Deseret Morning News Utah City Guide
2005
Midvale festival is going strong
By Deborah Bulkeley Deseret Morning News
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Fausto Rivas has been organizing Midvale's fiesta since
its inception.
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Shantel Cornejo of Chile performs with Ballet Folklorico
Citlali as part of Mexifest Cinco de Mayo celebration at the Salt Palace last year.
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When the idea of starting a Cinco de Mayo celebration in Midvale was first pitched
to Fausto Rivas, he didn't know if it was a realistic goal.
Now he's readying for the 18th annual event, which will
be Saturday at Midvale City Park.
The event, organized by Rivas, his family and friends, has
grown so much that Rivas says with a smile, "They don't know me as Fausto anymore,
it's Mr. Cinco de Mayo."
The annual event is one of several Cinco de Mayo festivals
planned this weekend along the Wasatch Front. It's a celebration of the 1862 Battle
of Puebla, in which the Mexico army defeated French invaders.
Mexifest at Washington Square in downtown Salt Lake City
will include a parade for the first time this year. Other festivals will be held
at Centro Civico Mexicano, Centennial Park in West Valley City and in Ogden at the
Municipal Gardens.
The holiday isn't widely celebrated in Mexico, but it has
become a fixture among Mexican-Americans because of the role Chicanos played in
the victory, said Armando Sol—rzano, University of Utah associate professor of ethnic
studies.
The general who led the Mexican Army was a Chicano, born
in Texas, and Chicanos sent some $200,000 to Mexico to support the Army and enlisted
as volunteers, Sol—rzano said.
Mexican Americans are also trying to differentiate between
Cinco de Mayo and Mexico's Independence Day, Sept. 16, which is widely celebrated
by Mexican nationals, he said.
"Sept. 16 is definitely a Mexican holiday, but we are
not in Mexico," he said. "There are a lot of reasons why Cinco de Mayo
is more relevant to the majority population of the United States."
Rivas, originally from Tanhuato, Michoac‡n, Mexico, said
former Midvale Mayor Everett Dahl had approached him with a proposition during a
political campaign. At the time, the only Cinco de Mayo event that Rivas knew of
was held at Centro Civico.
"He was thinking there ought to be a Mexican fiesta,"
Rivas said. "I was thinking we don't have a chance, we don't have support,
we don't have money."
But Dahl offered to help Rivas start the festival if Rivas
would help out on Dahl's campaign, and he won.
The first year, 1988, only about 35 people showed up, Rivas
said. Rivas stuck with it and it grew. There's now a committee that organizes Friday's
Miss Cinco de Mayo pageant, and Saturday's parade and festival.
About 7,000 people are expected to attend the festival,
which features bands, including mariachi musicians, dancing, and food.
Every year organizers go door to door to raise funds for
the event. Britini Sanchez is working on fund raising for the first time this year.
It's amazing, she said, how excited donors are about the event.
"Everybody knows Fausto," she said. Rivas smiles
as he says he's "just a kid" at 71. He says he hopes the committee will
take over when he retires, but is quick to add he has no plans to retire anytime
soon. E-mail: dbulkeley@desnews.com
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