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Festivals & Events
Excerpted from "The Best of San Miguel de Allende"© by Joseph Harmes. Reprinted with permission. See more at
www.thebestofsanmigueldeallende.com
June 11: Festividad del Sagrado Corazón de Jesús (Feast of the
Sacred Heart of Jesus, a moveable holiday). Celebrated the Friday following
Corpus Christi in all of the churches with Sacred Heart societies, especially at
El Oratorio de San Felipe Neri, which is decorated for the event with red and
white crepe paper. The feast day dates to around 1673 when a Catholic sister,
known as Saint Margaret Mary, began to have visions lasting 18 months. During
that time, Jesus told her to launch a grand crusade of love and host a feast in
his honor, at which time followers would make atonement for the sins of the
world by an act of contrition.
June 12: Festividad del Inmaculado Corazón de María (Feast of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary, a moveable holiday). Celebrated the Saturday following
the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, especially at El Oratorio de San Felipe
Neri.
June 15: Jueves de Corpus Christi (Thursday of the Body of Christ, a
moveable holiday). A festive day for kids, who receive gifts. Toys are sold
throughout the markets and streets and kids perform dances in front of La
Parroquia, including one called Los Hortelanos (The Gardeners). In late
afternoon, crimson and white banners are draped throughout El Centro. After Mass
is said in La Parroquia, the solemn procession of the Blessed Sacrament winds
through the streets.
June 18: Festividad de San Antonio de Padua (Feast of St. Anthony of
Padua). The preacher and miracle worker is one of the best-known disciples of
St. Francis of Assisi. Locally, he ranks second in popularity only to San Miguel
Arcángel. A parroquia, a former convent, a neighborhood and one of the town's
busiest streets bear his name.
Among the most common retablos and statues are those dedicated to Saint Anthony
(1195-1231), who lived part of his life, and died, in the city of Padua, Italy.
He most often is seen holding the child Jesus in his arms. He is the patron of
mariners and fishermen, expectant mothers, animals, American Indians and
travelers, among others. The fiesta begins earlier in the month at La Parroquia
de San Antonio with a novena (nine days of prayer) and nightly fireworks.
The weekend closest to the feast day brings a carnival and, most notably, the
Fiesta de los Locos on the Sunday closest to June 13. No when knows when the
fiesta began but it originated with masked--and usually intoxicated--farmers who
marched through town brandishing branches and tools--simultaneously handing out
fruit to bewildered onlookers. Today, in an extravaganza found only in San
Miguel de Allende, half the town dresses in wild costumes and the rest line
streets to catch the tens of thousands of pieces of candy thrown to (and
sometimes at) spectators. Residents of Colonia San Antonio are divided into
teams of locos (like Mardi Gras krewes in New Orleans) who save and raise money
for the group's candy, march together and concoct hilarious floats. Women adopt
the persona of their favorite celebrities. Men often dress as women, animals,
disgraced politicians, monsters or the most infamous of the moment like, Osama
bin Laden or George W. Bush.
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