Friday, April 6, 2012

Cubans mark Good Friday as official holiday

Members of the choir get ready for Good Friday Mass during Holy Week in the cathedral in Havana, Cuba, Friday April 6, 2012. Cuba's Communist government declared Good Friday a holiday to honor a request that Pope Benedict XVI made during his recent visit. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)

Members of the choir get ready for Good Friday Mass during Holy Week in the cathedral in Havana, Cuba, Friday April 6, 2012. Cuba's Communist government declared Good Friday a holiday to honor a request that Pope Benedict XVI made during his recent visit. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)

Cuba's Cardinal Jaime Ortega celebrates Good Friday Mass during Holy Week in the cathedral in Havana, Cuba, Friday April 6, 2012. Cuba's Communist government declared Good Friday a holiday to honor a request that Pope Benedict XVI made during his recent visit. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)

A woman prays at Good Friday Mass during Holy Week in the cathedral in Havana, Cuba, Friday April 6, 2012. Cuba's Communist government declared Good Friday a holiday to honor a request that Pope Benedict XVI made during his recent visit. (AP Photo/Javier Galeano)

Penitents walk on a design made with colored wood dust as they carry a statue of Jesus during a Holy Week procession on Good Friday in Antigua Guatemala, Guatemala, Friday April 6, 2012. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

Workers remove colored dust after its design was wiped away by a Holy Week procession on Good Friday in Antigua Guatemala, Guatemala, Friday April 6, 2012. The designs are made especially for the processions. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

HAVANA (AP) ? Good Friday was an official holiday in Cuba for the first time in a half century, but few Roman Catholics on the island seemed to be using the day off to attend Mass.

Cuba's Communist government declared the holiday to honor a request that Pope Benedict XVI made during last week's visit. Only a few more worshippers than usual were noted inside Havana's Catholic churches on Friday.

Authorities were also allowing Cardinal Jaime Ortega's to transmit a Good Friday message on state television.

Magno Felipe Mitjans, a lay worker who described himself as "revolutionary, Christian and Catholic," said at his parish of San Juan de Letran, "We have received more people, including in comparison with other Good Fridays."

Good Friday is the day Catholics commemorate the death of Christ, but it is not an official holiday in the United States, most of Europe or even Mexico, the most Catholic of the world's Spanish-speaking countries.

Cuba removed references to atheism from its constitution in the 1990s and relations have since warmed with the church. Still, less than 10 percent of islanders are practicing Catholics. The country has large numbers of adherents to Santeria and evangelical Christianity.

Cubans' low-key commemoration of the day contrasted with observances in other parts of the world.

Roman Catholics and Protestants in the Holy Land commemorated the crucifixion of Jesus Christ with processions through Jerusalem's Old City, and thousands gathered in the Philippines to witness devotees nailed to crosses in a tradition discouraged by the church.

Processions were held around the rest of Latin America, including especially eye-opening ones in Guatemala where streets in some ciites were carpeted with flowers and colored sawdust.

"I'm not Catholic, but I respect them," said Gladys Ocampo, among Cuban workers who got the day off. "I'm happy to have a holiday I wasn't counting on."

___

Andrea Rodriguez on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ARodriguezAP

Associated Press

dj am bully bobby abreu spike lee carson daly heejun han bohemian rhapsody

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.