Monday, March 24, 2008
easter pics
Good Friday procession
Scenes from our traditional 2-hour walkathon. I've always wondered why we did this. Maybe it's to share in the suffering of Jesus even just a little bit. Though I've complained that people now go on vacation during the Holy Week, I am always amazed at how many people join this procession. Traffic literally stops wherever we march.
But before anything, a merienda of guinataang kamote.
Kids lighting up their candles
visita iglesia
Here are the photos me and my sis took on Maundy Thursday.
1. San Sebastian-breathtaking Neo-gothic all-steel church. We are transported back in time whenever we go here.
2. UST church-I remarked to my UST alumna sister that the facade doesn't look like a church at all, it looks like a library...she doesn't know why.
picture with the whistleblower du jour, UST's pride Jun Lozada
3 St Jude's- patron of the impossible. You supposedly can ask St. Jude to fulfill even the most impossible wishes! A good husband, lucrative job abroad,etc. Probably the reason why the place is packed! Check out 2 of the 3 TV sets they placed outside so that people wouldn't have to squeeze into the church!
Just had to take a picture of the gates of Malacanan Palace, where the president lives.
4. San Beda, very small church but quite lovely inside. The angels holding the lamps remind me of the cathedral in Quezon...
Break muna! Ma and Twinx buy some calamares on the street.
5. San Agustin-the only church that survived the bombing of Intramuros. You can see and feel history here, whispering through the walls and the tombs!
6. Manila Cathedral-now fully air-conditioned! I love the grandeur and quiet grace of this place.
Monday, March 17, 2008
Holy week in RP
The Rodriguez cousins way back when
Holy Wednesday when I was much younger was spent at my tita's place in Pasay for the first procession/family reunion. My aunts would forbid us from playing because they said that if we got wounded on Holy Week, our wounds would never heal! Also, music and merrymaking were frowned upon as we were supposed to be mourning for Christ's suffering but good luck explaining that to kids. We thought our titas were just being mean. In those days before cable, you would really have no choice but to watch religious movies like "Jesus of Nazareth" and "Ben Hur" if you're lucky. Most of the day, tv stations were shut off or you'd see the usually inane afternoon TV hosts acting serious in made -for- TV tearjerkers.
San Agustin Church
Good Friday is the most solemn day. Older folks fast or not eat solid food the whole day while kids had to eat fish(simple fare, not expensive lobster or prawns) as a sort of sacrifice. Some even refrain from bathing on the hottest day of the year! Note: we did not follow this custom. We did eat ginataang bilo-bilo. This was the day of the longer procession, when all the saints on ornately decorated caros were and paraded around Pasay surrounded by devotees praying and holding candles like a prayer army. Before reaching the church, the flowers on the caros are flung to the devotees who believe these have miraculous powers. A peculiar belief some people have is that Good Friday is a day when aswangs and evil spirits roam because "patay ang Dios" (literally, God is dead.) One particularly memorable movie had a mananggal attack a family on Good Friday and could only be hurt by a palaspas blessed on Palm Sunday. Some of my cousins also perform a panata, a sort of penitence, so that God would grant their wish. They would walk all the way from Pasay to Antipolo to pray to Nuestra Senora de Paz y Bienviaje.