Garifuna Settlement Day
What Is Garifuna Settlement Day?
Every November 19, Belize pauses to remember one of the most remarkable stories in Caribbean history. Garifuna Settlement Day honors the arrival of the Garinagu people to the shores of Belize, a people who survived exile, crossed the Bay of Honduras against everything, and built an enduring culture that is still very much alive today.
It is not a tourist event. It is not a performance for visitors. It is a living act of cultural memory, drumming, dancing, food, language, and the re-enactment of an ancestral voyage that starts before the sun rises over the Caribbean Sea.
Visitors are welcomed in the Garifuna spirit: with warmth, food, and an invitation to feel something real. But the celebration belongs to the Garinagu first.
"November is a celebration of drumming, dancing, laughter, and an appreciation for one of our most vibrant cultures."
— My Beautiful BelizeThe Garifuna story in context
How The Garinagu Arrived
The Garifuna are descendants of West and Central Africans and the Indigenous Carib and Arawak peoples who inhabited the Caribbean. On the island of St. Vincent, they built a distinct culture, a blend of African resilience and Caribbean rootedness, and they resisted British colonial rule for decades.
After the assassination of their Chief Joseph Chatoyer in 1795, over 4,300 Garinagu were captured and imprisoned on the island of Balliceaux. In 1797, the British deported them to Roatan, Honduras, a forced exile from the only home they had known.
From Roatan, they spread along the Caribbean coast of Central America. On November 19, 1802; according to the oral tradition that Belizeans hold as sacred, the largest gathering of Garinagu arrived on the shores of Belize, paddling in dugout canoes laden with cassava, plantain, coconut, and their drums.
"They arrived singing. The drums came first — before anyone could see the boats."
— Garifuna oral tradition, DangrigaWhy November 19 Matters
Cultural Significance
Garifuna Settlement Day isn't just a holiday. It's the annual renewal of an entire identity: food, music, language, and spirit.
Music & Drumming
The primero and segunda drums are the heartbeat of Garifuna culture. Punta; the rhythm born from this tradition, has influenced music across Central America. On November 19, drumming begins before sunrise and doesn't stop.
Food & Identity
Cassava, coconut, plantain, and fresh fish from the sea, Garifuna cooking has not changed in two hundred years by accident. Every dish is a memory. Hudut on Settlement Day isn't just a meal; it's an act of cultural continuity.
Language
The Garifuna language; a blend of Arawak, Carib, French, English, and African words, is spoken by around 200,000 people worldwide. November is when elders teach children the old words. "Yurumein" means homeland. "Garinagu" means the people.
Resilience & Identity
The Garinagu were exiled, imprisoned, and written out of colonial history, and yet their culture is more alive today than many that were "preserved." Settlement Day is the celebration of that defiance. Many Belizeans of all backgrounds treat November like a second Christmas season.
Dance
Wanaragua (Jankunu), Punta, Chumba, and Sisira are among the dances performed. Competitions for Best Wanaragua Dancer and Most Exciting Sisira Performance bring out extraordinary performers from across the country.
A National Celebration
Though rooted in Garifuna history, Settlement Day now belongs to all of Belize. Creole, Maya, Mestizo, and Garifuna Belizeans celebrate together, a testament to the cultural gravity the Garinagu hold in the national story.
What To Expect On November 19
The celebration runs from before sunrise until long after midnight. Here's how a full Settlement Day unfolds.
- All-night drumming winds down
- Crowds gather along the coast
- Energy is electric
- Street food vendors open early
- Decorated dories take to sea
- Drumming begins on the water
- Conch shells signal the arrival
- Re-enactment of the 1802 landing
- Most powerful moment of the day
- Parade to the church
- Mass of Thanksgiving
- Street drumming and singing
- Traditional food stalls open
- Dance competitions
- Cultural performances
- Hudut and sere everywhere
- Punta rock and live bands
- DJs and live performers
- Battle of the Drums competition
- The whole town is dancing
- Celebrations go past midnight
The Yurumein Re-enactment
Yurumein means "homeland" — it is the Garifuna name for St. Vincent, the island from which they were exiled. Each year, community members board traditionally decorated dugout dories (canoes laden with cassava, plantain, coconut, and palms) and re-enact the 1802 voyage.
Aboard the boats are figures representing the elders: an old man, an old woman, and a pregnant woman — symbols of an entire people carrying their future to shore. When they land, one of Chatoyer's captains asks permission to settle. According to tradition, they are refused twice. On the third appeal, they are allowed to stay.
Best Places To Experience Garifuna Settlement Day
The celebrations happen across Belize, but these three towns offer the most authentic, immersive experience.
Dangriga is the epicenter. The Yurumein re-enactment here is the largest and most dramatic in the country. The town transforms completely: every street, every yard, every restaurant becomes part of the celebration. This is where the holiday was first celebrated in 1941, and it shows in the depth of the tradition.
