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In case you missed this on the Sevilla Blog, we are now in the middle of Semana Santa (Holy Week) in Sevilla. For those who haven’t experienced, or don’t know about it, it’s all about the processions – more than sixty of them during the course of the week, including those of the Madrugá on the Thursday night through to Friday morning (though this year it looks likely to be rained out). Each procession carries statues of the Christ and the Virgin from its home church to the Cathedral and back again, accompanied by nazarenos and penitentes carrying candles and crosses, and the distinctive music of the Semana Santa marching bands.
Because this is the largest and most elaborate celebration of its kind in the world, people come from all over Spain and even further afield to see it. With such large crowds, especially in the centre and around the cathedral, it is almost impossible for the residents to live normal lives, and for the last 18 years I’ve spent most of Semana Santa pretty much trapped in my flat just up the street from the cathedral. But this year I will be spending it in my new home near the Alfalfa for the first time, and I really don’t know what to expect in the way of crowds and inconvenience.
In retrospect it seems almost prescient that I took this video last year of the Santa Cruz procession, which plays my favourite marcha, the haunting La Madrugá by Abel Moreno. Little did I know that it was going to be the last time I would watch it go past below my bedroom balconies…

I think that Jesus In The Shoes pictures is SO VERY VERY WEIRD.
Thanks.
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Yeah, I have other Jesus-in-the-shoes photos from previous years, but I think this one is the best yet.
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Jesus died for your shoes. (That display made me laugh.)
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Or shoes to die for?
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Or because of the shoes?
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As in … these shoes are killing me?
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Ah, Festival of The Lop-Sided Saints time, eh?
Seriously, one day I’m gonna come and see this for myself. Whilst the Jesus-in-the-shoes might be a little off-the-wall, I would like to see the spectacle for myself.
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Well, it’s like that procession we bumped into the night you arrived last visit, remember? Except bigger and more crowded and all over town.
Except this year. The processions have been mostly rained out all week and the entire all-nighter (la madrugá) was cancelled last night, first time since 1933. Very sad for everyone who waits all year for this.
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