top of page

Semana Santa

 

Semana Santa, or Holy Week is one of the most important holidays of the Christian Spain, which attracts thousands of tourists from around the world turning a peaceful town into the great mystery, and the narrow streets filled with crowds of onlookers standing and waiting for the procession.  It is also one of the most exciting events in the year to which year-long preparations are  starting already at the end of Easter. The most pompusly and the most spectacularly is celebrated in Andalusia, especially in Malaga.

 

Parades are organized by the brotherhood - hermandades or cofradias penitenciales which mean  associations (community) centered around a specific parish, from  where the platforms (called the thrones)  are carried.  Amongs many there is a throne of the Virgin Mary crying, and scenes from the New Testament related  to the Passion of Christ.  Each brotherhood has its own characteristic color of the robes  and takes part in the specific day of Holy Week, marching surrounding the  throne, which can easily weigh  from several hundred pounds to even a few tons.  The figures located on the thrones are surrounded by hundreds of  flowers and candlelights,  often  covered with canopy, which in itself are priceless  work  of religious art of the Middle Ages. They are  being  lifted by more than two hundred men (hombres de trono), so-called  "costaleros".  The procession starts and ends with orchestra playing solemn music, often written specially for the occasion, thus the procession simply can not be missed. Dozens of trumpets and drums can be heard from a far distance, long before the orchestra appear on the horizon, associated with the hooded penitents reminding   Ku Klux Klan. They are  called nazarenos. 

They arouse curiosity of numerous onlookers, being dressed  from head to toe in colorful robes topped with stiff hood, which reminds everyone  the times of the Inquisition. Every  Nazareno has its place in the procession and its formation. They serve different roles eg  holding in their  hands blessed candles or  carrying various items belonging to the fraternity like insignia or books.  Processions start on Palm Sunday, where the first goes the throne with Jesus on a donkey, while the last one is of the Risen Jesus accompanied by nazarenos from each fraternity.  

 

Why the tradition and what was the beginning?

When in 1487 the Catholic Kings - Isabella and Ferdinand - rescued Malaga from the hands of the Moors, numerous monasteries and religious brotherhoods were founded. They took care to bury the dead and took  care for the sick; later on started performing Passion, using movable wooden figures. One of them is Jesus blessing the people - still carried in procession.

 

Semana Santa in Malaga is an incredibly intense week filled with the smell of burnt incense, pounding drums and intricate experiences. For residents sometimes happens to be tiring, as a few hours processions are also held throughout the night, and access to the apartment sometimes is almost impossible, as each side streets are  blocked by crowds of onlookers and parades.  However, despite of  all, this is a time of incredible experiences, which  put everyone into a time of Holy Week and events related to this.

However, to call  Semana Santa - fanaticism, excessive celebration or a waste of money in a time of crisis, this is a unique  week and tradition worth preserving, as one says, not to  see Semana Santa in Spain at least once, it's like not to see the Pope at the Vatican;)

bottom of page