Revellers, dancers and musicians filled the streets of west London yesterday for the annual Notting Hill carnival, one of the world’s largest street parties that, despite its cultural prominence, has struggled with funding challenges.
The 57th edition of the carnival – which celebrates the city’s diversity and how generations of migrants and their descendants have contributed to British society – was expected to attract more than one million people.
Yesterday’s celebrations, the event’s third and final day, featured trucks draped in colourful materials carrying bands and sound systems playing soca and reggae songs, surrounded by people in bright festival costumes.
The carnival traces its roots to the hundreds of thousands of migrants from the Caribbean, known as the ‘Windrush’ generation, who came to Britain between 1948 and 1971 to help rebuild the country following the Second World War.
Their arrival was accompanied by racial tensions and the unfair treatment of Black people. For some, the carnival’s message remains as important today.
“Continuing to do carnival every year just... reinforces the importance of equality and understanding everybody despite what background they’re from,” said 29-year-old Jocelyn Kuyaziwm, part of one of the carnival’s masquerade groups.
The carnival has been facing financial challenges, with its chair Ian Comfort telling the Guardian newspaper the event came close to not happening this year.
A review commissioned by the organisers highlighted safety concerns, particularly around crowd management, which required additional funding. There are also worries about violent incidents involving a small minority of attendees.