As pandemic fades, Spain Easter traditions resurrected

Author: AFP

With Easter processions cancelled for the past two years due to the coronavirus pandemic, Spain’s colourful Holy Week marches made their eagerly awaited return to the streets on Sunday.

The holiday, which runs until Easter Day on April 17, is a time when huge crowds traditionally gather to watch the elaborate processions in this deeply Catholic country. Organised by brotherhoods, the parades feature dozens of people dressed in religious tunics and distinctive pointy hoods and elaborate floats topped with statues of Jesus and the Virgin Mary. Some of the processions date back hundreds of years.

“We’re very excited after two years” of being unable to celebrate Holy Week, said Rafael Perez of the Work and Light Brotherhood that stages one of the processions in the southern city of Granada.

In Seville — whose 680,000-strong population doubles during Holy Week — people played traditional procession music over loudspeakers or sang mournful saetas from balconies, a capella ballads about the death of Jesus and the grief of his mother. Everything was thrown up in the air in mid-March 2020 when the country went into lockdown as the virus took hold a month before Easter, hitting Spain badly as it spread like wildfire.

In one of the world’s strictest lockdowns, Spain cancelled all religious celebrations, prompting some to improvise festivities at home on their balconies, mostly in the south where Easter processions have been held for centuries. The situation improved slightly last year, although with memories still fresh of the explosion of virus cases after Christmas the authorities imposed curfews and a ban on travel between regions that clouded the festivities. The southern city of Seville’s impressive Holy Week parades, which had never been cancelled since 1933, were called off for a second year running in a move mirrored across Spain.

This year, Spaniards want to make up for lost time and enjoy an Easter week as in times before the pandemic, when they made an average of seven million trips across the country to visit family or hit the beach, Statistica figures show. “Tourism and business prospects for Holy Week 2022, the first after two years of not being able to celebrate due to the pandemic, are close to 90 percent of the sales levels registered in 2019,” the Exceltur tourism association said on Thursday.

In April 2019, a total of seven million foreign tourists visited Spain. Tourism Minister Reyes Maroto said she hoped to see 80 percent of that figure, which would bring much-needed relief to the country’s badly hit tourism sector. Before the pandemic, Spain was the world’s second most popular tourist destination after France.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Pakistan

LUMS Hosts 2nd Symposium on Battery Electric Vehicles in Pakistan

Lahore, May 7, 2024: LUMS hosted the 2nd Symposium on Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) in…

2 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Marwat denies Imran’s disinterest in meeting allegations

  In the latest twist within Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), tensions between party bigwigs Imran Khan…

4 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Competition Commission of Pakistan Initiates Phase 2 Review of PTCL’s Acquisition of Telenor Pakistan

The Competition Commission of Pakistan (CCP) has successfully concluded Phase 1 of its review of…

5 hours ago
  • Top Stories

Police face tumult while attempting to disband protesting lawyers in Lahore

Disorder erupted in the vicinity of the Lahore High Court on Wednesday as lawyers, protesting…

5 hours ago
  • Pakistan

IHC judges’ letter case: SC urges unity for judiciary’s independence

The Supreme Court resumed on Tuesday heard the suo motu pertaining to allegations made by…

6 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Army rules out talks with ‘anarchist group’

Director General Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR) Major General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry Tuesday said that…

6 hours ago