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New York Latin Culture Magazine®

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American Democracy Depends on Us Voting

“E-le-le, le-le-le, A-la-la, la-la-la-a…” Like it or not, America is changing. There is no way back, and the old ones have failed us. We need a new generation of leaders to guide us now. Please vote for our shared future. It’s the American way.

México Now Festival (Museo Soumaya, Ibrester/Adobe)

México Now Festival Brings Contemporary Mexican Art and Culture to New York City 🇲🇽

American Ballet Theatre, Cassandra Trenary & Herman Cornejo in Wheeldon's "Like Water for Chocolate" (Marty Sohl/ABT)

American Ballet Theatre Celebrates Twyla Tharp, Presents a Juliano Nunes World Premiere, and a Gala Tribute to Misty Copeland 🇺🇸 🇦🇷 🇧🇷 🇨🇳 🇫🇷 🇰🇷 🇪🇸

More Latin Culture This Week
Panama Separation Day (Gualberto Becerra/Dreamstime)

Panama Separation Day Celebrates the Founding of the Republic of Panama 🇵🇦

Things to do in NYC (AboutLife/Adobe)

Latin Things To Do in NYC

January | February | March | April | May | June | July | August | September | October | November | December

Latin Art

México Now Festival Brings Contemporary Mexican Art and Culture to New York City

CENTER FOR FICTION, Fort Greene, Brooklyn 🇲🇽

Independent 20th Century Contemporary Art Fair Highlights Installations, Self-Taught, Arab Women and Latin American Artists

CASA CIPRIANI, Financial District, Manhattan 🇦🇷 🇧🇷 🇫🇷 🇮🇹 🇻🇪

Art on Paper New York is a Contemporary Art Fair of Art Made On or From Paper

PIER 36, Lower East Side, Manhattan 🇦🇷 🇧🇷 🇫🇷 🇲🇽 🇪🇸 🇿🇦

Latin Books

PEN World Voices Festival 2025 Celebrates International Literature

GREENWICH VILLAGE, Manhattan

Nuyorican Poets Cafe Hosts the Nuyorican Poetry Slam and Other Events Offsite and Online While Under Nuyorican-struction

BOWERY POETRY CLUB, NoHo, Manhattan ~ Nuyorican Bowery Slam 🇵🇷
PUERTO RICAN TRAVELING THEATER, Hell’s Kitchen, Manhattan ~ Poetry Grand Slam 🇵🇷

EAST VILLAGE, Loisaida, Manhattan

Langston Hughes was a Harlem Renaissance Jazz Poet Who Spoke of Rivers

JOPLIN, Missouri, February 1, 1902 🇺🇸

Latin Comedy

Gabriel Iglesias, the Fluffy Guy Makes Brooklyn Laugh Again

KINGS THEATRE, Flatbush, Brooklyn 🇲🇽

New York Comedy Festival Makes America Laugh Again

IT’S ALL OVER Chelsea, Midtown, Times Square Theater District, Upper East Side, Upper West Side, Washington Heights, Manhattan
Flatbush, Williamsburg, Brooklyn 🇺🇸 🇨🇻 🇨🇴 🇩🇴 🇭🇹 🇮🇳 🇯🇲 🇲🇽 🇵🇪 🇵🇭 🇵🇷 🇪🇸 🇻🇪

Kings Theatre is a Concert Hall in a Restored Brooklyn Movie Palace

Majah Hype Caribbean Comedy
Fluffy, New York Comedy Festival 🇲🇽

FLATBUSH, Brooklyn

Latin Dance

México Now Festival Brings Contemporary Mexican Art and Culture to New York City

CENTER FOR FICTION, Fort Greene, Brooklyn 🇲🇽

Calpulli Mexican Dance Company “Día de Muertos” Brings the Mexican Family Tradition to Life

QUEENS THEATRE, Flushing Meadows, Corona Park, Queens 🇲🇽

American Ballet Theatre Celebrates Twyla Tharp, Presents a Juliano Nunes World Premiere, and a Gala Tribute to Misty Copeland

