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Andalucia

Will Spain’s Hallowed Semana Santa Be Another Washout? Storm Olivier Brings Orange Alerts To Andalucia – Olive Press News Spain

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AEMET, the Spanish meteorological office, is predicting “certain” rainfall, at least for the first few days of Holy Week.

Semana Santa starts on Sunday 13 April, Palm Sunday and culminates the following Sunday, Easter Day.

AEMET says that the rain will start falling at midday on Thursday 10, in central Andalucía, and will continue throughout Friday with 95% certainty.

READ MORE: Spain braces for Storm Olivier: Costa del Sol battens down on yellow warning – but other regions face perilous orange alerts

Produccion Propia Juan Alonso
Semana Santa in Sevilla is under threat from Storm Olivier

Then it gets worse.

There may be sunny interludes on Saturday and Sunday, but there is also a 100% certainty of rain.

The weather in the second half of Holy Week is probably going to improve.

In statements to the media, the territorial delegate of AEMET, Juan de Dios del Pino, indicated that there will be no rain in the region in the coming days. However, a storm will make its appearance starting Thursday 10 in Andalusia, with an unstable outlook until Holy Tuesday (15).

READ MORE: British woman arrested for getting ex-husband to kidnap her former partner in Benidorm

According to the AEMET representative, the storm will affect all provinces, although it will be most prevalent in western Andalucía. He also explained that, in a forecast up to Palm Sunday, the rainiest day will be next Saturday. He stated that the front will leave periods with and without precipitation, and added that it is still too early to determine the extent of the rain after Sunday.

Regarding temperatures, del Pino specified that they will increase until Wednesday 9, when highs could reach 28 degrees in Andalucía. 

They will then drop by about five degrees starting Saturday, while lows will remain stable throughout the period. 

It is also worth noting the possibility of significant easterly winds on the coast of Cádiz and Almería starting this Tuesday.

READ MORE: Renfe Spain rail pass: get free travel until 30 June 2025

This forecast is looking disastrous for the Holy Week processions.

The ‘tronos’ – ornamental platforms, carried shoulder-high through the streets – contain life-size wooden carvings of enormous value.

These dramatic statues tell the story of Christ’s Passion and some of them are centuries old.

It would be foolhardy to risk damaging these figures by exposing them to the rain (a typical procession is out in the open for five hours), so the safest policy is to cancel the entire procession.

Thousands of people are adversely affected when this happens.

Preparations have been under way for months. 

Costumes, rehearsals, silver-polishing, flower-arranging and band practice: all this work has been in vain if the procession doesn’t go ahead.

Ronda has three processions scheduled for Palm Sunday.

In the morning, “La Pollinica” is scheduled to launch semana santa by processing from La Dehesa to the Socorro church, before returning to its ‘home’.

The afternoon is programmed to continue with “El Prendimiento” setting out from San Cristóbal. 

Its main trono is a big favourite, with a scene depicting Roman soldiers arresting Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane.

Finally, the Ronda gypsies are listed to process in the evening, leaving from Santa María la Mayor.

Andalucia

What links Andalucia’s Easter processions to the fascist Millán Astray?

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MANY readers will know about the Spanish ‘Legion’, the crack unit of the Spanish Army, based in Ronda and Almeria.

You are likely to see the Legion on the streets of AndalucIa’s major towns this week, as the regiment takes part in the Holy Week processions.

Its loyalty to the Catholic Church, and its obsession with death, are characteristics deliberately imposed on it by its founder and original commander, the eccentric José Millán Astray y Terreros.

Millan Astray with General Franco

Millán Astray was a gallego, a native of Spain’s ultra-conservative Galicia, the north-western region. He was born in 1879.

His father wanted him to be a lawyer, but the young José knew that the Army would be his destiny.

He studied to become an officer in the academy located in the Alcázar of Toledo (later to become an important symbol of Spanish Fascism).

Upon graduation, he joined the General staff of the Spanish Army. Soon after, the Philippine Revolution broke out, and he left his position to serve there as a volunteer second lieutenant.

La Legion during Semana Santa. Photo Wikipedia

He would earn numerous decorations for valour, and became a war hero for his defence at the age of 18 of the city of San Rafael, in which he fought off a rebel force of 2,000 with only 30 men.

He subsequently served in the Rif War in Morocco.

In October 1924, he was wounded during an ambush, and his left arm was amputated. There would be more wounds.

A month later, he lost his right eye when it was hit by a bullet.

He habitually wore an eyepatch and a white glove on his right hand when appearing in public. Interested in forming a corps of foreign volunteers after the fashion of the French Foreign Legion, he travelled to Algeria to study its workings.

