Spain Chooses Basque-Language Fim 'Loreak' as Oscar SubmissionThe Spanish Academy of Cinematic Arts and Sciences announced this
morning that Jon Garaño & Jose Mari Goenaga's "Loreak" (Flowers) has
been selected to represent the country in the Best Foreign Language
Film category at the 88th Academy Awards. This is the first-ever …
Majority in Catalonia voted 'no' to independence from SpainCatalonia, the north-eastern region in Spain, held a regional election
on Sunday. Its legal purpose was to elect a regional assembly that
should elect a new regional government. But the outgoing president and
his political mates decided this would not be the real purpose of the …
King Felipe VI and Queen Letizia of Spain, in Washington this week for
their first official visit — without the frenzied media mob that follows
the British monarchy. There are no breathless morning television
countdowns, no stakeouts for their trips to Mount Vernon or the …
Today is a public holiday in Madrid. (Or as my British friends say, a 'bank' holiday.)
It's Father's Day and Saint Joseph's Day. (Or as my Spanish neighbors say, Día del Padre / Día de San Jose.)
This is a regional holiday, not a national one.
A family member back in Louisiana commented recently that Spain sure had a lot more holidays than the USA. It seemed
that way to me, too, so I thought I'd tally them up and compare. Well, it turns out that this year there are 10 federal holidays in the
USA, but only 8 national holidays in Spain.
Still, that doesn't quite tell the whole story.
First of all, here are the US federal holidays for 2015:
Thursday, January 1
New Year’s Day
Monday, January 19
Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Monday, February 16
George Washington’s Birthday / Presidents' Day
Monday, May 25
Memorial Day
Saturday, July 4
Independence Day (Observed on Friday, July 3 this year)
Monday, September 7
Labor Day (Always on the first Monday in September)
Monday, October 12
Columbus Day
Wednesday, November 11
Veterans Day
Thursday, November 26
Thanksgiving Day (Always on the 4th Thursday of November)
Friday, December 25
Christmas Day
Now here is the list of national holidays in Spain for 2015:
Thursday, January 1
New Year’s Day
Tuesday, January 6
Kings Day / Epiphany
Friday, April 3
Good Friday
Friday, May1
Labor Day
Saturday, August 15
Assumption of Mother Mary
Monday, October 12
Spanish National Day
Tuesday, December 8
The Day of the Immaculate Conception
Friday, December 25
Christmas Day
Notice that because
the USA's July 4th holiday falls on a Saturday this year, it will be observed on Friday July 3rd, but that in Spain there is no such compensation for the holiday that falls on Saturday August 15th. This is because Spain
actually considers Saturday a work day. Thus, people like me who work Monday
through Friday won't get that holiday off this year.
This year we in Spain are also missing a holiday that falls on a Sunday: Constitution Day, December 6th. When a holiday falls on a Sunday, the Spanish sometimes do what the Yanks do, and observe the holiday on the subsequent Monday. Although Spain is not doing that with this year's Constitution Day, some of the country's Regions have come to the rescue and christened the Monday a holiday.
Therefore, it looks like the USA actually has more public holidays than Spain – especially when you consider that in the USA both Saturday and Sunday holidays are always compensated for.
Wait, though—there is another factor to consider. Each of Spain's 17 Regions have their own holidays. For example, there are four
Regional holidays for the Community of Madrid this year:
Thursday March 19 - Saint Joseph's Day
Thursday April 2 - Holy Thursday
Saturday May 2 - Community of Madrid Day
Thursday June 4 - Corpus Christi Day
And the other Regions are just as generous, with almost all having four
other public holidays falling Monday through Friday. (Only the Canary Islands Region has fewer: three.) In fact, this year several of the Regions have elected to give their citizens back the Constitution Day some in Spain are missing by observing it on the Monday. (Scroll down below for a list of all the Regional holidays in Spain.)
Now back in the USSA, many states also observe their own holidays, but most have only one or two of these. Nevertheless, only two of the 50 states seem to have matched the Spanish regional norm of four: Indiana, which observes Good Friday, Primary Election Day, General Election Day and Lincoln's Birthday and North Carolina, with Good Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, Christmas Eve and the day after Christmas.
So, if we consider the fact that added to the 8 (usually 9) national holidays there are four regional holidays almost everywhere in the country, it looks like overall Spain pulls ahead on the total number per year.
