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This month's
Festival pick...
Semana Santa
Guatemala’s Hidden Saints and Public
Processions
By Toni Dabbs
Semana Santa has been called the biggest holiday in Guatemala, the most
beautiful religious celebration in the Americas, and the largest Holy
Week observance in the Western Hemisphere. Beginning on Palm Sunday and
continuing through Easter Sunday, it is best known for its colorful
religious processions.
Processions in Antigua
Although Semana Santa is celebrated throughout Guatemala in even the
smallest towns and villages, the biggest festivities take place in the
former capital city of Antigua, where processions were held as early as
the 1500s. After a massive earthquake destroyed much of Antigua in 1773,
the government decided to move the capital to Guatemala City and ordered
the removal of all important religious relics and art from Antigua’s
churches to those of the new capital.
To prevent significant religious statues from being taken away,
Antigua’s cofradias (religious brotherhoods, usually devoted to specific
saints) took their statues from the ruined churches and hid them,
worshiping them in secret for generations thereafter.
Most of the cofradias disassociated themselves from the Catholic clergy
to become lay brotherhoods, called hermandades. These organizations grew
in power and influence during the 19th century, despite an 1872
presidential decree outlawing them. In the early 20th century, the
government lifted the ban on cofradias and hermandades, and the
brotherhoods revived the tradition of displaying their long-hidden saint
statues in Holy Week processions.
Today, Antigua’s Semana Santa processions feature huge platforms, called
andas, on which religious statues are mounted. The first platform,
holding a figure of Christ with a cross, is carried by 60 to 100 men,
called cucuruchos, dressed in purple biblical clothing. This is followed
by a platform with the Virgin Mary, born by women wearing black
mourning.
The same people often carry a particular float year after year, but
bearer shifts are open to everyone weeks in advance of a procession. All
bearers pay a small fee to the church for the privilege, and the money
is used to dress the saint in richly textured fabrics and decorate the
float with flowers.
Many bearers are doing penance and seek atonement by carrying the heavy
platform. Bearers generally take turns, because a procession can take
hours to complete its course.
Purple bows tied onto window ironwork mark a parade route, with
temporary carpets covering the cobblestone street below. The handmade
carpets, called alfombras, display detailed pictorial and geometric
designs made of flower petals, pine needles, dyed sawdust and colored
sand.
Hundreds of parishioners will work overnight to create an alfombra often
several blocks long in front of a church or along a procession route. In
addition, people who live along a route create their own alfombras on
the street in front of their homes.
The feet of the bearers destroy these elaborate but fragile works of art
as the procession passes. Spectators sometimes collect flower petals or
pine needles touched by a procession, believing that they possess
healing powers. For the most part, though, the remains of the carpets
are swept away during the night, leaving no trace.
Antigua’s best processions take place on Palm Sunday, Holy Thursday and
Good Friday.
Cult of Maximon
In the highlands of Guatemala, a curious holdover from the time of
hidden statues and the country’s ban on cofradias persists. This is the
cult of Maximon in the town of Santiago Atitlan.
Although of unknown origin, Maximon is said to be a manifestation of the
Mayan god Mam, who reigned over the five day period between the end of
one year and the beginning of the next and who was represented as a
wooden doll dressed in human clothes. When Catholicism was superimposed
over Mayan beliefs during the 16th and 17th centuries, Mam became
integrated with St. Simon. His name is a combination of max, the Mayan
word for tobacco, and Simon. For this reason, he is represented with a
large cigar between his lips.
The Santa Cruz cofradia is responsible for taking care of the wooden
statue of Maximon, which spends the year "hidden" in the home of one of
its members. Pilgrims and even tourists have no trouble finding Maximon,
though. He is seated in a place of honor in his attendant’s home,
surrounded by flickering candles and burning incense, offerings of
cigarettes, cusha (corn alcohol) and money at his feet. Followers visit
him to ask his help in resolving health, love, family and economic
problems. It is considered a serious breach of ettiquette to come and
leave nothing.
On the Monday of Holy Week, the statue’s attendant carries it to the
shore of Lake Atitlan, where Maximon’s clothes are washed on two
specific boulders, as they are once a month throughout the year. The
attendant bottles the water wrung from the clothes and gives it to
followers, who consider it an antidote to sadness, fear and witchcraft.
The next day, the new attendant for the coming year collects the
statue’s clothes and ceremoniously dresses Maximon before assembled
members of the Santa Cruz cofradia. The statue’s attire includes both
traditional highland Guatemalan and European clothing, with numerous
silk scarves and a couple of felt hats.
Newly clothed, Maximon is presented gifts by cofradia members and is
placed in a small chapel, where he remains until after 3 p.m. on Good
Friday. He then is carried on the shoulders of his new attendant to
participate in a Semana Santa procession. As he leaves the chapel, a
giant rattle creates a deafening racket, and outside, a sea of men
wearing straw hats parts to let him through.
In the Semana Santa procession, Maximon is positioned behind the statue
of Christ but before that of Mary. After being paraded proudly through
the streets of Santiago Atitlan, he is conveyed to the home of his new
attendant, where he will spend the coming year receiving visitors.
Toni Dabbs
is a regular contributor to The Cultured Traveler
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