DAVID H. KOCH THEATER, Lincoln Center, Manhattan 🇺🇸 🇦🇷 🇧🇷 🇨🇳 🇫🇷 🇰🇷 🇪🇸

Latin Fashion

Metropolitan Museum of Art Reopens Galleries of African, Indigenous, and Oceanic Art

Michael C. Rockefeller Wing Reopening, African, Indigenous, Oceanic art 🇧🇯 🇨🇲 🇨🇴 🇨🇩 🇪🇨 🇪🇹 🇬🇦 🇲🇱 🇲🇽 🇳🇬 🇵🇪 🇸🇳
Iba Ndiaye: Between Latitude and Longitude, Senegalese contemporary art 🇸🇳
Superfine: Tailoring Black Style, Black dandy men’s fashion

MET FIFTH AVENUE, Upper East Side, Manhattan

New York Fashion Week February 2025 Shows Women’s Fall Winter Collections

WEST EDGE, Chelsea, Manhattan 🇺🇸 🇲🇽 🇵🇭 🇪🇸

Fashion Designers of Latin America (FDLA) 2025 are the Latin Side of New York Fashion Week

CANOE STUDIOS, Starrett-Lehigh Building, Chelsea, Manhattan
UNITED PALACE, Washington Heights, Manhattan
INNSiDE NEW YORK NOMAD, Chelsea, Manhattan
🇺🇸 🇨🇴 🇩🇴 🇲🇽 🇵🇪 🇵🇷 🇪🇸 🇻🇪

Latin Festivals

Day of the Dead, Día de los Muertos, is a Pan-Latin Family Celebration Whose Mexican Tradition Has Gone Global

OCTOBER 31 – NOVEMBER 2 🇲🇽

Jackson Heights Halloween Parade is Fun for Young Children

37TH AVENUE, Jackson Heights, Queens 🎃

Diwali, the Festival of Lights, is Celebrated in NYC’s South Asian and West Indian Communities

🇬🇾 🇮🇳 🇯🇲 🗽 🇸🇷 🇹🇹

Latin Film

México Now Festival Brings Contemporary Mexican Art and Culture to New York City

CENTER FOR FICTION, Fort Greene, Brooklyn 🇲🇽

United Palace Presents Latin Comedy, Film, Music, and Theatre

Dominican Film Festival 🇩🇴
El Alfa, Dominican dembow 🇩🇴
The Muse: Offerings to the Ancestors, Day of the Dead & All Saints Day altar 🇲🇽 🇮🇹

Dominican Film Festival New York Captures the Quisqueya Spirit

UNITED PALACE, Washington Heights, Manhattan 🇩🇴
ALIANZA DOMINICANA, Washington Heights, Manhattan 🇩🇴
AMC Empire 25, Times Square Theater District, Manhattan 🇩🇴

Latin Food

New York City Wine and Food Festival (NYCWFF) is NYC’s Premier Wine and Food Festival

SEAPORT, Financial District, Manhattan 🇨🇴 🇫🇷 🇪🇹 🇲🇽 🇳🇬

Creole Food Festival NYC Shines Cuisines of the American South, Mother Africa, The Caribbean, and Latin America

EMILY ROEBLING PLAZA, Brooklyn Bridge 🇺🇸 🇧🇷 🇩🇴 🇬🇵 🇨🇮 🇬🇫 🇻🇪
ARTFULL WALLS GALLERY, Harlem 🇺🇸 🇫🇷 🇪🇸

National Pisco Day Celebrates the Spirit of Peru

JULY 24 🇵🇪

Latin Music

México Now Festival Brings Contemporary Mexican Art and Culture to New York City

CENTER FOR FICTION, Fort Greene, Brooklyn 🇲🇽

Reina Sofía School Orchestra Makes Its Carnegie Hall Debut With a Profound Journey to the New World

