Archive for January, 2011

February 2nd is the Feast of the Presentation of our Lord.

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“Jaro Feista” is more than just a festival of food, pageantry and cock fighting. The “Jaro Fiesta” is a Roman Catholic Feast of the Presentation of Our Lord in the Temple, commemoration of Mary’s rite of Purification and reflection on Simeon’s Canticle.

Our Lady of the Candles (Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria) is also known as the Candlemas Virgin. It was the title given to Our Blessed Virgin Mary in commemoration of the Presentation of Jesus and Mary’s own rite of Purification according to Jewish Law.

According to the Mosaic law a mother who had given birth to a man-child was considered unclean for seven days; moreover she was to remain three and thirty days “in the blood of her purification”; for a maid-child the time which excluded the mother from sanctuary was even doubled. When the time (forty or eighty days) was over the mother was to “bring to the temple a lamb for a holocaust and a young pigeon or turtle dove for sin”; if she was not able to offer a lamb, she was to take two turtle doves or two pigeons; the priest prayed for her and so she was cleansed. (Leviticus 12:2-8)

Forty days after the birth of Christ, Mary complied with this precept of the law, she redeemed her first-born from the temple (Numbers 18:15), and was purified by the prayer of Simeon the just, in the presence of Anna the prophetess (Luke 2:22 sqq.). No doubt this event, the first solemn introduction of Christ into the house of God, was in the earliest times celebrated in the Church of Jerusalem. We find it attested for the first half of the fourth century by the pilgrim of Bordeaux, Egeria or Silvia. The day (14 February) was solemnly kept by a procession to the Constantinian basilica of the Resurrection, a homily on Luke 2:22 sqq., and the Holy Sacrifice. But the feast then had no proper name; it was simply called the fortieth day after Epiphany. This latter circumstance proves that in Jerusalem Epiphany was then the feast of Christ’s birth.

From Jerusalem the feast of the fortieth day spread over the entire Church and later on was kept on the 2nd of February, since within the last twenty-five years of the fourth century the Roman feast of Christ’s nativity (25 December) was introduced. In Antioch it is attested in 526 (Cedrenue); in the entire Eastern Empire it was introduced by the Emperor Justinian I (542) in thanksgiving for the cessation of the great pestilence which had depopulated the city of Constantinople.

Article sources: newadvent.org (Catholic Encyclopedia),
Photo sources: en.wikipilipinas.org, daughter of the King theleastofallthefaithful

Dinagyang video

Dinagyang Festival video. Professional photography by RRGenciana Photography, Iloilo City.


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Let’s Hangout in Iloilo and enjoy the 2011 Dinagyang Festival!

October 14, 2010, Friday
2:00 pm  LOCAL LAUNCH Iloilo Dinagyang Festival 2011 – Freedom Grandstand

December 16, 2010, Friday
2:00 pm PAMUKAW Assembly Area: Promenade passing Iznart, J.M. Basa to Freedom Grandstand

January 4, 2011, Tuesday
2:00 pm  Model Ati Dinagyang Warrior 2011 Presentation

January 7, 2011, Friday
2:00 pm  Model Ati Dinagyang Warrior 2011 Talent Competition

January 9, 2011, Sunday
1:00 pm Model Ati Dinagyang Warrior 2011 Finals

January 14, 2011, Friday
2:30 pm  Mass for Opening Salvo of Tribe Dancers – San Jose Parish Church
3:00 pm OPENING SALVO -  Judging Area

January 14-16, 2010
Iloilo Dinagyang Golf Competition 2011 – Sta. Barbara Golf Club

January 15, 2011, Saturday
7:00 am SQUEAK Parade Route

January 16-23, 2011
Dinagyang Photo Exhibit

January 16, 2011, Sunday
10:00 am – 3:00pm DRESSING UP DAGOY

January 19-23, 2011
2:00 pm -12 mn Iloilo Hotel Resort & Restaurant Association (IHRRA) Food Festival  – Delgado St., Iloilo City

January 21, 2011, Friday
8:00 am TAMBOR TRUMPA MARTSA MUSIKA  – Freedom Grandstand
7:00 pm LUCES IN THE SKY Part I

The following two days are the highlight of the whole festivities

January 22, 2011, Saturday
7:00 am Mass for Kasadyahan – San Jose Parish Church
8:00 pm 2011 KASADYAHAN Competition -  Freedom Grandstand and other stages
2:00 am SPONSORS MARDI GRAS – Judging Area #4 to Freedom Grandstand
7:00 am LUCES IN THE SKY Part II
7:00 pm Religious Sad-sad to Sr. Sto. Niño -  San Jose Parish Church

