How to Speak Semana Santa – Antigua, Guatemala

This post is part 1 of 6 in the series Semana Santa in Antigua

Antigua, Guatemala (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) puts on the largest Easter celebration in The Americas. It’s estimated that around 200,000 people flock to this Colonial gem of a town every year to watch the colorful Semana Santa celebrations between Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday.

It’s all a lot more fun if you know your andas from your alfombras so we put together this handy Semana Santa Primer. Consider it a cheat sheet to guide you through the Semana Santa madness in our posts from  Antigua. You’ll see adorable kids! You’ll watch us help create an elaborate traditional street carpet made out of flowers! You’ll marvel as enormous floats navigate tight corners during processions galore!

And don’t miss our video at the bottom of this post–it’s full of highlights from Palm Sunday in Antigua.

For now, a little lingo…

SEMANA SANTA - The Spanish phrase for Holy Week which runs from Palm Sunday through Easter Sunday.

CUARESMA - The Spanish word for Lent, which is celebrated in Antigua with processions every weekend for the five weeks leading up to Semana Santa. If you can’t make it to Antigua for Easter week (or if you can’t get a hotel room in town over Holy Week), you can still catch one of Antigua’s Lent processions.

PASQUA - The Spanish word for Easter.

PROCESSION - A religious parade which always leaves from and returns to a specific church. Processions tell the story of Jesus’ crucifixion and resurrection using elaborate floats (called andas, see below) full of iconography. More than a dozen major processions (and many smaller processions) take place day and night in Antigua during Semana Santa. We managed to attend 12 of them. The procession tradition is said to have started in Guatemala in 1524 and, today, most Semana Santa processions include two main andas. The first carries a scene from the life of Jesus. The second carries a depiction of the Virgin Mary. Each procession is named after the specific Jesus and Mary that adorn the floats (i.e. Jesús De La Merced, Jesús El Peregrino, Jesús Del Milagro).  Some last for 15 hours and cover many miles.

ANDA - An enormous hand-crafted wooden float which weighs up to 8,000 pounds and is carried by up to 100 people. Dozens of andas are paraded around town during Semana Santa and each carries a different tableau on top depicting a scene from the story of Jesus’ crucifixion. These scenes are changed every year, but their meaning remains the same. Some of the andas are antiques and some are new. Each church has their own own anda of varying sizes and the main characters from the andas (Jesus, etc) spend the rest of the year in niches in their home churches. The andas are lit during night processions when people push generators along the procession route behind the floats.

ALFOMBRA – This is the Spanish word for “carpet” and that’s exacty what these temporary pieces of street art are meant to be–fancy carpets which pave the way for the andas in each procession. People spend as much as they can on alfombra ingredients which include flowers, luridly dyed wood shavings and sawdust, fruits and vegetables even glitter and tiny Noah’s Arcs. Some are hand-made and, thus, imperfect. Others are created meticulously using stencil cut outs and exact measurements. We found ones to love in all styles. Alfombras are typically created by an entire extended family on the cobblestone street in front of their home but local businesses create alfombras too. See more alfombras.  

COPAL - A natural tree resin which is burned as incense by men and boys swinging incense burners in front of the main anda. Processions on Saturday seem to have the most incense. Our theory is that on Saturday processions only include one anda with Mary on top (Jesus is not included because he’s been crucified and not yet risen). The Saturday andas are carried exclusively by women which leaves many men looking for a role to play in the processions so they grab incense burners.    

PURPLE - During the first half of Semana Santa hundreds of men in Antigua put on a silky purple tunic and sash with a head dress or hood (some hoods look disturbingly like KKK hats, but they’ve got nothing to do with racism). Why purple? Because it is the liturgical color of Lent and some believe it symbolizes Jesus’ pain and suffering and emulates the color of a robe that covered Jesus.  The costume switches to all black on Good Friday afternoon following Jesus’ crucifixion.