With the support of fellow Gallego Major Francisco Franco, he created the Spanish Legion, and, with the rank of lieutenant colonel, served as its first commander. He would popularise the mottos ¡Viva la Muerte! (“Long live death!”) and ¡A mí la Legión! (“To me the legion!”).

la legin conmemora sucvii aniversario fundacional en ronda e
La Legion soldiers

Millán Astray gave the legion a powerful ideology intended to evoke Spain’s Imperial and Christian traditions.

He also revived the Spaniard’s ancient feud with the Moors and portrayed his men as crusaders against Islamic civilization; and later as the saviours of Spain, warding off the twin evils of communism and democracy.

During the Spanish Civil War he sided with the Nationalists.

He served as director of the Office of Radio, Press, and Propaganda. It is said that he administered the press office like a military barracks, forcing journalists to fall in line in response to his whistle, and subjecting them to the same brutal harangues he had given as commander of the Legion.

Millán Astray is perhaps best remembered for a squabble with Miguel de Unamuno, the philosopher, in October 1936.

The two men were platform speakers at a symposium at the University of Salamanca, in the early days of the civil war.

From somewhere in the auditorium, someone cried out “¡Viva la Muerte!” As was his habit, Millán Astray, the founder and first commander of the Spanish Legion, responded with “¡España!“; the crowd replied with “¡Una!” [One!]. He repeated “¡España!“; the crowd then replied “¡Grande!” [Great!].

A third time, Millán Astray shouted “¡España!“; the crowd responded “Libre!” [Free!] This – Spain, one, great, and free – was a common Falangist cheer and would become a Francoist motto thereafter.

Unamuno, who was presiding over the meeting, rose up slowly and addressed the crowd: “Now I have heard this insensitive and necrophilous oath, and I find this ridiculous paradox repellent. General Millán Astray is a cripple. There is no need for us to say this with whispered tones. He is a war cripple.

“Unfortunately, Spain today has too many cripples. And, if God does not help us, soon it will have very many more. He’s a cripple, who hopes to add to the number of cripples around him.”

It was a metaphor of Spain’s plight. A clash between intelligence and obscurantism.

Millán Astray won and Unamuno lost. The professor was forced to resign and was placed under house arrest. It is now thought that his death, which followed nine weeks after the brush with Millán Astray, was in fact a Fascist murder.

Today, Millán Astray is regarded as a man of his time: extreme, unbending, intolerant. He lived on until 1954, dying (as he would have wished) at the height of Franco’s dictatorship.

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Algeciras

Protests planned at Spain’s largest port against ‘US ships carrying arms for Israel’ sets up another confrontation with Trump

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A protest has been organised in Algeciras for Sunday denouncing the alleged use of Spanish ports as a logistical stopping point for military cargo in transit to Israel. 

The platform, Cadiz with Palestine, believe the port is playing a ‘key role’ in the ‘logistics chain of genocide in Palestine,’ and it has criticised the use of civilian infrastructure for military purposes.

In a statement, the group said this constitutes a ‘violation of international law and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.’

It has organised several protests in Cadiz in solidarity with Palestine, including a street march in February.  

The port in Algeciras, located in the Bay of Gibraltar, is a major transshipment hub in the mediterranean. It’s the 4th largest port in Europe.

The event will be held at midday on April 20 in Paco de Lucía Square, opposite the city’s Commercial Port. It’s part of a nationwide series of actions that Palestinian solidarity groups are promoting to call out the use of civilian infrastructure in armed conflicts.

Autoridad Portuaria de la Bahía de Algeciras has been approached for comment. 

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Algeciras

Protests Planned At Spain’s Largest Port Against ‘US Ships Carrying Arms For Israel’ Sets Up Another Confrontation With Trump – Olive Press News Spain

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A protest has been organised in Algeciras for Sunday denouncing the alleged use of Spanish ports as a logistical stopping point for military cargo in transit to Israel. 

The platform, Cadiz with Palestine, believe the port is playing a ‘key role’ in the ‘logistics chain of genocide in Palestine,’ and it has criticised the use of civilian infrastructure for military purposes.

In a statement, the group said this constitutes a ‘violation of international law and the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court.’

It has organised several protests in Cadiz in solidarity with Palestine, including a street march in February.  

The port in Algeciras, located in the Bay of Gibraltar, is a major transshipment hub in the mediterranean. It’s the 4th largest port in Europe.

The event will be held at midday on April 20 in Paco de Lucía Square, opposite the city’s Commercial Port. It’s part of a nationwide series of actions that Palestinian solidarity groups are promoting to call out the use of civilian infrastructure in armed conflicts.

Autoridad Portuaria de la Bahía de Algeciras has been approached for comment. 

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