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Friday, March 29, 2024

Devotees defy terror threat, sizzling weather

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THRONGS of Catholic devotees braved sizzling weather and terrorist fears on Monday in a frenzied bid to touch a centuries-old statue of Jesus Christ that is believed to have miraculous powers.

The annual procession of the Black Nazarene, which police said attracted more than one-million people, is one of the world’s biggest displays of Catholic devotion and showcases the Philippines’ status as the Church’s bastion in Asia.

Many Filipinos believe touching or getting close to the life-sized statue, which was brought to the Philippines in the early 1600s when the nation was a Spanish colony, can lead to the healing of otherwise incurable ailments and other good fortune.

“If you seek a favor it will be granted as long as you pray hard,” Lolit Gonzales, 45, said as she sat on the sidewalk after taking her turn pulling on a thick length of rope that moved the statue’s carriage forward.

The manicurist attributed the healing two years ago of a painful right knee, which her doctor had told her required surgery and medicine that she could not afford, to taking part in the procession at that time.

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Gonzales said she had returned on Monday to ensure her knee ailment did not recur, since she had no health insurance and was the only breadwinner in her family.

The pilgrims walked Manila’s concrete streets as the temperature climbed above 30 degrees Celsius without footwear as a sign of penance and to imitate a barefoot Jesus carrying the cross before he was crucified.

HEAVING FAITH. Catholic devotees fence in the carriage of the Black Nazarene which left the  bayside Quirino Grandstand Monday morning for the nearly day-long journey to the Quiapo Church, three kms away, with some 1.1-million devotees, by police estimates, lining the city streets. Medical caregivers attend to devotees who are either injured or unconscious (upper left) while streetsweepers from the Metro Manila Development Authority and the Manila City Hall (upper right) clear the vicinity of the Quirino Grandstand. Norman Cruz/Andrew Rabulan

The statue is called the Black Nazarene because of its charred color, believed to have occurred when it survived a fire aboard a ship when being brought to the Philippines from Mexico.

Replica crosses and other religious icons and images followed the cross carriage six abreast, borne on the back of trucks, atop pedicabs and manually drawn carriages in an extremely slow procession that was expected to last into the night.

One small truck carried nuns in white robes sprinkling holy water on the sweaty pilgrims and reciting the Holy Rosary prayer in Spanish.

Such extreme forms of worship are a hallmark of the Philippines which is 80 percent Roman Catholic, a legacy of four centuries of Spanish colonialism that ended in 1898.

President Rodrigo Duterte often gives conflicting signals about his religious convictions and criticizes the Church’s leaders, but he offered encouragement on Monday to those involved in the procession.

“Prayers are likely answered because we do not give up or get tired from asking God for the fulfillment of our heart’s desires,” Duterte said. 

“Such is the phenomenal expression of faith of the millions of devotees in the form of gratitude, petition, and sacrifice shown in the image of the Black Nazarene every feast day on the 9th of January every year.”

This year’s event was held under the threat of Islamic militant attacks, with authorities reporting more than 5,700 police had been deployed to provide security.

National police chief Ronald dela Rosa had said repeatedly in recent days that extremists who have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group may try to stage an attack.

A separatist rebellion in the south has claimed more than 120,000 lives since the 1970s, but the major rebel groups are now involved in peace talks with the government and no longer waging armed conflict.

Small hardline groups, however, still carry out attacks, particularly against Catholics.

The most recent was a bomb blast at a crowded market in Duterte’s hometown of Davao in September last year that killed 15 people.

Police said some 1.2 million devotees joined the procession at the Quirino Grandstand in Rizal Park at about 5:30 a.m., but added that this was expected to rise to as much as 3.5 million later in the day. 

The procession, called “Traslacion,” was expected to end in Quiapo Church at midnight of Jan. 9 and 10, or early Tuesday.

Hundreds of policemen and soldiers secured areas along the route of the procession.

The National Telecommunications Commission had also told telecommunications companies to shut down cellphone signals in parts of Manila, based on the request of the Philippine National Police as part of the security measures for the Traslacion.

Police said that there were no direct threat to the Traslacion even as they called on the devotees to be vigilant.

The Philippine Red Cross said it has attended to more than 1,239 devotees who suffered various ailments and injuries during the procession.

A pregnant woman was assisted by the Red Cross, while five people needed to be taken to nearby hospitals for treatment.

In his homily during the early Mass at the Quirino Grandstand, Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle called on the devotees of the Black Nazarene to focus on loving and serving others.

“Love is not just an emotion. Love is not just an idea. It translates to service. This is what unites us,” he said.

He also asked the people to stop judging others, in line with the Traslacion’s theme of love and unity.

“Division is often the fruit of judgment. And if we are always like this, we never attain unity because there is no ability to say that we are no different from each other,” the prelate said. 

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