It was a day of celebration in Aurora on Sunday, albeit a muted one. Following a six-year hiatus, Aurora's Mexican Independence Day Parade went forward - without the turnout organizers would have liked - in a city where four out of 10 people identify as Hispanic or Latino.
The music, the colors and the vibrancy that makes up Mexican culture was on full display in downtown Aurora. The city welcomed back the traditional Fiestas Patrias celebrations for the first time since before the pandemic.
"I came here when I was eight years old," spectator Gabriela Donatlan-Williams said. "And I'm American and Mexican, but I'm very proud of our Mexico."
And yet for all its folklore, it was a parade which at times appeared to have more people participating in it, than watching it.
"It was disheartening, seeing how many people have just been afraid to show up today," spectator Alexa Pennell said.
Aurora hosted its Mexican Independence Day Parade and Fiestas Patrias celebrations Sunday amid fear over an expected surge in immigration enforcement.
Taking place under the specter of an anticipated large-scale immigration enforcement operation starting this week, organizers admitted people have been staying home, not just Sunday, but during Saturday's festival as well, where the turnout was estimated to be a quarter of what they usually get.
Aurora's new mayor, John Laesch, admitted it's been challenging to straddle the line between encouraging people to celebrate, while also wanting to keep the community safe.
"I think the people that came out and participated had a good time. And that was the main thing," Laesch said. 'Having this event is one way of saying we want people to celebrate and continue to be part of a culture and history that is now a fabric of Aurora. But as far as offering people false hope, false sense of security we're just not going to do that."
For those who did choose to attend, the parade was an affirmation.
"As much as we're Latino, we're American," spectator Jeremiah Pennell said. We belong here and you know, we won't be put in a corner, we won't be made to be afraid."
The question now is, with Chicago's traditionally massive Little Village Celebration coming up in a week, will that same fear translate into reduced crowds?