Thursday, 23 November 2017

Preparing for your Camino next year? Festivals in Spain and Portugal

Thinking of walking in Spain or Portugal?


The Iberian Peninsula is a land rich in history, tradition and superstition. Portugal and Spain being “Catholic countries” share many of the same holidays and religious festivals. There are also many legends, some based on vague historical facts, others coloured with religious connotations.  You may wish to take these into account when planning your Camino either to avoid them or to see them!
First of all I’d like to introduce you to some of the festivals I’ve come across on my travels and Caminos throughout Spain and Portugal.

 “Why”, you may ask yourself, “ do up to 300 couples get married on the same day and often in the same ceremony on Saint Anthony’s Day in Lisbon in Portugal? “

The answer lies in the story of Saint Anthony who was born in Lisbon. He became known as a great miracle worker and also for his skills at reconciling couples. In Lisbon the festivities in his honour begin on the evening of June 12 with displays of walking groups and singers and parades and a custom is for young people to write letters on that day asking Saint Anthony to help them find a partner. Then on the 13th , Saint Anthony’s Feast Day, as evidence of how effective this is traditionally 13 couples get married together with all expenses being paid by the city council. But as happens one tradition led to another and for years on this feast it has become the fashion for hundred of the Noivas de Santo Antonio’ (the Brides of Saint Anthony) to get married on the same day.
At the same time the Sardine Festival takes place and this is replicated elsewhere in Spain and Portugal in different places and at different times. On the Feast of Saint John in Galicia the people jump over bonfires (Oh yes they do!) and eat grilled sardines provided by local restaurants for free. A close relative of this takes place in the South of Spain in Malaga and Murcia and other towns when there is the Burial of the Sardine to mark the end of the excesses of Carnival and to herald the start of Lent. Sardines it seems are ubiquitous.
Many Hispanic festivals end when the symbols of the excesses which have been enjoyed are ceremonially burned. There is also at the end of Carnival the traditional Quema del Raspajo when an effigy is burned to represent regeneration and freedom. Often this is used to poke fun at the political order as happened in Santiago last Ash Wednesday:
Other festivals are more difficult to understand. My favourites of these are the Baby Jumping Ceremony in the province of Burgos and the Festival of Near Death Experiences in Galicia. Both cause visitors to gasp in either amazement or anxiety!
Baby Jumping or El Colacho as it is known in the Province of Burgos called Castrillo de Murcia takes place every year around the Feast of Corpus Christi which is usually celebrated in May or June. The tradition dates back to the 17th Century. During the ceremony men dressed as the Devil (the Colacho) in red and yellow suits jump over babies, born during the previous 12 months, who lie on mattresses on the ground.  This is known as the jump of the devil, El Salto del Colacho. The “devils” carry whips and castanets as the jump over the fortunately unaware infants. 
The point of the ceremony is to cleanse the babies and drive out any evil spirits to prepare them for life. It is said however that Pope Benedict asked local priests to distance the church from the Jump of the Devil because the Catholic Church teaches that it is baptism and not jumping over babies which anoints children for the Christian life. Imagine that! 

However weirdest of all in my book is the Fiesta de Santa Marta de Ribarteme, also known as the Festival of Near Death Experiences. It takes place in a small Galician village on the border with Portugal – Las Nieves, Pontevedra on the 29th July. Here if you are suffering from a grave illness and wish to pray for recovery or if you have already recovered from near death and you wish to give thanks you…rent a coffin, get inside it and your friends and relatives carry you through the village in procession before laying your before the altar in the local church where you remain during mass!

 Ex Votos
At most of the festivals described here there may be stalls selling everything from fresh donuts to wax body parts. Yes, body parts. These are called Ex Votos, votive offerings to add to your prayers for recovery from an ailment to your hand, head, leg... Strange they may seem but they aren’t restricted to Catholicism I have seen them at Hindu temples in India and Buddhist shrines in Japan. For me they are still strange!
So if you are passing a church as I did the other day and you notice policemen lined up in dress uniform wearing white gloves don’t be surprised if it is the Feast of Guardian Angels – the patrons of the National Police. It was!   
Religious Festivals and Public Holidays
2018
These feasts and holidays are observed in both countries except where otherwise indicated. Where the languages are different the names are given first in Portugese then Spanish.

