BOGOTÁ – In a heartwarming celebration, 72-year-old Rosalba Casas finally experienced the quinceañera she had longed for since her teenage years. On Friday, she wore a stunning pink gown and a sparkling tiara, marking her 15th birthday in style.
“Today is the happiest day of my life because I’m living my 15th birthday celebration,” said Casas, who was so excited about the event that she stayed awake the entire night before.
For the first time, Casas enjoyed the experience of professional makeup, a formal dress, and a ride in a limousine. She shared this memorable journey with 28 other senior women, all selected by the Sueños Hechos (Dreams Come True) Foundation to fulfill their dreams of a delayed birthday celebration.
Quinceañeras hold significant cultural value in Latin America, symbolizing a girl’s transition into adulthood at age 15. However, for the 29 women, many of whom are grandmothers, difficult childhoods had prevented them from celebrating this milestone.
The women traveled in a limousine through northwestern Bogotá, accompanied by lively music. They excitedly waved at onlookers from the car’s open roof, as people captured the joyous scene on their phones.
“I never rode in anything like that. I’d only seen them in pictures, but I never imagined I’d be in one,” Casas said. “I blew kisses to everyone,” she added with a laugh.
Deep inequality means many Colombians miss a rite of passage
Casas said that on her 15th birthday, she didn’t receive a single greeting. It was just another workday for her as a domestic employee in a wealthy Bogotá home, where her mother also worked.
María Isabel Carmona, 71, had a similar story. She recalled her 15th birthday party as a special breakfast of hot chocolate and fried eggs.
“My mother was very poor. There were a lot of us kids, and we lived in a small town. There was no way to celebrate,” Carmona said while getting her makeup done at a beauty academy that donated its services to the belated quinceañeras.
Even though it’s a very common tradition in Colombia, not all households can afford such a party in a country where the government estimates 31% of the population lives in poverty. The World Bank ranks the country as one of the most unequal in Latin America.
The 29 women stepped out of the limousine onto a red carpet leading into a community hall, where uniformed police officers raised their sabers to form an honor guard for the quinceañeras.
An emotional quinceañera song played in the background: “So fast — already 15 years, it can’t be … please, don’t grow up anymore.”
The women then swapped their shoes for sneakers — a bit more comfortable at their age — and were invited to dance the waltz, first with police officers, then with their husbands, sons and grandsons.
The project began with underprivileged girls
Freddy Alfonso Páez, director of the Sueños Hechos Foundation and a retired police officer, founded the organization five years ago with his two brothers, though they had started offering 15th birthday parties to underprivileged girls a couple of years earlier.
The project expanded to older women when organizers thought of others — like Páez’s own mother — who never had the traditional celebration in their youth.
Páez said the group has held quinceañera parties for older women for the past five years, providing the celebrations to 128 so far.
The Sueños Hechos Foundation holds the annual event with help from sponsors who donate the limousine, food and dresses. The police also lend support, with officers serving as escorts for the guests of honor.
The 29 women at Friday’s celebration, ages 60 to 85, were selected through an open call on social media.
“Many have different health conditions — diabetes, heart issues, leg or hip pain — but when the party begins, they forget all that and just enjoy themselves,” Páez said.
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