This will likely be a shorter
post, as the past weekend was a largely uneventful one. That – the uneventfulness – is actually a
good thing, as it was a long weekend and I was on call for the stretch from
Thursday to Sunday. I’m happy to report
that neither surgical disease processes, recreational misadventure, nor man’s
inhumanity to man resulted in any surgical cases for that whole interval. Of course we also had no deliveries – either by
C-section or the more usual route – so there were no joyous events either. My duties therefore consisted of toting the
duty phone hither and thither, answering the daily test call, and staying reasonably
close and completely sober. Tough duty
for a habitual traveler and enthusiastic oenophile (and sincere cerevisophile),
but not too bad for all that. I will say
that, despite a long weekend spent delightedly quaffing my wife’s kindly
concocted and quite tasty plum shrub, that first frosty ale on Monday evening
went down gratefully.
“Reasonably close” does allow
some latitude however, and we took advantage of that to head into the heart of
Rota this past Saturday (July 16th) for part of the celebration
of the feast of Nuestra Señora del Carmen.
Now, I must admit that the exact origin
of the feast took me a bit of time to work out.
It was not clear to me – as it would be to anyone who comes from a
Spanish speaking country or culture – that the figure involved was the same
know to Anglophones as “Our Lady of Mount Carmel”.
Isn’t it interesting that somewhere along the line the terminal “L”
became an “N”? Where and when, I wonder.
Anyway, the Lady in question is the Virgin Mary in her role as the patroness of the Carmelite Order, which takes its origin from a group of 12th and 13th century Christian hermits who built their hermitage on Mount Carmel (Karem El in Hebrew, Kurumal in Arabic) in the Holy Land. The mountain itself is more properly a mountain range, a flint and limestone promontory in what is now northern Israel's Haifa province, and is by all accounts a cultural, ecological and historical treasure. In any event, the Carmelites constructed a chapel dedicated to Mary using her title Stella Maris - Star of the Sea - on the site. From that beginning, and associated with many prayers, devotions, apparitions, manifestations and at least one attested miracle, the feast of El Virgen del Carmen had its origin.
In Rota, the feast is celebrated by parading the statue of Nuestra Señora del Carmen from its usual spot in a side chapel of Rota's central church Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de la O. The "O" in the name of the church is a good story of itself, but I think I'll keep it for another time. Anyway, after 8:30 am Mass on the morning of the 16th, the statue is paraded from the church through the streets of the city to the water front, where she is moved to a boat and then ferried around the harbor in a blessing of the Roteno fishing fleet and fishermen (remember that Stella Maris thing). Nuestra Señora is then returned to the church, where she rests until the evening. At 7:30 pm she is once again paraded through town, visiting many of the larger and smaller plazas and religious sites throughout the city before returning to her side chapel for another year. It was this evening procession we headed out to see.
Rota, like a lot of the Costa del Luz, is a tourist destination in the summer. The lovely sand beaches which shelve gradually into the waters of the Atlantic attract thousands of folks from inland Spanish cities as well as from the rest of Europe. The city seems to soak them up pretty well, and unless you're looking for parking (or trying to get to sleep at 3 in the morning in a downtown hotel) you might not notice that the population has tripled. Worried about parking, and wanting to be sure we could effect a speedy return to base if the hospital called, we headed down to the waterfront at about 6:30 pm, paid for a parking spot near the Cádiz ferry terminal, and walked into the town. We found a comfortably low wall in the middle of Plaza Bartolomé Pérez just outside the doors of the church and waited.
Having stood there for a bit as the many bearers of the enormous platform positioned themselves, the whole was hoisted into the air atop their unseen shoulders, and as the band struck up another hymn, the whole gorgeous tableau moved slowly down the stairs, turned deliberately to the right as two score bearers aligned themselves, and moved majestically through the square. People reached out to touch the sides of the float, turning back to bless themselves, or solemnly watched the procession pass.
The parade stopped for a minute or so in the the next small plazoleta, and then moved gradually on, disappearing slowly into the labyrinthine heart of the old city.
This all took about 20 minutes from the time the doors of the church had opened. The crowd dissolved then, filtering back down the streets and alleys from whence they had come. We strolled down to the golden Playa of Rota, recovered the car from the lot and drove back to the much more ordinary and orderly streets of base housing.
Rota, like a lot of the Costa del Luz, is a tourist destination in the summer. The lovely sand beaches which shelve gradually into the waters of the Atlantic attract thousands of folks from inland Spanish cities as well as from the rest of Europe. The city seems to soak them up pretty well, and unless you're looking for parking (or trying to get to sleep at 3 in the morning in a downtown hotel) you might not notice that the population has tripled. Worried about parking, and wanting to be sure we could effect a speedy return to base if the hospital called, we headed down to the waterfront at about 6:30 pm, paid for a parking spot near the Cádiz ferry terminal, and walked into the town. We found a comfortably low wall in the middle of Plaza Bartolomé Pérez just outside the doors of the church and waited.
As time went by the Plaza started to fill. Littler, older folks at first who found the few remaining seats, then families and elegantly dressed couples all angling to place themselves somewhere in the shade. Even after 7, the July sun packs a good deal of power. Lastly a band somewhat haphazardly seemed to coalesce at the foot of the steps leading to the doors of the church. I hope the video I'm appending below gives some idea of the experience of what happened next. At one moment it was sort of a pleasantly buzzing chaotic bunch of people assembled in a town square. Then seemingly all at once the church bells rang, the doors were opened and the band snapped to order and began to play. The front of the enormous, gilded platform upon which the lavishly appointed statue of Nuestra Señora is borne nosed its way onto the stairs of the church, and the Lady herself could be seen, catching the slanting rays of the early evening sun. It was a breathtaking moment.
Having stood there for a bit as the many bearers of the enormous platform positioned themselves, the whole was hoisted into the air atop their unseen shoulders, and as the band struck up another hymn, the whole gorgeous tableau moved slowly down the stairs, turned deliberately to the right as two score bearers aligned themselves, and moved majestically through the square. People reached out to touch the sides of the float, turning back to bless themselves, or solemnly watched the procession pass.
This all took about 20 minutes from the time the doors of the church had opened. The crowd dissolved then, filtering back down the streets and alleys from whence they had come. We strolled down to the golden Playa of Rota, recovered the car from the lot and drove back to the much more ordinary and orderly streets of base housing.