January 23, 2010, Sunday
6:30 am Concelebrated High Mass for devotees, Tribes, Gov’t. Officials, LOMAS in attendance -  San Jose Parish Church
8:00 am 2011 Dinagyang Ati CONTEST – Freedom Grandstand and other stages
7:00 pm Awarding Ceremonies – Freedom Grandstand

January 24, 2011, Monday
5:30 PM Thanksgiving Mass with all members of 2010 Iloilo Dinagyang Festival Working Committees – San Jose Parish Church

Read the History of Sto Nino

Read more about Iloilo’s Dinagyang Festival

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Source:  http://www.dinagyangsailoilo.com

Photos courtesy of RRGenciana Photography, Iloilo City

History of Sto. Niño

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The Voyage

The world is not flat! This discovery of the Spain’s expedition commanded by the Portuguese navigator Hernando de Magallanes or Ferdinand Magellan, that set the record as the fist expedition to circumnavigate and confirm that the world is round is the same expedition that brought the image of Sto. Nino and the Catholic faith to the Philippine islands. On September 1519, a fleet of galleons under the flag of Spain set sailed in search for the Spice Islands. Instead they landed in a group of islands in the central part of the Philippines and in Limasawa island where Magellan declared possession of the (part of the Maharlika Kingdom of Asia) archipelago and named it after King Philip of Spain.

The Gift of Faith

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Magellan's Cross in Cebu City

Without spices and in search of needed supplies, they continued their journey to the village of Zubu, now the City of Cebu, planted a mission Cross, befriended and converted into the Catholic faith the local chieftain Raja Humabon and his wife Hara Juana and the members of their tribe. As a gift on their baptism, Magellan gave the image of the Holy Infant Jesus, the Sto. Nino. A Sandugo, a blood compact was made between the two leaders and Magellan promise to fight with them against the neighboring tribe of the island of Matan, now Mactan. Magellan was killed in the battle of Mactan and the remnants of his forces returned to Spain using a different route, thus making the historic first voyage around the world.

The Rediscovery

It was 44 years later that the new group of Spanish explorers led by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and an Augustinian priest, Fr. Andres Urdaneta, a cosmographer from the Augustinian monastery in Mexico arrived in Cebu and find out that the new chieftain, Raja Tupaz was unfriendly to the newcomers. Skirmishes between the two groups left the village of Cebu in ruins. When a party was dispatched to check the village, a soldier, his name, Juan Camus found the image of the Child Jesus in one of the burning huts, the same image given to the former village chieftain’s wife, Juana 44 years earlier. The natives went back to their pagan ways and may have kept the image as an anito, or one of the native gods, as it was found with floral offerings.

The Prayer

Legazpi was said to have included this event in his report, “Relation of Voyage to the Philippine Islands”, to the king of Spain:

“Your Excellency should know that on that day when we entered this village (Cebu City), one of the soldiers went into a large and well-built house of an indio where he found an image of the Child Jesus (whose most holy name I pray may be universally worshipped). This was kept in its cradle, all gilded, just as if it were brought from Spain: and only the little cross, which is generally placed upon the globe in his hands, was lacking. The image was well kept in that house, and many flowers were found before it, and no one knows for what object or purpose. The soldier bowed down before it with all reverence and wonder, and brought the image to the place where the other soldiers were. I pray to the Holy Name of his image, which we found here, to help us and to grant us victory, in order that these lost people who are ignorant of the precious and rich treasure, which was in their possession, may come to knowledge of Him.”

The Answer

Since then, devotion to the Santo Niño has grown and has taken root in Filipinos’ popular piety, particularly in the Visayas, the central part of the Philippines group of islands. Pilgrims from different parts of the country make their yearly journey to the church, the Basilica Menore del Santo Nino or the Minor Basilica of the Santo Nino, in Cebu, to take part in the procession and festival. Different parts of the Philippines called this celebration differently: in Cebu, they call it Sinulog, Ati-Atihan in Kalibo, Aklan and in Tondo, Manila, Dinagyang in Iloilo and Binirayan in the province of Antique, to name a few. But all of them, all of these festivals, are centered on one and only purpose: the devotion to the Holy Infant Jesus, the Sto. Nino and His role in all of the Philippines’ embrace of the Catholic faith.

The Celebration

Iloilo Province celebrate the Feast of Santo Niño with a religious-cultural event called The Dinagyang Festival every fourth weekend of January after Cebu’s Sinulog and Kalibo’s Ati-atihan. Here are some snapshots of the event courtesy of RRGenciana Photography, Iloilo City.

RRGenciana Dinagyang2010

RRGenciana Dinagyang2010

RRGenciana Dinagyang 2010

RRGenciana Dinagyang 2010

RRGenciana Dinagyang 2010

Article sources: http://www.santoninogodevotion.org/, http://en.wikipedia.org, http://tubagbohol.mikeligalig.com

Pictures courtesy of RRGenciana Photography, Iloilo City