Semana Santa in Vigan
Holy Week in Vigan is one of the peak tourist seasons.
Local and foreign tourists trek to this city with its
old world ambience to experience how the Holy Week or
Semana Santa, as it is locally known, has been
celebrated throughout the centuries by its predominantly
Roman Catholic residents.
To get the full experience of this religious observance
of the passion and death of Christ, visitors are advised
to arrive on or before Palm Sunday. Masses are scheduled
throughout the day, participated in by people who bring
with them palm fronds or palaspas. These palaspas are
woven and knotted into decorative strands by bearers or
by the vendors who sell them in the market places and
beside the church. Worshipers raise and wave the
palaspas at the end of the Mass for the priest’s
blessing with holy water. They keep these all year-round
displayed in their homes as protection, and burn
portions of it as offering in their altar during times
of need.
Throughout the holy week, the church has scheduled
religious activities that the Catholic faithful have
grown
up participating in. However, official holidays
usually start on Holy Wednesday or Maundy Thursday so
those who stay for the whole of Holy Week can use this
time to not only observe the religious activities but
also visit
the historical sights and recreational places
of Vigan while there are still not too many people.
During Maundy Thursday, the local tourists would start
pouring in. They usually observe the Visita Inglesia
or
the practice of visiting as many churches as they can,
reciting in each one a station of the cross prayer.
The pageantry and show of piety is at its highest during
Good Friday. Most people abstain from eating meat, while
some would fast the whole day. They also participate in
the procession of the life-size religious statues borne
on carriages or carrozas. Each carriage depicts a scene
in the suffering of Christ. These statues are cared for
by prominent families who have owned them through
generations. They decorate them with flowers and have
new clothes made for the statues for the Good Friday
procession.
The procession usually lasts around two hours circling
the city, starting at the St. Paul’s Church, passing
through the major streets and then back inside the
church where the statues stay until Easter Sunday.
Tourists may opt to join the procession, carrying
candles like the devotees, so that they can fully
experience
the tradition. They may also choose to watch
from the high vantage point of their hotels for a better
view of the ancient statues that gleam life-like
surrounded by candle lights carried by the people
walking beside them and by the people who line the
streets to light the way of the procession.
Easter Sunday activities start before dawn. The scene of
the meeting of Jesus and Mary is reenacted by two groups
of people, one accompanying the life-size statue of
Jesus, while the other group accompanies that of the
Virgin Mary. The groups leave the church separately and
take different routes, but eventually meeting at a point
before again entering the church for the celebration of
mass. Like the other Holy Week activities, this one is
both solemn and beautiful.ricultural industries in
Vigan.
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