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New York City Cancels June Events Including the Pride Parade on Its 50th Anniversary

New York City Cancels June Events Including The Pride Parade On Its 50th Anniversary
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A man rides past The Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street as New York City attempts to slow down the spread of coronavirus through social distancing on March 27, 2020. John Lamparski—Getty Images

By Associated Press
April 20, 2020

(NEW YORK) — New York City won’t allow public events in June, including three of the city’s major annual celebrations: the National Puerto Rican Day Parade, the Celebrate Israel parade and the Pride parade on its 50th anniversary.

Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Monday that the events would be canceled or at least postponed, saying that it was a painful but necessary step as the city continues to fight the coronavirus.

“They will be back, and we will find the right way to do it,” he said, allowing that it’s not yet clear whether it will be realistic to reschedule the events this year.

The Pride parade began in 1970 as a way to commemorate the Stonewall rebellion the year before, when a police raid at the Stonewall Inn bar sparked a resistance by gay men, bisexuals, lesbians and transgender people and led to the development of more extensive and militant LGBTQ activist groups than the U.S. had seen before.

The Puerto Rico and Israel parades are also touchstones in a city that has the largest Jewish population outside Israel and the biggest Puerto Rican community off the island.

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