It was fun, thrilling, and colourful at the Lagos Fanti Carnival, which had guests, ladies and fans walk the streets of Lagos Island and come alive in a riot of feathers, sequins, and samba-infused Yoruba rhythms.
During the Fanti Carnival held on Easter Monday at the Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS), there was a potpourri of samba music, performances by the carnival ladies, even
as the air was thick with the scent of street food and the thunder of drums.
The Awakening of the Neighborhoods
Long before the official parade starts, the historic “Brazilian Quarters” of Lagos Island are buzzing. Each neighbourhood—Lafiaji, Campos, Okepopo, Olowogbowo—is a rival kingdom of colour.
At the 2026 celebration, there was the Okoo-Faji, parading a float shaped like a massive canoe to honour the crowd with giant dragon and ostrich puppets.
The Fanti Carnival is hinged on the 19th century, specifically, the Afro-Brazilian returnees who travelled back across the Atlantic to find home.
Families spend months sewing costumes, towering headpieces, shimmering capes, and masks that blend West African masquerade traditions with Portuguese aesthetics.
As the procession weaves through the narrow streets of Lagos Island, fancy boys and girls perform choreographed routines, their feet moving in a blur of synchronised steps.
Bedazzled Horses often lead the way, a nod to the aristocratic flair the Aguda families maintained.
At the heart of the festival is a beautiful contradiction. You’ll see a young man in a sequined vest doing a Brazilian samba step, only to break into a traditional Yoruba Bata dance a moment later. You might hear a trumpet blare a highlife tune that suddenly shifts into a Latin rhythm.
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