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As cities call off Cinco de Mayo parades, one Ohio community celebrates in full color

Two dancers hold colorful yellow and red skirts, twirling them through the air.
Erin Gottsacker
/
The Ohio Newsroom
Painesville's Cinco de Mayo celebration featured folkloric dancing, music and lots of Mexican food.

At Painesville鈥檚 Cinco de Mayo festival in northeast Ohio, a troupe of folkloric dancers prepared to take the floor.

They held up full, brightly colored skirts decorated with ribbons of red, green, blue and purple and waited for the music to start. Then, they spun and swooshed their skirts, creating swirls of color through the air.

Daniela Nicasio and Rosario Chavez have been dancing like this for years.

鈥淚t's very important because it's us trying to express our culture,鈥 Nicasio translated for Chavez. 鈥淚t's our roots, it's our life.鈥

They perform at Christmas, Mexican Independence Day and Cinco de Mayo 鈥 the holiday that recognizes the Mexican army鈥檚 victory over the French in an 1862 battle.

Painesville鈥檚 Hispanic community

In Lake County, east of Cleveland, the Hispanic population is one of the largest in the state, with more than as of 2023.

鈥淭he city [of Painesville] is now about a third Hispanic and the schools are more than 50% Hispanic,鈥 said Veronica Isabel Dahlberg, the executive director of HOLA Ohio, a nonprofit that helps Latino families, farm workers and immigrants.

It organized this Cinco de Mayo fiesta 鈥 the city鈥檚 third. Although the itinerary changed because of rain, its schedule was originally packed with Mexican traditions like lucha libre wrestling, Tex-Mex music, homemade pinatas and lots of Mexican food.

Folkloric dancers twirl colorful skirts through the air during a Cinco de Mayo presentation.
Erin Gottsacker
/
The Ohio Newsroom
Folkloric dancers twirl colorful skirts through the air during a Cinco de Mayo presentation in Painesville.

鈥淎ll of that is important,鈥 Dahlberg said. 鈥淚t really adds to the cultural fabric of the United States and it's something we should be very proud of in this country.鈥

Celebration cancellations 

This year, though, cities like and cancelled their Cinco de Mayo parades, citing fears over the Trump administration鈥檚 crackdown on immigration.

While Toledo still hosted its Cinco de Mayo celebration at the zoo, organizers told the city鈥檚 newspaper, , that they worried some people would be too nervous to attend.

Dahlberg says that鈥檚 not the case in Painesville.

"We're not scared to live here and we're not scared period,鈥 she said. 鈥淵es, there's a lot of rhetoric, there's some bad things going on, but we're going to continue to live our lives. We're not going to hide.

鈥淥ur community, they're very hard working, family-oriented. We're busy. People are going to work, they're having their quincea帽eras and life goes on. So, same thing with Cinco de Mayo.鈥

And despite the rain, community members turned out.

Scenes from Painesville鈥檚 Cinco de Mayo fiesta

The sidewalks were lined with vendors selling hand painted sacred hearts and alebrijes 鈥 tiny carvings of brightly colored fantastical animals.

Nearby, a row of food trucks sold quesadillas, tacos, street corn and artisanal ice cream.

Diana Guzman and her mom brought their food truck from Sandusky, an hour and a half west.

鈥淲here we're at, there's hardly any Hispanics,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o to come and see all our community is good.鈥

Maricela Daza Manejadora stands under a blue tent beside stacks of colorful embroidered hats.
Erin Gottsacker
/
The Ohio Newsroom
Maricela Daza Manejadora sells hats and bags at the Cinco de Mayo fiesta in Painesville.

Maricela Daza stood under her tent with stacks of intricately embroidered hats and bags from Latin America. In Spanish, she explained she takes her business, Latin Minga, to cultural festivals like this all over northeast Ohio.

鈥淚 think that we can get together, get to know each other a little more, enjoy the flavors, enjoy traditional dances,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think it's very important because that way little by little we are becoming part of the community of Painesville and other places.鈥

Although rain may have lowered turnout, organizer Veronica Dahlberg says the impact of this Cinco de Mayo fiesta isn鈥檛 limited to just one day in May: The collaboration that leads up to it 鈥 and the cultural understanding that results 鈥 makes the community stronger too.

Erin Gottsacker is a reporter for The Ohio Newsroom. She most recently reported for WXPR Public Radio in the Northwoods of Wisconsin.