Bolivians dance in honour of St. James
In the Bolivian highlands along the shores of Lake Titicaca, the Aymara Indian community celebrates St. James in the days leading up to his feast day every year with an unusual dance.
On precarious boats floating in a small lagoon, teams of St. James devotees in colorful costumes dance to calm the saint known in Spanish as Santiago before they seek his forgiveness and protection. The dance aboard the boats fashioned of reeds is said to recall the first African slaves, who arrived in this Andean region to work in the mines.
In Guaqui, a little more than 90 kilometres (57 miles) west of La Paz, dancers on Friday celebrated enthusiastically in a test of their luck.
According to tradition, those who fall into the water are expected to have bad luck in the coming year while those who do not fall are not.
“I have much faith, I’ve been dancing for 25 years out of my devotion to ‘Tata’ Santiago,” said one of the festival organisers, Guillermo Paton, using the Aymara word for “lord” or “sir”. Paton noted the saint’s feast day is July 25, but said Guaqui usually celebrates it a few days early.
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