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"parade month"
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#12880267
19 Oct 2025
Participants take part in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880268
19 Oct 2025
A participant takes part in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880269
19 Oct 2025
Participants take part in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880271
19 Oct 2025
Participants take part in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880272
19 Oct 2025
A participant takes part in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880273
19 Oct 2025
Participants in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025, draw an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880274
19 Oct 2025
An attendee wrapped in a rainbow flag blows bubbles during the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880275
19 Oct 2025
An attendee wrapped in a rainbow flag blows bubbles during the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12880277
19 Oct 2025
Participants take part in the annual LGBTQIA+ Pride parade and celebration in Orlando, Florida, on October 18, 2025. The event draws an estimated crowd of more than 200,000 people to the 21st annual Come Out With Pride celebration, known as the largest Pride event in the southeastern United States.
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#12727196
7 Sep 2025
Performers wear traditional costumes during a parade for the Chinese Hungry Ghost Festival in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on September 7, 2025. According to Taoist and Buddhist beliefs, the seventh month of the Chinese Lunar calendar, known as the Hungry Ghost Festival, is when the Gates of Hell open to let out spirits who wander the land of the living looking for food.
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#12727197
7 Sep 2025
Performers wear traditional costumes during a parade for the Chinese Hungry Ghost Festival in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on September 7, 2025. According to Taoist and Buddhist beliefs, the seventh month of the Chinese Lunar calendar, known as the Hungry Ghost Festival, is when the Gates of Hell open to let out spirits who wander the land of the living looking for food.
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#12723503
6 Sep 2025
''Pulukisi,'' the mythical elephant of Hindu Lord Indra, god of rain, parades through Kathmandu, Nepal, on September 6, during Indra Jatra. The ascension of three living deities--the Kumari, Ganesh, and Bhairab--in the form of humans on three different chariots that tour around the city is an annual festival observed for eight days starting from Bhadra Shukla Chaturdashi of the Nepali month of Bhadra. The fourth day of the waxing moon in the month of Bhadra, according to the lunar calendar, is Indra Jatra, which has been followed for a long time. Legends say that the Indra Jatra festival is observed to celebrate the victory of the gods over the demons to release Jayanta, the son of Lord Indra. It is believed that Lord Indra comes to the earth to collect white flowers for his mother but is caught by the locals (the Newars) of the Kathmandu Valley and kept bound. After Lord Indra's mother, Jayanta, comes and discloses his identity, a procession takes place, which continues to this day. Indra, the god of rain, is worshiped in this festival primarily celebrated by the Newar communities following both Hinduism and Buddhism.
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#12723504
6 Sep 2025
''Pulukisi,'' the mythical elephant of Hindu Lord Indra, god of rain, parades through Kathmandu, Nepal, on September 6, during Indra Jatra. The ascension of three living deities--the Kumari, Ganesh, and Bhairab--in the form of humans on three different chariots that tour around the city is an annual festival observed for eight days starting from Bhadra Shukla Chaturdashi of the Nepali month of Bhadra. The fourth day of the waxing moon in the month of Bhadra, according to the lunar calendar, is Indra Jatra, which has been followed for a long time. Legends say that the Indra Jatra festival is observed to celebrate the victory of the gods over the demons to release Jayanta, the son of Lord Indra. It is believed that Lord Indra comes to the earth to collect white flowers for his mother but is caught by the locals (the Newars) of the Kathmandu Valley and kept bound. After Lord Indra's mother, Jayanta, comes and discloses his identity, a procession takes place, which continues to this day. Indra, the god of rain, is worshiped in this festival primarily celebrated by the Newar communities following both Hinduism and Buddhism.
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#12632518
10 Aug 2025
Devotees gather to watch the procession of large idols of the Hindu god Ganesha, which are carried through a street during preparations for the upcoming Ganesh Chaturthi festival in Mumbai, India, on August 10, 2025. The festival, which honors the elephant-headed deity, is marked with processions, prayers, and cultural events across the state later this month.
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#12632503
10 Aug 2025
Retail shop sellers watch a procession of a large idol of the Hindu god Ganesha being carried through a street during preparations for the upcoming Ganesh Chaturthi festival in Mumbai, India, on August 10, 2025. The festival, which honors the elephant-headed deity, is marked with processions, prayers, and cultural events across the state later this month.
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#12632230
10 Aug 2025
People dress as cows and parade through the alleyways and courtyards of the Kathmandu Durbar Square, a UNESCO World Heritage site, in Kathmandu, Nepal, on August 10, 2025, to commemorate their loved ones who have passed away within a year, praying for their salvation. Dressed as cows, who are on a brief pilgrimage to give salvation to the souls of their departed loved ones, thousands of people march through Basantapur Durbar Square, marking the annual festival of Gai Jatra. In this time-honored tradition, people of all ages, in the guise of cows and lunatics, go around the city wearing odd costumes to commemorate those who have died within the past year. Bereaved families offer fruits, bread, beaten rice, curd, and money to those participating in the procession, including the cows. This festival of cows, commonly called ''Gai Jatra'' or the ''Cow Festival,'' falls on the first day of the waning moon in the month of Bhadra (Bhadra Sukla Pratipada), the fifth month of the Lunar calendar. It is mostly observed by the Newari and Tharu communities of Nepal. According to sayings, the festival derives its name from the religious belief that the deceased, during their journey to heaven, cross a legendary river by grabbing the tail of a cow. The tails of cows demonstrated today are also credited for helping the deceased to get across Baitarni, a legendary river, to enter heaven. The persons who are demonstrated with the attire of a cow also have an artificial tail, which serves the same purpose.
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