Monday, December 31, 2012

FEATURE: Pingtung villages? Christmas parade a hit

Most people may not have expected it, but for residents in Pingtung County?s two small villages of Wanjin (??) and Chishan (??) ? with a combined population of about 5,000 ? Christmas is the most important festivity of the year, since about 80 percent of the villagers are Catholics.

One after another, fireworks were shot into the sky as Christmas songs were sung and a carriage, drawn by men in Santa Claus outfits and carrying two children dressed up as Joseph and the Virgin Mary holding baby Jesus, passed through the crowd. Church volunteers led the way, while onlookers took pictures of the parade.

In the past, the carriage was drawn by a cow. However, as the number of visitors grows, the church has decided to have people draw the carriage because a cow would be easily scared by the crowd.

?Merry Christmas. May peace be upon you,? the paraders and the onlookers said to each other, with smiles on their faces.

Many may have thought that parades on Christmas Eve only took place in predominantly Christian countries, but the residents of the two small villages neighboring Wanluan Township (??) have celebrated Christmas for well over a century.

?We have just celebrated the 151st anniversary of the founding of the Wanjing Basilica, and we?ve always had a parade since the founding of the church here to express and share our joy for the birth of Christ,? said Pan Ching-yu (???), a priest at the basilica.

Prior to the parade, at the entrance of Chishan, a group of priests and young volunteers had traveled to another village named Jiazuo (??), about 2km south of Chishan, to pick up the children dressed up as Joseph and Mary holding baby Jesus in a reconstructed stable, and paraded them through Chishan and Wanjin villages.

The parade ended at the basilica, where a mass was held.

The parade symbolizes the villagers welcoming Jesus and is also to spread the faith, said Baru, a priest of the Paiwan tribe.

?There are seven neighborhoods in Wanjin and Chishan, plus Jiazuo Village, so a total of eight communities in the surrounding areas of Wanjin Basilica take turns to stage the Nativity,? he said. ?Representatives from the eight neighborhoods hold meetings to make the decision.?

Pan explained why there was such a concentration of Catholics in the two villages.

?The two villages were historically severely impoverished, but things began to change when the Spanish missionary Father Fernando Sainz arrived in Wanjin in 1861,? Pan said. ?He made great efforts trying to help the villagers economically, while also mediating ethnic conflict. Through his acts of benevolence, he gained the trust of the people and a large number of people were converted to Christianity.?

For instance, many villagers at the time had to sell their land for cash, and without land, they would not be able to make a living, Pan said.

?So what Father Sainz did was purchase the land with church funds and continue to allow the original landowners to work their land,? he said.

Ethnic conflicts were also a serious problem because Wanjin and Chishan are Hoklo-speaking villages surrounded by Hakka-speaking and Paiwan Aboriginal communities, Pan added.

In fact, although Wanjin and Chishan are Hoklo-speaking villages, the majority of the villagers are descendants of the Makataos, a Pingpu Aboriginal tribe.

Christmas celebrations have long attracted Catholics from across the country and promotion by the Pingtung County Government since last year has made it a popular event even for non-Christians.

Source: http://libertytimes.feedsportal.com/c/33098/f/535599/s/270eeb26/l/0L0Staipeitimes0N0CNews0Ctaiwan0Carchives0C20A120C120C310C20A0A3551411/story01.htm

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