CARNEGIE HALL, Midtown, Manhattan 🇪🇸

Roulette Intermedium is an Experimental Art and Performance Theater in Brooklyn

Mali Obamsawin “Sugarcane,” Indigenous jazz film score played live 🇺🇸 🇨🇦

BOERUM HILL, Brooklyn

Latin Parades

Jackson Heights Halloween Parade is Fun for Young Children

37TH AVENUE, Jackson Heights, Queens 🎃

Tompkins Square Halloween Dog Parade Softens Life’s Ruff Edges

TOMPKINS SQUARE PARK, East Village, Manhattan 🎃

Panamanian Parade NYC Celebrates Panamanian Independence

CROWN HEIGHTS, Brooklyn 🇵🇦

Latin Sports

El Clásico Real Madrid vs FC Barcelona is One of the World’s Most Watched Sporting Events

PEÑA MADRIDISTA NYC, Playwright Irish Pub, Garment District, Manhattan 🇪🇸

PENYA FC BARCELONA, Smithfield Hall, Chelsea, Manhattan ~ 🇪🇸

New York Red Bulls vs NYCFC is the New York Derby

SPORTS ILLUSTRATED STADIUM, Harrison, New Jersey 🇨🇲 🇨🇱 🇬🇦 🇬🇭 🇵🇦 🇵🇾 🇺🇾 🇻🇪

Billie Jean King National Tennis Center is One of the World’s Largest Tennis Complexes

US Open Tennis Championship 🇺🇸 🇦🇷 🇧🇷 🇧🇮 🇨🇱 🇨🇳 🇨🇴 🇫🇷 🇭🇰 🇮🇹 🇯🇵 🇱🇧 🇲🇽 🇵🇪 🇵🇹 🇷🇴 🇿🇦 🇪🇸 🇹🇼

FLUSHING MEADOWS CORONA PARK, Queens

Latin Theatre

Days of the Dead Festival is Fringe Theatre Inspired by Day of the Dead and Halloween

UNDER ST MARKS THEATER, East Village, Manhattan 🎃

Repertorio Español is New York’s Busiest Spanish-Language Theater

La Gringa, Puerto Rican comedy 🇵🇷
En el Tiempo de las Mariposas, Dominican drama 🇩🇴
La Golondrina, Spanish drama 🇪🇸
La breve y maravillosa vida de Oscar Wao, Dominican coming-of-age story 🇩🇴

KIPS BAY, Manhattan

Teatro SEA is America’s Latino Theatre for Young Audiences

“The True Story of Little Red ~ La verdadera historia de Caperucita” bilingual children’s theatre 🇵🇷

CLEMENTE CENTER, Lower East Side, Manhattan

Sponsored by the Best of New York

New York City’s leading Latin, Indigenous, European, African, Jewish, and Global cultural organizations support us because they support you. Let’s support them back!

Sponsors guide our editorial direction. We learn from them. They support the free editorial we do for small organizations that deserve coverage, but have no budget. Thank you! ¡Gracias ustedes!

92nd Street Y, New York (Cory Weaver Bright/92NY)

92nd Street Y, New York is a World-Class Cultural and Community Center That Serves All Communities

Brooklyn Museum (Demerzel21/Dreamstime)

Brooklyn Museum Combines African, Indigenous, Asian, Islamic, and Women’s Art with Community

Calpulli "Día de los Muertos" (Julieta Cervantes)

Calpulli Mexican Dance Company “Día de Muertos” Brings the Mexican Family Tradition to Life

Carnegie Hall (courtesy)

Carnegie Hall is One of the World’s Legendary Music Halls

Harlem Stage (Marc Millman)

Harlem Stage Develops Visionary Artists of Color

Hostos Center (courtesy)

Hostos Center is One of America’s Top Latin Performing Arts Centers

Melvis Santa (Zuza Gasiorowska)

Melvis Santa Afro-Cuban Jazz For The Ancestors

Ailyn Pérez in "Florencia el el Amazonas" (Ken Howard/Metropolitan Opera)

Metropolitan Opera is One of the World’s Great Opera Companies

National Indigenous Peoples of the Americans Parade NYC (Wirestock/Dreamstime)

National Indigenous Peoples of the Americas Parade Unites All First Nations and Friends

New York City Center Main Stage (courtesy)

New York City Center is One of NYC’s Premiere Homes for Dance and Theatre

NYU Skirball Center (Ajay Suresh/Wikimedia)

NYU Skirball Center is the New York University Performing Arts Center

Find your next project. Discover your next team. Do it on RISE.