VIERNES SANTO – We’re not sure why it’s called “Holy” Friday or “Good” Friday since this is the day on which Jesus was crucified. We can tell you that Semana Santa celebrations in Antigua reach their peak on Viernes Santo (not on Easter Sunday) with four major processions in town and very large crowds.  The action starts at midnight on Thursday with the Peregon de Romanos (parade of Romans). Some processions begin at 4 am on Friday morning and some don’t finish until 6 am Saturday morning. Graphic and emotional re-enactments of the crucifixion of Jesus also take place inside churches on Viernes Santo and by 3:00 pm everyone has changed out of their purple clothes and into black clothes in mourning for the crucified Jesus.

Jesus has arisen and he says there's just Una Via (one way)...

EASTER SUNDAY – The day Jesus is said to have risen from the dead marks the end of Semana Santa but Easter Sunday is not the peak of the celebrations. That honor goes to Good Friday. Processions on Easter Sunday have a celebratory vibe with fireworks, people waving yellow and white flags and confetti in the air.

MARCHAS FUNEBRAS -  This is the Spanish phrase for funeral marches. Music plays a big role in Semana Santa processions, cueing various actions and setting an appropriately somber mood. The procession bands (which are paid to perform), are heavy on drums, brass and wind instruments and they play a repertoire of more than 100 marchas funebras, mostly written by Guatemalan composers.Some bands throw in a Chopin tune now and then for variety. After a few days we began recognizing some of the songs in heavy rotation. The sound is not unlike the brass bands associated with classic New Orleans second-line funeral processions and we’ve got back up on this one. Dr. Tom Tunks, a Professor of Music at Southern Mehtodist University in Texas, has lived in New Orleans and has taught jazz musicians from the legendary Marsalis family, was also in town for Semana Santa and he agrees that some of the marchas funebras bear a passing resemblance to dirges played by brass bands during second-lines in New Orleans.

CUCURUCHOS and CARGADORAS - These are the men and women, respectively, who carry the andas. Each pays about 30 quetzales (roughly US$4) to their church for the privilege. Children, who carry smaller andasin their own special processions, pay less.

People signing up and getting measured so they can help carry an enormous wooden float on their shoulders during an Easter parade in Antigua, Guatemala.

Only men carry andas with Jesus on them and these can weigh up to 8,000 pounds and require 100 men. Only women carry andas with the Virgin Mary on them and these can weigh up to 3,000 pounds. During each processions, these enormous andas are carefully choreographed along specific routes through city streets, around tight corners and over an obstacle course of cobblestones and flower-and-vegetable-strewn alfombras. Originally done as penance with the faces of the bearers covered, it’s now clearly an honor to carry the load of an anda. Every carrier gets measured to ensure that each group of 40-100  bearers is of relatively the same height. You can imagine what would happen if the heights varied too much. It’s also said that the tallest bearers get the honor of carrying the anda out of the church. Or maybe it’s a challenge. Often the anda is already so tall that the bearers have to carry it while squatting in order to ease it out the door. Some andas have to exit on rails and get picked up once outside the church. Bearers usually carry their anda for one block then an artful switch is made. Many come back to carry again later in the procession.

ROMA – What would the crucifixion story be without Roman centurions? Many men and boys play this role and march ahead of the main anda in processions wearing fairly elaborate costumes which include armor and capes and menacing spears. Though it’s hard to look too tough when your helmet is topped by a bright red broom…

WHAT’S WITH THE KKK HOODS? -  Some of the Semana Santa costumes feature tall pointed hats that cover the men’s faces. Yes, they look disturbingly like part of the KKK costume but these versions have nothing to do with hateful racists. They’ve been worn by Catholic Brotherhoods in Europe for hundreds of years and are seen in Semana Santa celebrations throughout the world.

Here’s video of some of the processions from Palm Sunday in the daytime and nightime:

TIPS

Route maps for the day’s processions are usually available at information booths in the main plaza in Antigua in front of the cathedral.

To get the best pictures of the alfombras, study the route map and approach the church that’s hosting the procession by walking toward it backward along the procession route–toward the church instead of away from it. This will enable to you shoot the intact alfombras before they get trampled by the procession.

