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Philly’s Puerto Rican Day Parade embodies strength of the mainland’s second-largest Boricua community

Philly’s Puerto Rican Day Parade embodies strength of the mainland’s second-largest Boricua community

  • The Puerto Rican Day Parade in Philadelphia embodies the strength of the mainland’s second-largest Boricua community, celebrating both Puerto Rican culture and identity.
  • The parade is a public demonstration of community identity, using symbols and traditions to communicate what it means to be Puerto Rican, whether islander or diasporic, historical or contemporary.
  • Being Puerto Rican means different things to different people, with ambivalence about identity and history being a common experience for many, including the author, who identifies as both Boricua and Latino.
  • The parade also highlights the complexities of cultural traditions and political power, with issues like poverty, violence, and health inequities affecting Puerto Rican communities in Philadelphia.
  • Ultimately, the parade is a gesture of love that straddles comfort and grief, reflecting the mixed feelings and ambivalence that many Puerto Ricans experience about their identity and connection to both the island and the diaspora.

The annual parade is an expression of love for both Puerto Rico and Philadelphia. Photo courtesy of VISIT PHILADELPHIA®

Picture this: Puerto Rican flags, referred to as “la monoestrellada” – the “one-starred” – everywhere you look. The smell of alcapurrias – if you can find them! – and other savory fritters wafting through the air. The rhythms of salsa or Bad Bunny’s trap reggaetón blasting out of speakers. Almost everybody speaking some version of “españinglés,” or Spanglish.

Philadelphia’s annual Puerto Rican Day Parade is chaotic, loud and hard not to love.

On Sunday, Sept. 28, 2025, Boricuas from across the city will converge on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway to celebrate their heritage and traditions with music, dance, floats, food and general revelry. Boricuas is how Puerto Ricans often refer to themselves, as the island was called Borikén by the Indigenous Taínos before the Spaniards arrived in 1493.

I am Puerto Rican, island-born and raised. I currently live in Philadelphia and teach theology and Latin American studies at Villanova University. I call myself a “diasporican” in contrast to what I would call “islandricans,” or Puerto Ricans who live on the island.

For me and many other diasporicans, being Puerto Rican embodies mixed feelings, or ambivalence, about identity and history. For example, I am both Boricua and Latino, de allá y de aquí. I grew up colonized yet now live in the colonizing country. I think in two languages. I eat arroz, habichuelas y carne guisada and also hamburgers. I like Guns N’ Roses and Calle 13. I perform my Puerto-Ricanness in myriad ways.

Puerto Rican identity is complicated

Parades are public demonstrations of community identity.

In the Puerto Rican Day Parade, symbols and traditions are used to communicate what being Puerto Rican is and means, be it islander or diasporic, historical or contemporary, and traditional or alternative. But these symbols and traditions are open to interpretation.

Waving la monoestrellada can mean pride in Puerto Rican culture and history. Or value and respect for the island as a U.S. territory. Or even a call for independence from the U.S. Meanwhile, parade dancers perform Indigenous, Spanish and Afro Caribbean dances for what is ostensibly a singular ethnicity.

Being Puerto Rican means different things to different people while being strictly policed by those same people.

For example, Boricuas are often bilingual, yet their proficiency in Spanish and English can be used to measure just how Puerto Rican they are. On the one hand, Spanish is the most common language spoken at home for islandricans, yet English is more prevalent among diasporicans. On the other hand, speaking Spanish with a gringo accent could mark you as an outsider on the island, while not speaking English at all could be seen as backward in the diaspora.

It’s complicated.

The power of ‘arraigo’

Cultural anthropologist Yarimar Bonilla captured this ambivalence in her July 20, 2025, op-ed in the Puerto Rican newspaper El Nuevo Día.

Bonilla discusses Bad Bunny’s 30-date concert residency in Puerto Rico. Bad Bunny chose the island for his shows, adjusted dates and pricing to favor islandricans, and art-directed the concert to highlight Puerto Rican history and culture.

“[The concert] is not simply an unprecedented artistic achievement; it is also a political statement,” Bonilla writes. “Arraigo (rootedness) is not what binds [Puerto Ricans], but what empowers us.” Another version of the op-ed was published in English in The New York Times on Aug. 3, 2025.

According to Bonilla, Bad Bunny’s concert series can be interpreted as “a gesture of love” – love for Puerto Rico, no matter where you are, and for all Puerto Ricans, no matter how they are.