RISE Theatre Directory Joins Diverse Theatre Professionals With Top Employers

Robert Browning Associates is a Global Music pioneer (Ildogesto/Adobe)

Robert Browning Associates is a World Music Pioneer

Siudy Garrido Flamenco (courtesy)

Siudy Garrido Makes Her Lincoln Center Debut with Latin Grammy-Nominated Dance Theatre “BAILAORA” Flamenco Reimagined

Teatro Real, Royal Opera of Madrid Orchestra Gala Musical Fantasy From Spain (Teatro Real)

Teatro Real, the Royal Opera of Madrid Orchestra, Plays a Gala Musical Fantasy From Spain Featuring Violinist María Dueñas, Soprano Saioa Hernández, and Conductor David Afkham

World Music Institute (Ildogesto/Adobe)

World Music Institute is a Leading World Music Producer

Sponsor New YorK Latin Culture

Latin, Latino, Latim ~ Tout Moun se Moun

Keith Widyolar in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, 2023
Getting ready for a teteo in Capotillo 42, the cradle of dembow in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; after leaving Puerto Rico 🇺🇸 🇵🇷 🇩🇴

¿KLK? Dime a ver. Editor Iroko “Kíko” Keith aquí con todos ustedes. Vamos a gozar la vida Latina juntos. ¡Ay bendito! Tú lo sabe.

What’s up? Iroko “Kíko” Keith Widyolar, the creator of New York Latin Culture Magazine, here. Everywhere I go, except New York City, people tell me, “you’re not from here.”

Claro que si. I’m a native-born multigenerational American of the United States who chooses to live in Spanish. My point of view is also Caribbean and Yoruba. I’m a son of Eleguá and Yemayá. My birth story is like a movie. ¡Aché!

My first home was in Boyle Heights, a Chicano neighborhood in Downtown Los Angeles. I was also raised in Bangkok, Thailand. I’m a 20-year New Yorker. Yo soy Boricua (de corazón) pa’ que tú lo sepa. In the Caribbean, Cubans and Dominicans say I am “aplatanado,” a foreigner who has adopted local customs. I’m just me.

The Magazine is my way of understanding and supporting the Brazilian, Argentine, French, Colombian, Puerto Rican, and Afro-Dominican families in my life’s journey. I have a mixed up Creole accent, but my family doesn’t speak English.

Soy calle. What I learned from the road is that we are far more African and Indigenous, and Latin culture is a far bigger part of United States culture, than most of us have been taught.

So over nearly 20 years, my concept of Latin has grown from the traditional Caribbean and Latin American; into the great mix of Indigenous peoples of the Americas plus our mother cultures in Africa and Europe, with Jewish, Arab, Indian, Chinese, Japanese, Irish, and even German influences.

“Tout moun se moun” is Haitian Kreyòl for “All People Are People.” There is only one human race and Afrika is Mother. “If you are not African, you are not human.” Please quote me on that.

Appearance is a false flag. We are all mixed, and when you learn to love and respect all peoples, your world grows exponentially. Mine has. I don’t just write about Latin culture, I live it. ¡Mi Gente, Ustedes!

Ven, ven, Iroko, ven ven ~ Kíko

How We Got Here

Puerto Rican NEA Jazz Master Eddie Palmieri (vaya con Dios) defined Latin in the Americas and the Latin influence on United States culture in the simplest way:

The Spaniard brought the African
The African put everyone to dance
In the States, they took away the drum,

and we got the blues“

Eddie Palmieri at the 92nd Street Y in 2016 🇵🇷

The blues is the root of most American (and some Caribbean) popular music and dance, including: jazz, rhythm and blues, country, rock, reggae, soul, funk, disco, house, hip hop, reggaeton, and trap. Even American country music originates in Mother Afrika.

Together, the Latin family has created music, dance, and food that is uniquely American, and loved around the world. Latin culture brings people together and turns the blues into joy. ¡Aguanilé!

