“Semana Santa”: Easter in Peru

“Semana Santa”: Easter in Peru, Aracari Travel

Easter in Peru

A variety of events and processions to mark Holy Week are underway across the country.  Friends and family gather for the occasion and attend church together while some also take the opportunity of having two days holiday to travel in Peru, with popular destinations filling up over the weekend.

The occasion is marked by a number of vivid festivals in the Andes that are the hallmark of the syncretism between native traditions and Catholicism.

A spectacular procession took place in Cusco on Holy Monday, El Señor de los Temblores, or “Lord of the Earthquakes” –  as dramatic and spiritual as its name suggests. The procession carries aloft a statue of Christ, the ‘Taytacha’. Blackened by the smoke of thousands of candles over the centuries, the statue is an impressive if somewhat eerie sight.

On the day, the singing of two groups of Quechua singers known as chaynas or jilgueros herald the preparation of the moving of the statue from the cathedral. The rich colour of the crimson ñukchu flower decorates the cross, symbolising the blood of Christ, though also significant plant in indigenous religion. Finally, flanked the singers and surrounded by crowds of people, the procession starts its winding journey through the streets of Cuzco to the Main Square, just as it did for the first time in the 17th century.

Significant processions also take place in the northern Andean town of Huaraz where week-long events culminate with and explosion of fireworks and the release of hundreds of birds; and also notably in the central Andean town of Tarma, where the streets are donned with archways and carpets of colourful flowers for which the region is renowned.

The most raucous events, however, and most famous for Peruvians, are held in Ayacucho. There are huge processions through the city’s streets and these continue from the Friday in Passion Week (before Palm Sunday) right through to Easter Sunday. The processions wind through the city streets from the city’s multiple churches to the Cathedral and bearing venerated figures of the main figures in the scriptural stories, particularly Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary.

Happy Easter from the Aracari Team!

Related Post

Why Every Photographer Should Visit Bolivia and Peru In Conversation with Max Milligan : A Preview Of His Bolivian and Peruvian Photo-Workshops With Aracari We recently had the pleasure of interviewin...
ARACARI’S FAVORITE INCA SITES IN PERU – AND WHY No visit to Peru is complete without a few visits to Inca archaeological sites - and there are a whole lot more to choose from than Machu Picchu. Whil...
Hacienda Tacama – Wine and Pisco in Ica The oasis of Ica, some 300km south of Lima, is home to Peru’s wine and pisco-producing vineyards. There, tucked amidst rows of grapes, sits the sprawl...
8 Inspiring Women On International Women’s Day Happy International Women’s Day! We would like to introduce you to these eight inspiring women. Each of them does exceptional work preserving the c...
Our New Years’ Travel Resolutions If you made any new year's travel resolutions at the beginning of last year, then we're guessing that 2020 made it rather difficult for you to keep to...
Conscious Travel: How Aracari Is Supporting “Peruanos Sin Agua... Social and ecological responsibility is at the heart of everything we do here at Aracari. We have always been proudly passionate about conscious trave...