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The Festival
of the Three Kings. How
do you have your Christmas cake and eat it? The
answer is have two celebrations. Have the usual Christmas at home and
two weeks later be in Tenerife in the Canaries for The
Festival of the Three Kings. I
happens each year on the 5th of January. You can spend the day lying in
the sun and in the the warmth of the evening, wander streets that echo
to the sound of Christmas carols. They are of course sung in Spanish. I
remember standing on the beach and looking at a magnificent sand
sculpture. It was of the baby Jesus, Mary and Joseph and was complete
with ox, ass and angel. Low
in the sky, not one star,
but four sparkled across the bay. They were bright neon ones on top of
a four star hotel and their reflection shimmered on the water. At
Los Christianos, which is in the south of Tenerife, I joined the crowds
and mingled with the locals
who gathered in front of the church where the children waited beside the
fountains for the arrival of The Three Wise Men. Naturally they were due to arrive on camels. It
was quite a parade. Youth bands appeared amid a flurry of flags.
Children danced along the street waving red and yellow banners. Police
cars with flashing lights edged the colourful spectacle along through a
crowd that was vibrant with good humour. A
rambo style policeman held up the traffic to let the parade passed by,
he was a giant of a man, complete with helmet, leather jacket and
leggings. The
sound of clattering hooves filled the air as a posse of horses
approached bearing splendidly dressed riders. Three palm trees appeared
above the horizon of heads and beyond them what looked like a mosque was
lit up green, yellow and
gold and above it hung a crescent moon. In
front of the church there was a crib scene with the two shepherds who
were in Spanish National costume. The ‘Three Kings’ fanned by
ostrich feathers, received letters from children saying what they wanted
for presents.. The
presents should arrive when they wake up the following day, but later
that night when the parade was over, the town was alive with
children playing with toys. Families sat at open air cafes chatting land
I watched one little boy follow his remote control car under the tables
and chairs while his sister zapped everyone in sight with a space gun. As
opposed to our Christmas 'day' it's very much an 'evening' affair. In
Tenerife they have Christmas AND
the festival of the Three Kings. It’s worth making the trip if only to
see the sparkling eyes of the children as the Three Wise Men to get
their sweets and hand over their letter. It adds a bonus to a January 'winter break'. http://www.tourspain.es/turespai/marcoi.htm (link to Spanish National Tourist Office Web page)
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