It was the dawn of a new J’Ouvert.
Thousands of revelers gathered in Crown Heights on Sept. 4 for the early-morning parade that unfolded without a fatality after years of deadly violence following the enaction of its strictest security measures yet. But the precautions, which included a significantly increased police presence, resulted in a festival largely unrecognizable to long-time attendees.
“It was dead,” said Imani Henry of Equality for Flatbush, an advocacy group that monitors police–community relations at the event. “There were no people and no vendors, and usually for there are a lot of people out.”
The beefed-up safety also included pushing the procession’s start time from 4 am to 6 am, setting up more floodlights along its route from Grand Army Plaza to Prospect Lefferts Gardens, and installing entry checkpoints with metal detectors — all of which sucked life from the historically spirited celebration, Henry said.
“It created a different energy,” he said.
And the heightened security did not entirely curb festival-related violence: Around 5 am, a 38-year-old man was shot in the abdomen and a 34-year-old man was hit by a bullet in his left leg, the New York Post reported. Both men were near the parade route, and the 38-year-old sought treatment at Kingsbrook Jewish Medical Center while the 34-year-old checked-in to Kings County Hospital.
Neither injury was life-threatening, according to authorities.