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Fifteen Candles -
Jul. 19,
2004
Quinceaneras--coming-of-age
parties for Latina girls--are going mainstream -
By
CAROLINA A. MIRANDA
It's the type of birthday party a little girl dreams
about: she is decked out in a flowing gown and
attended by a court that presents her with gifts.
For thousands of Latina teens in the U.S., that is
no fantasy. It's a coming-of-age rite known as a
quinceanera, a celebration held to mark a girl's
15th birthday (quince means 15).
The affairs can be as lavish
as any wedding. Quinceaneras usually begin with a
Roman Catholic Mass, followed by a reception in
which the girl dances a waltz with her father and
performs a dance with her court. All told, a typical
party costs about $10,000 for gowns, DJ, banquet
hall, limos and food.
Quinceanera festivities, which
have roots in Aztec and Catholic traditions, have
been around Latin America for centuries, but as the
number of Latinos in the U.S. has grown (there are
currently more than 35 million), such celebrations
have become more commercial and more mainstream.
Wal-Mart now stocks budget quinceanera gowns in 200
stores in 30 states, and the David's Bridal chain
has dresses made exclusively for the market. Royal
Caribbean offers seven-day quinceanera cruises out
of Miami (at $850 to $1,200 a head), which are
booked solid into next year. This fall the company
will offer cruises from Orlando, Fla., and Bayonne,
N.J.
And the gatherings are
spreading outside the Catholic Latino community.
Stephen Everett, a pastor at the nondenominational
Present Truth Ministries in Cape Coral, Fla., now
officiates at the ceremonies at the behest of Latino
congregants. Quinceanera planners report that courts
increasingly consist of multi-ethnic lineups. So
even if you're not Latino, an invitation for your
teenager may be in the mail.
With Latina girls dropping out
of school at high rates, some critics wonder whether
parents should put emphasis on such opulent revelry
and are trying to modify the tradition. "We
deemphasize the big party," says Graciela Fonseca,
who oversees Stay-in-School Quinceanera, a program
at the Hispanic Cultural Center of Idaho that helps
kids finish school. For most participants, however,
the event is about much more than the trappings.
"It's an opportunity to express your maturity and be
thankful," says Marlowe Veloz, a Miami teen who just
celebrated her quince aboard a cruise. "Every girl
should have that, whether she's Hispanic or not." |
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