Doomed.
For Catholics in Belém, Círio is more important than Christmas. There are similarities between the two events. Lots of shops are decorated with images of the virgin of Nazaré, the guards at my apartment complex put out a little contribution box (I contributed), and people are running around in a frenzy buying things. Perhaps because of the frantic shopping or the sky-high price of duck, my laundry lady tried to charge me 50% more than usual for washing my clothes (I refused).
And, like Christmas, there is tacky commercialization, except here the religious imagery is more explicit. I took some photos of my favorite billboards around town:
Círio. Faith never breaks.
(by Companhia do Vale do Rio Doce, a huge mining company)
Our Lady of Nazaré, light up (enlighten) our families.
(by Celpa, the state electric company)
*Brief background information in English, although there are some inaccuracies like the size of the procession (i.e., hundreds of thousands, not thousands).
2 comments:
Ugh. That is cheezy commercialism. How do they serve the duck? Is there a traditional preparation?
It is served in a sauce called tucupi with a vegetable called jambu. Tucupi is made from manioc and is tangy. Jambu looks kind of like spinach but has alkaloids so it makes your tongue tingle.
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