Saturday, July 9, 2011

Celebrating Mass and 2 special events in Spanish

I do not speak a second language; shame on me!  With our ever growing Hispanic community and a robust Vietnamese community in this area we have many folks who speak both their native tongue and English.  Despite 2 years of high school spanish, I got nothing.  Tonight I attended a Mass celebrated in Spanish principally because one of our deacon candidates was being installed as a reader, a minor order along the way towards ordination.  And our candidate, being Hispanic and living in a parish that celebrates a Saturday evening Spanish Mass, was installed in a celebration in spanish.  Fortunately for me and the other one language only attendees, the Deacon delivered his homily in both Spanish and English and the Presider also weaved some English into the event.

Despite the language barrier there was something really beautiful and wonderful about being present for this celebration.  It's the same Mass celebrated in a different language.  It's the same Eucharist.  The words of Scripture proclaimed tonight are the same I will hear in English tomorrow as the Gospel is the same I will proclaim in the morning.  This was affirmation that the Church is truly catholic: universal!

Another celebration in tonights liturgy was something called a Quinceanera.  This is a beautiful celebration of the 15th birthday of a young lady.  Apparently it is a tradition within the culture with heavy Catholic overtones.  At the Mass tonight I witnessed many of the things in the article I'm posting in this post.  Of course the beauty of the young lady expressing her faith and receiving a blessing from the Priest was palpable.

So we celebrated, in Spanish, a wonderful Mass, the institution of a candidate as Reader and the Quinceanera.

La Quinceañera: a celebration of budding womanhood
Dale Hoyt Palfrey

The transition from childhood to womanhood is a significant passage for adolescent girls in almost all cultures. In Mexico, it is marked with the celebration of the Quinceañera, or 15th Birthday. From a north-of-the-border viewpoint, it may be seen as a cross between Sweet Sixteen and a debutante's coming out party. The celebration is a way to acknowledge that a young woman has reached sexual maturity and is thus of a marriageable age.

The most important component of the celebration is invariably a Misa de acción de gracias (thanksgiving Mass). The birthday girl arrives decked out in a fancy full-length dress - frills, pastel tones and matching hats or headdresses prevail. Flanked by her parents and padrinos (godparents), she is specially seated at the foot of the altar throughout the service. She may be accompanied by up to seven damas (maids of honor) and as many chambelanes (chamberlains), selected from among close family and friends.

At the end of the mass younger sisters, cousins and friends pass out bolos (commemorative favors) to those in attendance, while the quinceañera deposits her bouquet on the altar or in a niche honoring the Virgin Mary, most often that of the ubiquitous Virgen de Guadalupe.

The quinceañera traditionally has the option of further celebrating the occasion with either a viaje (journey) or a fiesta (birthday bash). While a trip to Paris and other European destinations was once the rage among the well-heeled, nowadays young women of all social strata generally opt for the party, complete with live band music. The degree of opulence of the event is directly related to the economic means of the girl's parents and godparents.

Urbanites frequently lease banquet halls for the dance, while village folks are more inclined to set up rented folding tables and chairs in a freshly cleared and swept huerta (orchard) or corral. To cover the multiple expenses, a host of padrinos and madrinas may be invited to sponsor, respectively, the dress, the music, the locale, the bar, the cake and the table favors.

While raucous banda, cumbia and salsa tunes tend dominate throughout the event, the culminating moment comes when the festejada (celebrant) and her number-one chambelán (escort) dance to a traditional waltz. Other indispensable highlights include a customary toast and the cutting of a multi-tiered birthday cake. Dripping in meringue frosting and decorated in hues to match the quinceañera's dress, the cake may be of such monumental proportions that the door leading into the party locale must be removed from it hinges.to accommodate it!

The origins of Mexico's quinceañera celebrations remain obscure, although the roots may well lie in the era of the Aztecs. According to Bernardino de Sahagun, in his chronicle Historia de Nueva España, it was traditional for the parents of a young Aztec maiden to formally acknowledge her passage into womanhood. This included a stern but tender exhortation to observe acceptable modes of behavior. For a full English translation of the passage "Advice of an Aztec Mother to her Daughter" see William H. Prescott's The Conquest of Mexico.

Regardless of how the tradition originated, regardless of the relentless onslaught of gringo culture prevalent today, the celebration of the quinceañera remains as one of the rites of passage that keeps the bonds of the Mexican family firmly cemented. Its fancy frills and frosting abide as rich ingredients for a niña's sweet dreams.

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