During Semana Santa normally-safe Antigua becomes a magnet for pickpockets. This is for real.  Carry as little with you as possible when you venture out during Semana Santa (especially on Thursday and Friday when crowds are thickest). Eric caught a mans’ hand in the leg pocket of his cargo pants during the very first procession we watched. The pocket only contained a route map and after he caught the pickpocket Eric  followed him out of the catherdral and onto the street shouting “Cuidado! Ladrón!” (Caution! Thief!). Eric even pointed the guy out to a police officer who stopped the man and searched him but since he didn’t have anyone else’s ill-gotten booty on him they had to let him go. We also heard the sad, sad story of an elderly couple that was pickpocketed not once but TWICE. First they got the woman’s wallet by slicing the bottom of her bag open. The next day thieves got the man’s fanny pack by cutting the belt. The couple had stubbornly ignored multiple warnings not to carry anything valuable and they ended up losing all their money and creidt cards. Don’t be like them.  

Forget about driving anywhere in Antigua during Semana Santa. The streets all over town are closed for hours for the building of the alfombras and then for the processions.   Oh, and Jesus always looks to the right from on top of the anda. No idea why, but it’s something to consider for photography.

 

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Big Tree, Big Festival, Big Ride – Tlacoluca Valley, Oaxaca State, Mexico

The Titanic Tule Tree

About five miles outside the city of Oaxaca is the tiny town of Tule–home to one humongous tree. The Tule Tree is nearly 120 feet in circumference (including its many buttresses), somewhere between 119 and 141 feet tall (depending on whose measurements you believe) and is said to be the “stoutest” tree in the world.

The Tule Tree is so massive that it was originally believed to be multiple trees but DNA testing (they do that on trees?) proved it to be a single tree that’s been slowly growing for between 1,200 and 3,000 years (its exact age has proved elusive).

In 2001 the Tule Tree was submitted for consideration as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. So far, nothing. But never mind. The Tule Tree gets plenty of love from the locals who festoon it with Christmas tree decorations, stuffed animals, clothes, you name it.

From a distance the massive Tule Tree looks like a mini forest.


You pass the town of Tule on your way from Oaxaca city to the Mitla and Yagul archaeological sites and it makes a pleasant break. We can recommend Restaurante Tule for lunch. The name is not very imaginative, but the beer is cold and the food is good.

Yes, that's ONE tree. Note the tiny people on the right for scale


Tlacolula Festivities

Our time in Oaxaca coincided with the annual Feast of the Christ of Tlacolula in the town of Tlacolula for which the valley is named (or vice versa, we’re not sure). The festival (like most in Mexico) is a multi-day affair and we caught the Candelaria parade through town featuring what seemed like the entire town dressed up as one religious icon or another. The paraders ambled from church to church, stopping at each to perform a brief devotion. It was like a beer and tequila fueled connect-the-dots of the towns most sacred places.

A big-head paper mache figure in the Candelaria parade celebrating the Feast of Christ of Tlacolula.

Women parading with floral arrangements on their heads which spell out the town name as part of the Feast of Christ of Tlacolula.


Check out our video, below, and see the paper mache and floral costumes and processions of the Candelaria in Tlacoula in action.


Rancho Pitaya Horseback Riding

Maybe the greatest way to appreciate the beauty of the Tlacolula Valley is on horseback and we know just the people to make it happen. Mary Jane Gagnier used to run Casa Sagrada, a well-known guesthouse and horse ranch in Teotitlán del Valle. For reasons that are neither here nor there, she is no longer associated with Casa Sagrada. But that’s good news because she, along with her partner Bobby Ortiz, has taken the opportunity to create a new and improved riding operation and guest house just a few miles away.

Meandering through the column cactus and the picturesque hillsides of the Tlacoluca Valley during a day of horseback riding with Mary Jane Gagnier and Bobby Ortiz of Rancho Pitaya near Oaxaca city.


It’s called Rancho Pitaya and it’s got three rooms in a traditionally constructed adobe lodge, each with a huge private patio with views of the valley plus hand painted tiles and convenient kitchenettes. Rancho Pitaya also has an open air gourmet kitchen with a chef on hand. This is good because you’ll be working up an appetite out there on the trail.

Both Mary Jane and Bobby are accomplished horsemen and both excel at competitive endurance racing (basically an overland marathon for horse and human). Do not miss a chance to get Bobby talking about his days as a jockey (if he doesn’t bring it up, prod him for the “monkey” story). And don’t say no to one of Mary Jane’s margaritas. Mary Jane is also a published author on Oaxacan culture including the food and the rug weaving which the valley is famous for.

Meandering through the column cactus and the picturesque hillsides of the Tlacoluca Valley during a day of horseback riding with Mary Jane Geiger and Bobby Ortiz of Rancho Pitaya near Oaxaca city.


Mary Jane and Bobby (along with chief handler Gregorio Morales) have carefully built a stable of more than 10 horses that are fit and extremely well-trained but not lobotomized. During our all-too-brief outing Karen rode WMA Zebulon (aka Zeb) and Eric rode Chocolate (a sweet, sweet stallion) and they proved strong, agile and responsive on trails that wound through stands of column cactus,around and over green hillsides and through still, dry canyons. Just a joy to ride–especially in the super-light, super-flexible synthetic endurance saddles Mary Jane and Bobby use and especially in this gorgeous valley.


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Big Bicentennial Bash (Best-Of) – Mexico City, Mexico

This post is part 4 of 4 in the series Mexican Bicentennial

Yeah, yeah. Mexico’s got some world-class problems on its plate at the moment. But sometimes troubled times are the  best times to throw a world-class party–it distracts the collective consciousness from the negative and pays due respect to the positive.

And so it was in Mexico this past week as the people marked 200 years of independence from Spain with celebrations that honored the past and, we hope, emboldened many Mexicans to face the future with the power of pride.

We were lucky enough to be part of the goings-on in Mexico City and here we present some of our Best-Of moments from the parade, the crowd, President Felipe Calderón’s ode to the Grito de Dolores (watch our video) all the way to the mind-blowing spectacle of the finale fireworks (watch our video).

Check out our video compiled while we walked through the performers and the crowds across Mexico City and then from the press box in the Zócalo on the night of September 15, 2010, followed by photos of key moments from the festivities.

Eerie Dia del Muerto (Day of the Dead) figures in the parade down Avenida de la Reforma in Mexico City marking the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

Women representing the colorful arts-and-crafts culture in Mexico march in the parade down Avenida de la Reforma in Mexico City marking the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

Dancers in Aztec costumes march in the parade down Avenida de la Reforma in Mexico City marking the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

A woman representing the colorful arts-and-crafts culture in Mexico march in the parade down Avenida de la Reforma in Mexico City marking the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

Larger-than-life Zapatistas march in the parade down Avenida de la Reforma in Mexico City marking the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

When we saw our first bicentennial countdown clock in Mexico it showed more than 600 days until the celebrations. Here's what the clock said as we entered the Zócalo.

The Presidential Palace on the Zócalo all dressed up for the bicentennial party.

The Zócalo, Mexico City's main plaza, was decorated from tip to toe.

A float version of the sacred serpent Kulkukan entering the Zócalo during celebrations marking the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

The parade even took to the sky with this floating Angel of Independence.

This gold and silver inflated dragon reminded us of the floats above the streets of Manhattan during the Thanksgiving Day Parade, only better.

The Coloso, that huge man standing by the flagpole, was not our favorite part of the party but he does represent the strength of the nation.

Mexican President Felipe Calderón waving the flag after a rousing ode to Hidalgo's 200-year-old grito.

VIPs packed the balconies of the Presidential Palace including (from mid left) crooner Vicente Fernandez (white hair), the new Miss Universe Mexican model Ximena Navarrete (in the sash) and in the blue mask, Lucha Libre icon the Blue Demon Jr.

As a warm up to the fireworks, the Presidential Palace roof was turned into a stage for choreographed fire balls.

A massive fireworks display over the Zócalo in Mexico City marked the end of a night spent celebrating the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

A massive fireworks display over the Zócalo in Mexico City marked the end of a night spent celebrating the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

A massive fireworks display over the Zócalo in Mexico City marked the end of a night spent celebrating the 200th anniversary of Mexico's independence from Spain.

One pooped parader.

1810-2010: 200 years of Mexican independence from Spain.

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