The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Greek island of Naxos celebrates Carnival

- By Demetris Nellas and Thanassis Stavrakis The Associated Press

NAXOS >> The island of Naxos hosts some of the most colorful Carnival celebratio­ns in Greece, with some customs dating from antiquity.

Others, such as the nowfamous Lampadifor­ia (Torch Parade) are more recent but have become very popular and an integral part of the festivitie­s.

In the Torch Parade, a procession of young men and women with faces painted to resemble black-and-white masks wear white sheets and hold torches on long poles on Saturday night. It first took place in 1994, dreamed up by young members of the local cinema club. About 50 people back then went out into the street holding the torches, screaming and dancing, startling the unsuspecti­ng public as they paraded toward the Temple of Apollo.

Now, the celebratio­n is a

well-establishe­d part of Carnival festivitie­s. About 2,000 people are expected to take part this year.

Local hotels provide sheets for the revelers to put on and residents join in the fun. Since the local Venetian castle has been rendered off-limits by archaeolog­ical authoritie­s, the parade

takes place along the maze of the old town’s narrow streets. Revelers dance to the beat of drums, ending at the town’s central square, where a scarecrow is burned.

In the Greek island’s main town and villages, more merriment awaits on Sunday, the official end of the Carnival, and Clean Monday.

 ?? THANASSIS STAVRAKIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo taken on Saturday a couple watches the Torch Parade on the Greek island of Naxos. Almost 2,000 people took part in the procession of young men and women with faces painted to resemble black-and-white masks wear white sheets and hold...
THANASSIS STAVRAKIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo taken on Saturday a couple watches the Torch Parade on the Greek island of Naxos. Almost 2,000 people took part in the procession of young men and women with faces painted to resemble black-and-white masks wear white sheets and hold...

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