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Emancipation Day is a national holiday in Trinidad and Tobago which celebrates the Emancipation of slaves in the British Empire on August 1, 1834. In 1985 Emancipation Day replaced Discovery Day among the holidays of Trinidad and Tobago. Emancipation is celebrated with the festival called Kambule. Kambule is Kikongo (language of the Congo) for Street Procession. The Kambule pays homage to our African Ancestors, our forefathers, who commemorated the end of slavery by processing through the streets. Reflection points are identified along the way from the Brian Lara Promenade to the Queen’s Park Savannah. There are three main Kambule points of reflection: 2nd Stop - The procession then moves to Besson Street, which was one of the early settlement areas of the Yorouba people of Africa. After the abolition of slavery, some of the people, mostly Yorouba, left the estate to seek employment as close to the town center as possible. Not being able to actually live or afford accommodation in Port of Spain, they occupied this site which now houses the Police Station and the square. 3rd Stop - All Stars Pan Yard, this pan yard was the site of the 1881 Kambule riots.
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