Adorned with large feather headdresses, Carnaval San Francisco participants colorfully hit the streets during their 46th annual celebration on Sunday.
The Grand Parade had a 60-contingent lineup, with over 3,000 artists representing the cultural heritages of Brazil, Mexico, Panama, Bolivia, Cuba, Peru, Puerto Rico, Nicaragua, Colombia, Trinidad & Tobago, Guatemala and El Salvador,
The free two–day festival covered multiple blocks in the Mission District, with five main stages, 50 local performing artists, 400 vendors and an abundance of international food samplings.
Every Carnaval parade begins with a blessing ceremony from local Aztec dancers, where pungent copal incense is burned while they drum and dance.
Carnaval San Francisco is the largest multi–cultural celebration on the West Coast, and first began in 1978.
The theme for this year’s Carnaval was “Honor Indigenous Roots,” and Rigoberta Menchú, a 1992 Nobel Peace Prize laureate from Guatemala who fought for the rights of Indigenous people in her home country, led Sunday’s Grand Parade.
Rodrigo Duran, executive director of Carnaval San Francisco, estimated this year’s parade attendance at 200,000.