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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
In the Philippines, Easter (Paskò/Linggo
ng Pagkabuhay) morning is marked with joyous celebration, the first
being the dawn ceremony called the Salubong (Filipino for
"meeting") that re-enacts the imagined reunion of Christ and his
mother after the Resurrection. Statues of the Risen Christ and the Virgin Mary
are borne in two separate processions that meet at a designated area called a Galilea,
usually in the plaza fronting the church. Some locales include statues any or
all of The Three Marys (Mary of Cleopas, Mary Magdalene, and Mary Salome), Saint
Peter and Saint John the Evangelist in the processions, which are almost always
sex segregated (i.e., male devotees follow Christ and the male saints; women
follow the Virgin and female saints).
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
The Virgin Mary is clothed or veiled in black
to express her bereavement. A girl dressed as an angel, positioned on a
specially constructed high scaffold or suspended in mid-air, sings the Regina
Coeli in Latin or in the vernacular, and then dramatically removes the black
veil to signify the end of Mary's grieving. This may also be done by other
"angels" who pull off the veil, or tie it to balloons or doves and
release these into the dawn sky. The Virgin is then called the Nuestra
Señora de Alegria ("Our Lady of Joy") and confetti and flower
petals are showered on the statues. The moment is marked by pealing bells and fireworks,
followed immediately by the Easter Mass. In several parishes however, this is
practiced at midnight of Easter Sunday immediately after the Easter Vigil, done
in the very same manner.
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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Salubong at Parokya San Miguel, Zamboanga Sibugay |
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