The Kalûnga Line (Andreykuzmin)

Oye, you are crossing the Kalûnga

The Kalûnga is the border of the realms of the living and the dead in the traditional Kongo culture of Central Africa. It is the horizon in the Yowa or Dikenga Cross, the Kongolese cosmological diagram which represents the spiritual journey through the stages of life and death. Psychology texts use similar diagrams to describe psychological development. La Altagracia taught me this. ¡Mmm!

The Atlantic Ocean is the Kalûnga in life. Kongolese knew that anyone taken away across the ocean, never came back. It was believed to be a terrifying journey to the land of the dead. But it turns out there was life on the other side. More or less, that is the mix of Indigenous, European, African, and Asian peoples in the Americas, that we call Latin.

La Llamada de los Tambores
(The Call of The Drum)

A TV reenactment of traditional Bomba Puertorriqueña in Loíza Aldea, the Puerto Rican town with the strongest African Diasporic culture. 🇵🇷

Bienvenido a el areíto en el batéy del pueblo Latino. Somos uno en el tambor.
Escucha la llamada. La rumba ya se forma en el solar.
Yo prendo una vela.

(Welcome to the community gathering in the sacred circle of the Latin people.
We are one in the drum. Listen to the call. The party is starting in the patio. I lit a candle.)

Bom, bom, bom
ba-ta-ba-ta, ba, ta-ba, ta-ba
Bom-ba, ta-ba, Bom-ba, ta-ba
Bom-ba, ta-ba, Bom-ba, ta-ba

This call of the drum is Bomba Puertorriqueña Sicá.

“E-le-le, le-le-le, A-la-la, le-le-le“
Loíza Aldea, Loíza, Puerto Rico 🇵🇷

La salsa begins with the “Diana,” the call to prayer that asks for spiritual connection before we dance;
because by tradition, dance is how we pray.

“E-le, le-le, le-le-le-le“
La Marina, Matanzas, Cuba 🇨🇺

Rumba is what the first Africans in Cuba did, as soon as their hands were free.

“Yo Soy Ogun Balenyo”
Los Congos, Villa Mella, Santo Domingo, Republica Dominicana 🇩🇴

Palo, even more than merengue, is the root music of La República Dominicana.

“Diki riki riki riki, Diki riki riki riki, Diki riki riki riki, Di, Diki ri”
Capotillo 42, Santo Domingo, Republica Dominicana 🇩🇴

Dembow is the sound of the streets in La República Dominicana.

“Ay, ay, Ay-ay“
San Juan de Ulúa, Veracruz, México 🇲🇽

“Canta y no llores…”

“Aí aí aí“
San Basilio de Palenque, Bolívar, Colombia 🇨🇴

“Ajai, al son de los tambores…”

“Bim Bom, Bim Bim, Bom Bom“
Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil 🇧🇷

“O meu coração pediu assim, só…”

“I like to be in América“
San Juan Hill, New York City 🇺🇸 🇵🇷 🇮🇱

“Okay, buy me in América,
Everything free in América
For a small fee in América…”

¡ A-G-U-A-N-I-L-É !
El Barrio, Loisaida, Bushwick, y El Bronx 🇵🇷

“Aguanilé” is a healing prayer to Ogun.

Who answers the call? The community responds!

Latin is family and community.

¿Oye Cómo Va?

playingforchange.com Carlos Santana, Cindy Blackman, Tito Puente, Jr, Al Harban Brothers, André Siqueira, Andreus Valdés Torres, Chouloute Minouche, Cory Henry, Estevinson Padilla Valdés, José Valdés Terán, Karl Perazzo, and more.

We are Indigenous, European, African, Jewish, Arab, South Asian, East Asian, and everything in between.

“¿Oye cómo va? Mi ritmo, bueno pa’ bailar, mulata.”

Hey, how’s it going? My rhythm is good for dancing, Latina.

“Andando, andando, andando…”

(Walking, walking, walking…)

“Yo me tiro pa’l solar”

(I throw myself into the field)

Dios te bendiga

(God bless you)

¡Aché!

(Amen)

“E-le-le, le-le-le…”

(We start and end the dance with a call to Eleguá, God’s messenger, because dance is how we pray)

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