Then we can throw city and town holidays into the mix. In Spain most of these have multiple local holidays and even small towns and villages often have one or two. For example, in the City of Madrid there are 3 in 2015:
Friday, May 15 - Saint Isidro Day (Patron Saint of the City)
Wednesday, September 9 - Santa Maria de la Cabeza Day (Saint Isidro's wife)
Monday, November 9 - The Virgin of Almudena Day - (Patroness of the City)
Barcelona has two:
June 1 - Saint John's Night
September 24 - Día de la Merced
Valencia also has two:
January 22 - Saint Vincent The Martyr's Day
April 13 - Saint Vincent Ferrer's Day
And Seville has two, too:
Wednesday April 22- Wednesday of the Spring Fair (Replaces the usual May 30th Saint Fernando holiday, which falls on a Saturday this year)
Thursday June 4 - Corpus Christi Day
Now, I don't know of too many American cities that have two or three local public
holidays.
Conclusion: I think we can safely say that, yes, Spain does have more
public / bank holidays than the United States.
Here are the 2015 public holidays in Spain's Autonomous Regions. Andalusia February 28th: Andalusia Day April 2nd: Holy Thursday November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Aragon April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 23rd: Saint George’s Day November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Asturias April 2nd: Holy Thursday September 8th: Asturian Regional Day November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Balearic Islands April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 6th: Easter Monday November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Basque Country March 19th: Saint Joseph April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 6th: Easter Monday July 25th: Saint James Canary Islands (Only 3 holidays regional holidays in the Canaries!) April 2nd: Holy Thursday May 30th: Canary Islands Day November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day Cantabria April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 6th: Easter Monday September 15th: Patron Saint of Cantabria (Virgen de la Bien Aparecida) November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day Castilla-La Mancha April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 6th: Easter Monday June 4th: Corpus Christi December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Castilla y León April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 23rd: Castile and León Day November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Cataluña April 6th: Easter Monday June 24th: Saint John's Day September 11th: The Diada, Catalonia Regional Day December 26th: Saint Stephen's Day Ceuta April 2nd: Holy Thursday September 25th: Festival of Abraham’s Sacrifice November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Extremadura April 2nd: Holy Thursday September 8th: Extremadura Regional Day November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Galicia March 20th: Day after Saint Joseph's Day April 2nd: Holy Thursday July 25th: Saint James, Galician Regional Day November 2nd: Monday after All Saints Day La Rioja April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 6th: Easter Monday June 9th: La Rioja Regional Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Comunidad de Madrid March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day April 2nd: Holy Thursday May 2nd: Community of Madrid Day June 4th: Corpus Christi Day Melilla March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day April 2nd: Holy Thursday September 25th: Festival of Abraham’s Sacrifice December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Murcia March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day April 2nd: Holy Thursday June 9th: Murcia Regional Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day Navarre March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day April 2nd: Holy Thursday April 6th: Easter Monday July 25th: Saint James Valencia March 19th: Saint Joseph's Day April 6th: Easter Monday October 9th: Valencian Regional Day December 7th: Monday after Constitution Day
If you haven't been yet, go! If you have, then you know why I say this. . The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao provided me with one of the best museum experiences I have ever had -- and art museums are not my favorite types of museums. I usually prefer history museums. However, this art museum is fascinating on so many different levels, that I think it would appeal to almost everyone. Words like light, joy, curiosity, wonder, fun, dynamic, fresh, imagination, inspiration, relaxation, meditation and activity come to mind when remembering the full day I spent there. Indeed, I arrived just after the 10am opening and stayed until it closed at 8pm. . Of course, the museum building and the site itself are a true wonder of a work of art. It is well worth taking the time to use the audio guide provided for a tour of the grounds and interior of the "titanium icon," which both echos and compliments the Guggenheim Museum building in New York City. Nestled between Bilbao's Nervión River and its Moyúa neighborhood, the limestone, glass and titanium structure billows out like a series of giant sails caught in the wind. . On the riverside is a curving walkway that winds around fountains and works of art, such as Louise Bourgeois' Maman(French for "Mama"), a giant spider cast from of bronze, stainless steel and marble. Just past Maman, the building stretches beneath the modern Puente de la Salve bridge that spans the river. Then the museum shoots up a limestone tower-like facade on the opposite side of the bridge. To commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Bilbao Guggenheim, a Red Arch designed by Daniel Buren was added to the bridge in 2007. It is well worth the walk up the stairs set into the tower to see the views of the museum, the bridge, the river and the city.
