The Asian Age

No more pain for Philippine devotee nailed to cross for 32nd time

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Cutud, Philippine­s: A Philippine man who has been nailed to a cross every Easter for the past 32 years in a Good Friday re- enactment of Jesus Christ’s crucifixio­n says he no longer feels any pain from his wounds. Ruben Enaje, 58, again portrayed Christ on Friday in the traditiona­l religious rite in Cutud village, about 76 km ( 47 miles) from the capital Manila. “In the past, I went home injured and limping, but this year I feel so great,” Enaje said after the ritual held under a sweltering sun. He said he believed his strong Catholic faith helped him avoid pain. “I feel like he is telling me ‘ go ahead, keep it up’,” he said, referring to God. Easter is a festival marking the crucifixio­n and resurrecti­on of Christ. About 80 per cent of the 105 million people in the Philippine­s, a former Spanish colony, are Catholic. Enaje said he felt strong enough to perform in two or three more crucifixio­ns, until he turns 60. Enaje was among three devotees nailed to wooden crosses in the village on Friday, including a woman taking part for the seventh time. Actors wearing Roman soldier costumes attached the devotees to crosses by hammering two- inch nails soaked in alcohol through their hands and feet and hoisted them up in a field packed with domestic and foreign tourists. The Catholic Church in the Philippine­s tolerates the ritual but says it does not support such gory displays of devotion, describing them as a “misinterpr­etation of faith”. Many Catholics in the Philippine­s perform religious acts of penance during the Holy Week at Easter as a form of worship and supplicati­on. Some believe penance cleanses sins, cures illnesses and even leads to wishes coming true.

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