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In Pictures: Spain's Fallas festival returns after pandemic pause

AFP/The Local
AFP/The Local - [email protected]
In Pictures: Spain's Fallas festival returns after pandemic pause
Ninots (cardboard effigies) burn as one installation of the Fallas Festival is set alight in Valencia on September 5, 2021. Photos: José Jordan/AFP

Valencia's Fallas festival wrapped up with fireworks and the burning of colourful sculptures on Sunday after returning to the eastern Spanish city following a pandemic-induced hiatus.

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The five-day festival is traditionally held in March but was cancelled last year as the Covid-19 pandemic swept Spain. This year, officials postponed the start of the UNESCO-recognised event until September 1st.

It was the first time that the festival was suspended since the end of Spain's 1936-39 Civil War.

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Each year, residents make hundreds of colourful puppet-like sculptures -- some as big as a four-storey building -- out of wood, plaster and papier-mache for the festival.

Called "ninots", the sculptures depict fairytale characters and cartoonish effigies of politicians and celebrities.

One ensemble from this year's event was inspired by the hit Spanish Netflix series "Money Heist". It depicted several people wearing red overalls and Salvador Dali face masks like the main characters in the show.

The ninots are displayed in the streets of the Mediterranean city and then burned on the last day of the festival -- in a bonfire called the "Cremà" -- in a centuries-old tradition honouring St Joseph, the patron saint of carpenters.

Fireworks lit up the night sky as this year's bonfire, which features about 750 sculptures, was held without the thousands of spectators that the event usually draws.

The bonfire was brought forward by two hours to allow festivities to end before a nightly virus curfew came into effect at 1:00 am (2300 GMT).

After much debate a customary flower offering to the Virgin Mary was allowed to proceed -- but without people lining the route, as is tradition.

"These are not Fallas as such, more like Fallas-related events that comply with health regulations," said Valencia mayor Joan Ribo.

The Fallas festival is believed to have originated from pagan rituals marking the end of winter.

The pandemic has forced the cancellation of many of Spain's most famous fiestas, including Pamplona's bull-running festival and Seville's Holy Week processions.

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Anonymous 2021/09/06 19:19
Why does nobody talk about what a menace Fallas can be? ...constant fireworks - my ear were ringing for days after an explosion near my head came out from nowhere. Dogs being walked are terrified and jittery...What about the horrific air pollution caused by the burning? The sculptures are mostly made of polystyrene foam which is plastic... the amount of cancerous particulate going into the air must be huge! Somebody needs to tell the truth about this. Where is the real journalism from The Local?

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