Mammoth crowd joins ‘Traslacion’

Credit to Author: Tempo Desk| Date: Wed, 09 Jan 2019 09:27:29 +0000

DEVOTEES hold on tightly on the carriage carrying the iconic image of the Black Nazarene during yesterday’s ‘Traslacion.’ (Ali Vicoy)

DEVOTEES hold on tightly on the carriage carrying the iconic image of the Black Nazarene during yesterday’s ‘Traslacion.’ (Ali Vicoy)

A mammoth crowd of mostly barefoot Filipino Catholics joined a raucous procession Wednesday of a centuries-old black statue of Jesus Christ under extra-tight security in Manila due to terrorism fears and recent bomb attacks in the Southern Philippines.

Police said they have not monitored any specific threat but that they deployed more than 7,000 personnel, including bomb squads backed by a surveillance helicopter, to secure the annual “Traslacion” or procession of the wooden Black Nazarene in Manila. Police expect up to five million people to join the dawn-to-midnight procession.

Authorities imposed a gun and liquor ban and cellphone signals were jammed in the vicinity of the procession. Flights over the area were prohibited along with sailing in nearby Manila Bay and on the Pasig River where special police and Coast Guard forces guarded bridges that the mass of devotees passed through.

Despite the threats and the tropical heat, mobs of devotees in maroon shirts dangerously squeezed their way into the tight pack of humanity around a carriage carrying the life-size statue of Christ. They threw small towels at volunteers on the carriage, which was being pulled by ropes, to wipe parts of the cross and the statue in the belief that the Nazarene’s powers cure ailments and ensure good health and a better life.

“I’m praying so I can walk again and be cured of depression,” said Pochi Maximo, who held on to a wheeled walking device as she waited along a road with her daughter for the procession to pass.

The 58-year-old housewife said she has joined the religious gathering since childhood as part of a family tradition and persisted to be at the procession despite debilitating knee and spine ailments that were diagnosed last year, along with diabetes, that drove her into pits of depression.

“There is a saying in the church that if you look up front, in your back, to your left and right but can’t find a solution to your problems, look up to heaven and you will see the solution,” Maximo said, beaming.

Another devotee, Ryan de Vera, a 29-year-old former finance officer at a local bank, said he squeezed his way through the crowd to touch the hand of the Black Nazarene, which he credited for the recovery of his father from prostate cancer.

After the dangerous feat, he was pushed uncontrollably aside by the mass of humanity to a roadside, where his left foot sustained a deep wound caused by a sharp metal piece debris.

After getting treatment in a first aid station, he limped back to the crowd, still barefoot and smiling. By midday, more than 850 devotees had been treated by Red Cross volunteers for minor injuries, exhaustion, and high blood pressure.

Crowned with thorns and bearing a cross, the Nazarene statue is believed to have been brought from Mexico to Manila on a galleon in 1606 by Spanish missionaries. The ship that carried it caught fire, but the charred statue survived.

Some believe the statue’s endurance, from fires and earthquakes through the centuries and intense bombings during World War 2, is a testament to its powers.

The spectacle reflects the unique brand of Catholicism, which includes folk superstitions, in Asia’s largest Catholic nation.

Dozens of Filipinos have themselves nailed to crosses on Good Friday in another tradition to emulate Christ’s suffering that draws huge crowds and tourists each year.

Police forces have been placed on full alert ahead of the religious gathering amid military offensives against Muslim militants aligned with the Islamic State group who have been blamed for a spate of bombings and other attacks in the volatile South.

Last week, suspected Muslim militants remotely detonated a bomb that killed two people and wounded about 30 others near the entrance of a shopping mall in southern Cotabato City as people did last-minute shopping ahead of New Year’s Eve celebrations. (AP, Jel Santos, Minka Tiangco, Erma Edera, Dhel Nazario, Jhon Casinas, Ria Fernandez, Leslie Aquino, and Hanah Tabios)

(To be updated)

 

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