- Largest Yurumein re-enactment in Belize
- Drumming competitions and cultural performances
- Best selection of traditional Garifuna food
- Most immersive atmosphere overall
Hopkins is considered Belize's culinary capital and its Garifuna community is deeply rooted. The Yurumein here is more intimate; you're standing a few feet from the canoes as they come ashore, drums echoing across the water. Afterwards, the village fills with the smell of hudut being prepared in every kitchen.
- Intimate Yurumein re-enactment (closer access)
- Best traditional Garifuna restaurants
- Strong local community involvement
- Beautiful beach setting
Punta Gorda offers a quieter, more local celebration; away from the larger crowds, closer to the Maya and Garifuna cultural overlap unique to Toledo District. The Battle of the Drums Competition is held here, coordinated by the Battle of the Drums Secretariat to revive traditional drumming, singing, and dance.
- Battle of the Drums Competition
- Less crowded, more local atmosphere
- Unique Toledo cultural mix
- Gateway to Garifuna villages
What To Eat On Settlement Day
Garifuna food is built on three things: cassava, coconut, and plantain. Everything else comes after. The dishes you'll find on November 19 have not changed in two hundred years, and that is the point.
The signature Garifuna dish. Fish simmered in fresh coconut milk, served alongside a ball of mashed green and ripe plantain (the actual "hudut") pounded in a wooden mortar. You eat it with your hands, tear off a piece of plantain mash, press it into a scoop, drag it through the coconut broth. Rich, filling, deeply satisfying.
The coconut fish broth that is the liquid heart of hudut, but served as its own dish. Prepared with fresh coconut milk, okra, onions, cilantro, and locally caught fish. Some versions add cassava or potatoes. Sometimes finished with pigtails for depth of flavour. Warm, aromatic, and completely addictive.
Made from grated cassava root, pressed and toasted over fire. Thin, slightly sour, and nutty, the bread that has accompanied Garifuna meals for centuries. The process of making ereba is labor-intensive and takes several days; eating it is honoring that labor. Served with nearly every meal on Settlement Day.
A thick, hearty fish soup served with mashed plantain dumplings flavored with garlic. Think of it as hudut's bolder, chunkier cousin. Common in Toledo and Punta Gorda, machuca is a meal that will anchor you to the spot for the rest of the morning, in the best possible way.
The Garifuna version of a tamale, made from grated green banana mixed with coconut milk, wrapped in banana leaves, and steamed. Can be made sweet or savory, with fish or chicken. A traditional snack that you'll find vendors selling throughout the day's celebrations.
A creamy cassava and coconut milk porridge drink, the Garifuna equivalent of eggnog, served warm or cold. Made from cassava flour blended with fresh coconut milk, sweetened with a touch of sugar. Comforting, unique, and one of the more unexpected flavors of the day.
On pricing: Garifuna food is extraordinarily affordable. Hudut and sere typically run BZD $10–$12 (around USD $5–$6). Snacks like darasa, sahou, and cassava bread are usually BZD $1–$3. Bring cash, most Settlement Day vendors are family-run and cash only.
Local Tips From Belizeans
The things that don't appear in any guidebook.
The coastline fills fast. To get a clear view of the canoes landing, you need to be in position before 6 AM. The procession starts at 6:30 and there is no second viewing. Miss the landing and you've missed the heart of the day.
The best food, the most authentic experiences, the real Settlement Day all happens at family stalls and roadside tables. None of them take cards. BZD is standard; USD is usually accepted. Bring more than you think you'll need. You'll want to eat at every stall you pass.
Eat early. The most sought-after vendors, especially the ones cooking over open fires, run out of their best batches before midday. Eat your hudut in the morning after the Yurumein, while it's still fresh and the broth is at its richest.
Dangriga and Hopkins fill up completely for Settlement Day. If you're planning to be in either town on November 19, book your accommodation before September. Many visitors end up driving in from Belize City or Placencia if they leave it too late.
You are a guest at someone else's most important celebration. Ask before you photograph people, especially during the Yurumein. Don't stand in the water's edge blocking the participants' path to shore. Watch, feel, participate when invited, but let the Garifuna people lead.
November 19 is the peak, but Garifuna culture fills all of November. Drumming competitions, cultural workshops, and community events happen throughout the month. If you can't make the 19th, visiting any weekend in November is still extraordinary.
Settlement Day runs from before dawn to well past midnight. If you try to squeeze in a reef tour or a ruin visit on the same day, you'll miss the heart of the celebration. Give the full day to the Garinagu, it will be worth it.
November 18 is an all-night party in Dangriga and Hopkins, live bands, renowned DJs, drumming, and dancing leading up to the sunrise Yurumein. If you want to understand the full energy of Settlement Day, you need to experience the night that precedes it.
Tell us when you're visiting, where you're staying, and what matters to you. We'll help you make the most of Garifuna Settlement Day.
