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Religion, perhaps. Pamplona is a major center of Opus Dei, the conservative Catholic lay movement. And when, on July 7, San Fermin's relics are carried from his chapel in the Church of San Lorenzo to the Cathedral of Santa Maria for solemn high Mass, it's an emotional procession. But this is the only day religion rules; the rest of the week, San Fermin has to take his chances like everybody else.
"San Fermin would be crying if he could see what's going on at his feast," Padre Jesus Labari, the parish priest of San Lorenzo told me. "There’s no sleep. And the odor of urine and dirt in the street." On the other hand, "the majority of people who come for the fiesta don't leave the city without visiting the saint, even if they're not believers. I’m no fool. I know that during the year a lot of them don't go to church. But every year there are more and more people who come to the procession. It's thrilling—the people really do cry when they see the saint pass by them."
While the fiesta still retains elements that a jongleur or wandering friar would recognize—street performers, flashes of intense piety, that wild sense of freedom—many of its best-known customs are surprisingly recent. Several years ago, for example, children spontaneously offered a few flowers to San Fermin. Now an entire morning is devoted to the children and their flowers—red and white carnations, yellow roses, orange gladiolus—laced into a broad trellis behind the saint. Dressing in red and white began in the 1960s; before that, celebrants wore street clothes. The bulls used to run at 6:00 a.m., but since 1974, the time has crept ever later to today's 8:00 a.m. Even the Txupinazo began to take form only when people spontaneously began to set off rockets in the Plaza del Castillo, half a century ago.
The last day of the fiesta is July 14. You can feel it seeping away. The music seems a little sadder, and people seem to move a little slower. Jeweler Marcial Acuna Lopez stands at Plaza San Nicolas, which tomorrow, like the whole city, will be empty of revelers. "Pamplona will seem like a spectacular painting that has been cut out of its frame and carried away under cover of darkness," he tells me. "When San Fermin is over, all you see is the frame. And it makes you think: during the fiesta, everybody talks to one another. The rest of the year everybody is very serious. Why aren't we always the way we are in San Fermin?"
It's an excellent question of the kind no philosopher has been able to answer. Why can't we always be happy? Why do we have to grow up, get old, die? In Pamplona, during San Fermin, nobody asks such questions. And the only answer that makes any sense is that next year the fiesta will come again.
Sun or Shadow?
Where you sit in the bullring says it all
Pamplona's bullring, inaugurated three years before Hemingway's first visit to Pamplona, is the second largest in Spain. Its 19,529 seats sell out far in advance, and scalping flourishes despite the efforts of police to stop it.


Comments
Date: 2007/9/17
To: LettersEd@si.edu
(...) Some American friends encouraged me, as a native from Pamplona, to write a few lines to you in order to share some thoughts. Among numerous inaccuracies found in the mentioned article, there is one that I find specially serious and damaging for my hometown. In page 93, first paragraph, there are two lines that shamefully affirm that we the people from Pamplona use a traditional garb of red and white, I quote, "two Basque customary colors that represent the blood shed in the struggle for independence and the Catholic faith".
I guess the insistence of the article's author writer linking Pamplona and the Basques is due to "marketing reasons" (There is not a single mention in the article to the fact that Pamplona is the capital of the autonomous region of Navarra, a different region in Spain to the Basque Autonomous region). However, declaring that the hundreds of thousands of peoples in Pamplona wearing red are representing "the blood shed in the struggle for independence" is simply a fabrication, going well beyond the line of what could have simply been an extremely poorly researched article. A mere look at any web site, official or not, would have been enough to unmask the huge "mistake". Searching in the Internet, for example, the official results of all the elections held in Pamplona and Navarra since democracy was restored in Spain, the author and people in charge of the edition of Smithsonian would have easily detected:
1 That less than 10% of the people in Pamplona or Navarre support ETA and its terrorist attacks (what I guess the author considers "struggle for independence").
2 That not only there is no popular support for any "blood shed" but also 70% of the people in Pamplona do not consider themselves as politically Basques (and the vast majority among them not even culturally Basques).
Therefore, I kindly request from you an informed rectification. Thank you very much in advance. Yours sincerely.
Posted by pamplona in dc on August 28,2009 | 01:58PM