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Celebrating Jozi

AUCKLAND PARK - Stilt-walkers, giant puppets, tireless dancers and fabulous floats - this year's Gauteng Carnival sported it all.

The tag-line of Gauteng Carnival is ‘spreading joy and happiness.’ And 2014’s carnival certainly succeeded with this aim – passersby watching the vibrant procession on 6 September were smiling from ear to ear.

The 20 000 participants taking part in the carnival danced and sang for 6km, never breaking their smiles or their formations.

The colourful procession weaved through the streets of Auckland Park, Melville and down toward Emmarentia, ending up at the Johannesburg Botanical Gardens.

And even then the show didn’t stop. Carnival goers were treated to live shows, acrobatics and flame throwers at night.

One Auckland Park resident, who’d walked out of his house to see what the commotion was about, ran back into his house to get a lawn chair and watch the enormous procession for two hours.

“I wasn’t expecting to spend most of my Saturday watching this,” James Olckers said.

“But I couldn’t stop looking, and now I can’t stop smiling; I want to go to the Botanical Gardens and continue watching the show.”

Acrobats, dancers, musicians, amazing costumes and large floats told the story of the journey of South Africa over the last 20 years, spokesperson for the Gauteng Department of Sport, Arts, Culture and Recreation Nomazwe Ntlokwana said. The event was organised by this government department.

Preparation for the carnival has been ongoing since April – with choreographers preparing dance troupes, seamstresses sewing costumes and welders getting a head-start on the floats. And the results were worth it.

*The main parade was preceded by a 4km schools parade starting at Milpark Primary School featuring 6 500 school pupils.

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