Semana Santa in Quito and Hari Krishna hamburgers
19.03.2008 - 21.03.2008
I am stuck in the middle of a giant, day-long easter parade in old town Quito!
All the streets are packed with people, like sardines in a can, and then there are thousands of citizens dressed in purple, ku klux klan-type robes walking up and down the streets while marching bands play upbeat music. Then there are hundreds of men who have willingly beaten themselves with a poisonous plant on their backs (you can actually see hives on their skin from it), and who are wearing chains on their feet and have barbed wire around their heads and chests with blood all over, and they are carrying GIANT wooden crosses as they try to walk up and down the streets. Some of the crosses are literally as big as trees and there are a good 5 other men who have to help the designated Christ carry it up and down all the hills. It´s all a bit weird, kind of creepy, but definitely very interesting.
Among all the purple robed people, crosses, and marching bands, there are also a lot of people carrying dogs around like purses. Don´t quite understand that. Also, don´t forget the women and men shouting at us to buy umbrellas, hats, water, gum, sugared corn treats, and chips. It´s all so Easter-like.
After we´d seen enough of the parade and a good thousand purple robed people and 50 Christ´s, we decided it was time for lunch. Somehow we stumbled into a Hari Krishna temple while they were having their own religious celebration and started talking to a nice Hari Krishna guy from Colombia who told Rachel she had a good aura about her personality (I guess I don´t). He told us that if we so desired, we could sleep at their temple for free and medidate each morning at 3am. We ate vegetarian hamburgers with him while all the little Hari Krishna kids who lived at the temple giggled at our attempts at speaking Spanish. He asked me why I wasn´t talking as much, if maybe I didn´t know as much Spanish as Rachel. I started to respond, but one of the little girls who was listening to our conversation chimed in and said, ¨Because you can´t!¨ (speak Spanish). When kids start to make fun of my Spanish, it´s time to run. But he then tried to convince us to go to the jungle with him and other Hari Krishnas instead of going on the other tour we were hoping to book today through Sacha Ursay. I think it involves a lot of meditating and converting us into Hari Krishnas
Now we´re in an internet cafe while the men running this place are standing at the door watching the parade pass by. It´s been a good 3 hours already and this parade has no end in sight. They are probably wondering why we are not as excited to watch and would rather be on the computer.
This evening we´re going to go to another salsa lesson. Hopefully this time my instructor won´t be mute and unhelpful, like the one I had a couple days ago. I don´t know how to dance or count beats, but despite telling him I had two left feet he continued to twirl me around in circles without explaining anything at all. At one point he laughed at me but wouldn´t explain why. I´m beginning to notice a trend of people laughing at me here in Quito.
Last night we went to Vista Hermosa to eat dinner, a restaurant in Old Town that has an amazing view of the entire city. It was very fancy schmancy, and even had an elevator boy to take us up to our table on the roof top. However, as nice as the restaurant looked, the food was absolutely disgusting. Rachel and I got ¨chicken lasagna¨, but when it arrived we discovered that they´d decided to add layers of sandwich style ham meat in it in addition to the ground up chicken. Apparently ¨chicken lasagna¨means chicken AND ham. How stupid we were to not know. It was the worst tasting lasagna I´ve ever eaten in my life. However, the view of the city at night with all the churches lit up was absolutely beautiful, and our waiter wasn´t too bright and left 3 things off our check so we didn´t end up spending too much on our terrible meal after all. Plus, the warm wine was a nice drink in the cool weather.
After dinner, we walked around old town with Juliet and her friends and visited all the cathedrals. I´m guessing because of Semana Santa, they were all open to the public and lit up all night long. They were packed to the brim with people, but still very beautiful to see at night. One of the churches had bird noises blasting throughout the main hall... I guess they wanted to make us feel like we were in the jungle.
The night before, Rachel wasn´t feeling too well after her salsa instructor had spun her around and dipped her down one too many times, but we had made plans to go out and dance that night. I was still hoping to go out dancing so I called up Hannah, the girl from Berkeley who is here working for the English language newspaper that we were originally supposed to work with on our trip, The Ecuador Reporter. I went to a fun club with her and her international girlfriends (from Germany, Norway, and Austria) and we had a really fun night playing pool (very badly, however our opponents were equally terrible) and dancing a bit. It wasn´t so fun when punk music suddenly started to play and we found ourselves in the middle of a mosh pit, but let´s forget that part. Speaking of the Ecuador Reporter, we´ve met most of the people who either work for it or provide the financial backing for it. One of them is an Irish guy who runs a Vietnamese restaurant (Uncle Ho´s, delicious!) in Quito. That makes a lot of sense now, doesn´t it? He´s nice, though. Everyone here we meet is oddly connected to that paper. Is it a sign that we should work for them? Hm.... I think we will have had enough of Quito by the end of next week.
Anyway, time to push past the crowds, find the Ecovia (trolley), and make our way back to New Town in time for our salsa lessons. A visit to Papallacta, a nearby town with hot springs, is next on our list for the weekend. Looking forward to that ![]()
Posted by KerriBerri 21.03.2008 14:51 Archived in Ecuador Comments (0)