Man in beige clothes and hunting cap sings while surrounded by circle of men wearing straw hats and some playing drums

Bad Bunny performs during the opening night of his No Me Quiero Ir De Aqui (I Don’t Want to Leave Here) residency in San Juan.
Kevin Mazur via Getty Images

Empowerment in spite of mixed feelings

Puerto Ricans have been a vibrant presence in Philadelphia for more than a century.

According to U.S. Census Bureau data, a little over half of all Latinos in the city are Puerto Rican. Indeed, Philly is home to the second-largest Puerto Rican community outside Puerto Rico, after New York City. Philly diasporicans certainly are a proud local bastion of Latin identity, and the parade is an outpouring of civic love via flags, music, dance and food.

And yet, diasporican arraigo also demonstrates precarity. Just look at poverty, violence and health and housing inequities that have long afflicted Fairhill and West Kensington, two adjacent and heavily Puerto Rican neighborhoods in North Philadelphia.

In a world marked by migration and disparate allegiances to empire, identity must also embrace uncertainty. Islandrican becomes diasporican, vice versa and back again. Cultural traditions shift, and the relationship to political power doesn’t stay still.

Historically, the U.S.’s treatment of Puerto Ricans both on the island and in the diaspora has fluctuated. On the one hand, it has been significantly helpful, as when island economic conditions improved through U.S. intervention after World War II, although those improvements came at a significant cost to local farming. On the other hand, it has been outright abusive, as when researchers unethically tested birth control pills on the island in the 1950s, or when the federal government undertook a slow and mismanaged response after Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico in 2017.

The parade, then, demonstrates a rootedness that is complex and plural, entangled with shifting identities and complicated histories. It is a gesture of a love that straddles comfort and grief. Is not love like that always, with mixed feelings?

As a recent diasporican, I am still working through how to best express my love for my community and the city. I am a proud Boricua, arraigado (rooted) in the island and in Philly. And you will find me among the throngs attending the 2025 parade, wearing my one-starred beret, eating an alcapurria and dancing salsa quite awfully.

Read more of our stories about Philadelphia.

The Conversation

Héctor M. Varela Rios does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What is the significance of the Puerto Rican Day Parade in Philadelphia?
A. The parade is an expression of love for both Puerto Rico and Philadelphia, showcasing the strength of the mainland’s second-largest Boricua community.

Q. What does “Boricuas” refer to?
A. Boricuas refers to people of Puerto Rican descent, often used by island-born individuals to describe themselves, as opposed to “islandricans,” who live on the island.

Q. How do diasporicans express their Puerto Rican identity?
A. Diasporicans perform their Puerto-Ricanness in various ways, such as speaking two languages, eating traditional foods like arroz and habichuelas, and enjoying music from artists like Guns N’ Roses and Calle 13.

Q. What is “arraigo” according to cultural anthropologist Yarimar Bonilla?
A. Arraigo refers to the feeling of being rooted or connected to one’s community, culture, and history, which empowers individuals rather than binding them.

Q. How does the Puerto Rican Day Parade reflect the complexities of Puerto Rican identity?
A. The parade demonstrates a complex and plural rootedness, entangled with shifting identities and complicated histories, showcasing both pride and ambivalence about being Puerto Rican.

Q. What is the significance of Bad Bunny’s concert residency in Puerto Rico according to Yarimar Bonilla?
A. Bad Bunny’s concert series can be interpreted as “a gesture of love” – love for Puerto Rico, no matter where you are, and for all Puerto Ricans, no matter how they identify.

Q. How does the U.S.’s treatment of Puerto Ricans affect their identity and community?
A. The U.S.’s treatment of Puerto Ricans has fluctuated between being helpful and abusive, with improvements in economic conditions coming at a significant cost to local farming, and outright abuse through unethical research and slow responses to natural disasters.

Q. What does the author mean by “diasporican” versus “islandrican”?
A. The author uses “diasporican” to describe themselves as someone who is Puerto Rican but lives outside of Puerto Rico, while “islandrican” refers to those who live on the island.

Q. How does the author’s identity as a diasporican relate to their love for the community and city?
A. The author identifies as both Boricua (rooted in the island) and arraigado (rooted in Philadelphia), expressing their love for the community through participating in events like the Puerto Rican Day Parade.