Times Colonist

Antigua Guatemala rolls out flower carpet

Residents of this city create one of world’s most dazzling displays of Easter devotion

- GIOVANNA DELL’ORTO

GUATEMALA CITY — The rising sun hasn’t lit up the cobbleston­e streets of this colonial city yet, but people of all ages are busy covering them with brightly coloured sawdust mosaics and carpets made of flowers and fruits.

Many have worked overnight on these elaborate masterpiec­es that will disappear in a couple of minutes under the feet of dozens of men carrying in procession a three-ton religious float.

Whether shoulderin­g massive sacred images or decorating the streets where they will pass, the people of Antigua Guatemala, a small city in southern Guatemala, create one of the world’s most dazzling and moving displays of Easter devotion.

That makes early spring an ideal time to visit this volcano-ringed city that looks remarkably as it did 500 years ago when it was the capital of Spain’s Central American empire.

Easter festivitie­s kick off the fifth Sunday of Lent — April 2 this year — with the first procession revering Jesus’s passion.

A group of 90 “cucuruchos,” as the purplerobe­d and hooded volunteers are called, shoulders a block-long wooden float at the parish of San Bartolome Becerra at 6 a.m.

Every 100 metres on the 12-kilometre route, a new group will relieve the sweating, swaying men, until the antique sculpture of Jesus falling under the weight of the cross has made its way through the city centre.

There are approximat­ely 9,000 carriers. Some are from Antigua but they also come from across Central America and even from the United States, with Guatemalan­s living elsewhere coming home for the celebratio­n.

It will be 1 a.m. the next day before the last group deposits the float back at San Bartolome, said Hiram Salazar, spokesman for Hermandad de Jesus Nazareno de la Caida, the Catholic confratern­ity in charge of this procession first recorded in 1902.

As the float inches its way on top of the first green, yellow and red carpet, a hush comes over the crowd squeezed against whitewashe­d houses to let the cucuruchos walk through.

Incense mixes with the fragrance of crushed tropical flowers and candlewax wafting from small chapels.

By Easter Sunday, these scenes are repeated as a dozen other procession­s carry sacred images past Antigua’s crimson and gold single-storey homes, arcaded palaces, tree-lined plazas and monumental churches and convents such as the canary yellow, sculpture-filled La Merced.

In the past few years, hundreds of thousands of visitors descended on Antigua for Easter festivitie­s.

But if you go early enough in the morning, the streets still belong to two teenagers perched on a wooden plank patting down violet sawdust or a man fashioning a large cross of red rose petals among a giant square of white calla lilies and pink snapdragon blossoms.

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