1 January: New Year’s Day and the Feast of Mary, Mother of God - Santa Maria, Mãe de Deus/Santa María, Madre de Dios. 

6 January: The Epiphany - Dia de Reis/ Día del Reyes. In Spain this feast is celebrated as much as Christmas, and presents are often given on this day. There are street processions and celebrations.
Three Kings Procession
Carnaval: This is the period before the start of Lent and is a time of partying and over indulgence.

14 February: Ash Wednesday - Quarta feira de cinza/Miércoles de Ceniza, and the start of Lent - Quaresma/Cuaresma

19 March: The Feast of Saint Joseph - São José/San José. This is when Father’s Day is celebrated in both countries.

25 March – 1 April: Holy Week - Semana Santa, when there will be many religious services and street processions.

25 March: Palm Sunday - Domingo de Ramos 

29 March: Holy Thursday - Jueves Santo 

30 March: Good Friday - Sexta-feira Santa/Viernes Santo

1 April: Easter Sunday - Domingo de Páscoa/Domingo de Resurrección

25 April, in Portugal: Freedom Day - Dia da Liberdade, celebrates the 1974 coup d’état that ended the oppressive Estado Nuevo government and established the Portuguese Third Republic. 

1 May: Labour Day - Dia do Trabalhador/ Fiesta del Trabajo.

6 May: Mother’s Day - Dia da Mãe/Día de la Madre.

May/June (moveable dates):
10 May: Ascension Thursday - Ascensáo do Senhor/Ascensión del Señor (may be celebrated on Sunday 13 May)

20 May: Pentecost - Pentecostés 

31 May: Corpus Christi (may be celebrated on Sunday 3 June), with religious street processions in many places.
Corpus Cristi Procession
10 June, in Portugal: Portugal Day - Dia de Portugal.

25 July: Feast of Saint James - Santiago Apóstol, Patrón de España, Spanish 
National Holiday.

15 August: Feast of the Assumption - Assunção da Bem-Aventurada Virgem Maria/Asunción de la Virgen.

5 October, Portugal: Republic Day - Implantação da República, celebrates the end of Monarchy and the beginning of the Portuguese Republic.

12 October:  Día del Pilar (Our Lady of the Pillar) – Fiesta Nacional de España|Día de la Hispanidad (National Day|Hispanic Day).

1 November: All Saints - Todos os Santos/Todos los Santos.

2 November: All Souls - Dia de Finados/Todos los Difuntos.
Around these dates there may be local church services for those who have died in the community in the last year.

1 December: Portugal Restoration of Independence Day.

6 December: Spain Constitution Day - Día de la Constitución.

8 December: Feast of the Immaculate Conception - Imaculada Conceição da Bem-Aventurada Virgem Maria/La Inmaculada Concepción.

24 December: Christmas Eve - Véspera de Natal/Noche Buena, when traditionally Spanish families gather together at home for a meal. Many restaurants close.

25 December: Christmas Day - Natal do Senhor/Natividad del Señor.

31 December: New Year’s Eve|Hogmanay - Noite de Ano Novo/Noche Vieja.

Local Festivals and holidays in Portugal and Spain


Almost every village seems to have their own Feast or Feria, for example the Feast of the Ascension, which is the annual festival in Santiago de Compostela with street theatre, bands, orchestras and the circus comes to town.
In towns and villages all along the Camino Francés you may encounter a local festival such as:

Running of the bulls in Pamplona
Arzúa Cheese Festival – February/March
Bread and Cheese festival in
 Sahagún – April
Fire water festival in 
Portomarín – early April
O Cebreiro cheese festival – April
May Festival – Festa do Maio in 
Villafranca del Bierzo – May
San Fermin running of the bulls and the city’s most famous festival in 
Pamplona – July
San Cristobo Festival in 
Palas de Rei – July
Estella festival –
 Estella/Lizarra – early August
Santa Marta festival in 
Astorga – end of August
San Zoilo festival in 
Carrión de los Condes – end of August
Rioja Harvest Festival in Logroño – September
Romaria Virxe do Cebreiro dedicated to the patron saint of 
O Cebreiro – early September
Fiestas de la Encina in 
Ponferrada, the city’s biggest annual festival – September
Music Week in
 Melide – November

And finally


The Tomatina
If you are walking the Camino Levante and find yourself in Valencia at the end of August head for the town of Buñol to take part in the world’s largest tomato fight. If it is a choice between running with the bulls or fighting with tomatoes I know which I’d choose!

1 comment: