Semana Santa Easter Day Procession in full swing
Easter is a big thing here in Spain. We have seen the set-up for various Easter week processions in Andalucia in the recent past, but I hadn't actually experienced Easter Sunday in Spain since my childhood. It is purely coincidental that Easter week should clash with the end of the Fallas festival this year - one religious celebration rolled into the back end of another.
Jo making use of some of the many thousands of carnations thrown to the waiting crowds
Chris patiently waits in the crowd for his own carnation!
It is as if this city needs no pause for recuperation because scarcely had the costumes of the Falleras been put back in the closet and the trumpets and drums of the Fallas marching bands stowed back in their cases than an entirely new set of immaculate costumes were dusted off and the instruments brought back out for the annual Semana Santa processions. Processions took place 'in three acts' on Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and culminating in the Resurrection Procession on Easter Sunday in the Marinera de Valencia - inland from the beach area a couple of blocks.
Marching band after marching band throughout the route
We only managed to attend the final parade on Sunday, but it was yet another show of true city-wide community proportions with thousands upon thousands of marching groups and bands.
The costumes - every one of them immaculately detailed - looked stunning. Again, the questions ran through our minds as to who can possibly foot the bill for such sumptuous threads. The thousands of participants, carried hundreds of thousands - if not millions - of carnations in every colour - many of which were dispatched into the crowds lined up on both sides of the street for the 2 or 3 mile route. We also wonder where such vast quantities of carnations could have been harvested for this event.
Babes in arms - not one detail of the costumes was missed out
We stood in one position for nearly ninety minutes and the procession still took around an hour of that time to completely pass us by, underlining the sheer scale of the day's event. Yet again, all ages were active participants - even babes were carried literally in arms - in the full regalia of their group. This will be yet one more video to add to the growing backlog of 'editing projects'!
2 comments:
Hi Hill-Whitehead family, I found your blogspot via your YouTube video of the mascaleta. I was over in Valencia for Fallas 2006 & part of Fallas 2007 so it was very interesting to see part of it on video. I haven't had a chance to read your blog yet but hope to do so gradually. Since you've remained in Valencia, which really is a beautiful city, I guess your Spanish adventure is going well. Hope it continues to do so.
Regards & best wishes, Ruth
Thanks for your comments, Ruth. We are really having a great time here still and love the city of Valencia. Not sure I can face going back to the UK after a year here, but we'll have to see. I have hours of video I need to edit back into a few short slots and post here, but I'll need some spare time to do it. Thanks again and good wishes. Brian Whitehead
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