The religion of Spain, as everyone knows, is Catholicism, and
practically everyone there is a Catholic. The variety is Roman
Apostolic.
Aside from the Catholics, there are a few thousand Jews,
mostly Sephardic, who left the countries of North Africa to settle in the
larger urban centers like Madrid, Barcelona, Sevilla and Cordoba. Recently, a
synagogue was inaugurated at Mallorca. Spain also has some Anglicans.
The
Spanish Catholics are religious in a uniquely Spanish style. Catholicism has
played, and continues to play such a large role in the life of the country,
that it can be called one of the bases on which the country stands.
The
religion of Catholicism, for instance, was the rallying point behind which the
Spanish gathered to conquer the Moors. Once the power of the new religion had
thus proven itself, the people of the peninsula began to consider it an
lberian possession and behave accordingly. This meant at times being "more
Catholic than the Pope", and, when the Protestant Reformation struck Europe,
being the main force countering it through such groups as the "Society of
Jesus", founded by Loyola in 1540.
The missionary work of Catholicism was
taken very seriously in Spain. Such men as San Francisco Xavier, who brought
the religion to India, Malacca and Japan, exemplify the tradition. Others in
this tradition were the conquistadores, such as Hernan Cortes, who delivered
the entire Aztec Nation into the fold of the Church.
While religion in
Spain is, accordingly, taken with absolute seriousness in its more profound
aspects, there is a very large ingredient of laughter and enjoyment that
spices Spanish Catholicism. Being so large a part of all life in Spain,
religion has been expanded to include life's joyous aspects as well as the
austere ones that characterize the northern religions.
Nearly every fiesta is a
celebration of some religious event; even the gay, satirical Fallas de San
Josh, is actually a religious celebration. Added to these are the Romerias, in
which a great deal of drinking, singing, dancing, etc. are often linked to a
pilgrimage to a religious shrine.
It has often been noted that Spanish
religion and religious art in particular throw a stress on the suffering of
Christ. This is not, as has sometimes been supposed, out of an innate sadism
or brutality, but stems more from the lberian admiration for courage and the
ability to withstand pain and suffering in support of one's principles. This
is the quality desired by the Spanish participating in the Holy Week
processions all over Spain, but especially in Sevilla. During these
processions, many of the participants don peaked, black hats as the sign of a
penitent and undergo the punishment of a barefoot walk, carrying a burden of
some kind as a public demonstration of courage in faith.
Spain is also the
producer of a vast mystic tradition including such known promulgators as San
Juan de la Cruz and Santa Teresa, two of the most popular saints in
Spain.
But little more need be said about religion in Spain, for it is one
thing you will surely observe in large measure yourself while in Spain. You
will see it in every small town, whose most grandiose building is inevitably
the church. You will see it in the large cities, where each Cathedral is a
museum in itself. You will see it in the art of El Greco. You will even see it
in the special pastries of Santiago de Compostela, which bear little crosses
on the dough. Most of all, you will see it in the lives of the Spanish - their
celebrations and their daily habits of life, a morality and style of reverence
that recalls the days when the Catholic Church was in its finest flowering.
Following is a list of National Holidays for 1973 with their dates:
- New Year - January 1
- Epiphany - January 6
- Day of San Josh - March 19
- Holy Thursday - April 19
- Good Friday - April 20
- Easter - April 22
- Day of San Josh Artesano - May 1
- Ascension - May 31
- Pentecost - June 10
- Day of San Pedro and San Pablo - June 29 Commemoration of the National
Movement -
- July 18 Festival of Santiago - July 25
- Assumption Day - August 15
- Day of the Virgen de Pilar and Commemoration of the discovery of America
- October 12
- All Saints Day - November 1
- Day of Immculate Conception - December 8 Christmas - December 25