. On the side of the building facing Iparraguire Street, visitors are welcomed to the museum's entry plaza by another artistic beast: Jeff Koons' 40 meter tall Puppy, a giant flower sculpture constructed of a steel frame covered by 6500 kilos of earth and 40,000 plants. (On a stroll around the museum area a few nights later, I saw a frisky little cat playing with some of the flowers at Puppy's base.) . Inside the building there is a bright reception area with friendly people prepared to greet visitors in English, Spanish or Basque -- and probably a few other languages, as well. After paying the 10.50 euro entrance fee, a hand-held audio guide device is provided, with a choice of several languages. . The next room is the atrium, which is warm and welcoming, despite it's size. Measuring 650 square meters, it rises 50 meters to the skylight above, and has a glass curtain looking out towards the river on one side. On the other sides it is encased in limestone and includes a couple of glass elevators and an open air stairwell. (For those who don't like heights, there are also an enclosed stairwell and an enclosed elevator.) . On the day I visited, we were greeted by Juan Pérez Agirregoikoa's large cream colored fabric panel dangling down from the floor above, with the following question painted on it in red and black letters: "¿Habeis cedido a vuestro deseo?" ("Have you all given into your desires?) . Just outside the atrium is a large terrace, covered by a limestone canopy supported by a central column. The terrace looks over a shallow pond installed next to the river. The terrace holds Jeff Koons' Tulips, while the pond sports two water-art-works: Fire Fountain by Yves Klein and Fog Sculpture # 08025 by Fujiko Nakaya. . Back inside the building, the exhibition spaces extend out and up from the atrium. There were two exhibitions when I was there:
Art in the USA: 300 Years of Innovation, which surveyed the history of the country's visual arts through approximately 200 works of art filling the galleries on the first and second floors floors of the building, and
Chacun à son goût(Each to their own taste), a selection of works by 12 artists who were Basque by either origin or residency. These were displayed in the exhibition spaces on the third floor.
I enjoyed both exhibitions -- almost as much as the building itself! Art in the USA will run until April 27, 2008; Chacun à son goût until February 3, 2008. . Chao amig@s, . P.S. The Guggenheim Bilbao web site offers a great virtual tour.
I haven't got much time, but I wanted to post something on the first day of 2008. So, I'll write a little about the place where I spent this cool, sunny day. . Getxo is a beach town within the greater metropolitan area of Bilbao. It is located at the mouth of the Nervion river, just inland from the Bay of Biscay. It offers great views of the bay, especially towards the north. . One such area is La Galea, which is where this post's photo was taken. This cliff top spot has a little park next to the abandoned fort and lighthouse that give the place its name. Aside from a sign reading "La Fortaleza La Galea" (Galea Fort), there was no other information posted about the fort, but it seemed to me to be at least a couple of hundred years old. It's a great spot for picnicking -- and I say that from experience.
. Other sites I enjoyed in Getxo included several stunning 19th century mansions, some lovely parks, a series of relaxing water-side walkways, a hill-side elevator that provides a nice view of the river and bay, and the 1893 "transporter bridge". This contraption is also known as a "ferry bridge," because it is sort of a combination of the two, that carries cars across the river in a gondola. What a great ride! . Hasta luego amig@s, . Carloz
Greetings from Bilbao! What an incredible looking city: mountains, valleys and riverbanks embedded with exciting architecture -- old and new; traditional and vanguard. I'll write more about that next year. . I had barely arrived here when I learned about another Spanish holiday tradition: the Basque Country's Olentzero! Olentzero is a giant who brings presents to children on the night of Dec. 24. Apparently the legend varies, but according to the one I heard, Olentzero, who was abandoned in the forest as a newborn child, was found and raised by a fairy. When he grew up, he became a charcoal burner. In his free time he liked to carve wooden toys and dolls. Periodically he filled his charcoal bag with his carvings and gave them out to children in a nearby village. . On one of his visits to the village he found a house burning and heard children inside calling for help. He ran into the house, found the children upstairs and helped them escape through the windows. However, before he could leave the burning house collapsed around him. The children and other villagers saw a flash of light pull Olentzero out of the flames and into the the sky. It was the fairy who had raised him. She not only rescued him, but gave him everlasting life as the Basque Country's Christmas toymaker. . I've been told that the Basques observe traditions based on Father Christmas. Olentzero and the Three Kings, although different families may emphasize one. So, here's to the Olentzero, the Caga Tío, the Caganer, the Tifa, the Three kings, Father Christmas, and the 12 Grapes at Midnight that help to make this time of year so colorful! . Cheers amig@s, . Carloz