went to the Greek Independence Day Parade held on Fifth Avenue and found myself standing next to two incredibly cute twin girls about 4 or 5 years old.  They were dressed in traditional Greek outfits and their parents had them sitting on the curb.  The parents, apparently Greek in origin, taught the girls to cry out “Zito Elada”, which apparently is the phrase-of-the-day for that parade.  At first, the girls were a little quiet but, after encouragement from their parents, discovered that yelling out “Zito Elada” brought them lots of attention and they liked it.  The attention was such that people in the parade, including official-type photographers, were snapping these girls’ pics constantly.  In later comments to others, I joked that my ankles had earned celebrity points throughout all of Greece. 

Once I started thinking about doing a blog, I considered naming it something like “wanderingNYC” or “NYCwanderer”, but they just didn’t seem to have the cache of “famous ankles”.

-H