At this time of the year, childless couples used to make pilgrimages to Obando to perform a prayer dance imploring San Pascual Baylon to give them a child. (In Spanish, Baylon means "fond of dancing".) Two other saints were also implored, Santa Clara, who with St. Francis, founded the Poor Clares and Our Lady of the Conception, whose image was found inside a fishing net so that she was popularly known as Our Lady Caught in a Salambao. Devotees who made pilgrimages to Rome were called romeros. In time, all pilgrims were called romeros, whether they went to Rome or Obando.
Obando was literally the dance center of the Philippines. The dance prayers there showed the Filipino at their "dancingest". Although it was a religious pilgrimage, everything was fun. The romeros from Manila started from Tutuban. And heres the English translation of the Tagalog doggerels they sang on the way:
Oh, all-glorious Saint Paschal,
We ask you through a fandango
Deliver us from all evil,
that we arrive at Obando.
Santa Clara, so purely pare
My solemn vow to you is this:
When I arrive in Obando
I will dance the fandango. brP>Single ladies also danced for a husband. Here are two samples of their songs:
To the miraculous worker,
Proffer a ceremonial taper,
That he grant a husband to each member
Of the contradicting gender.
Santa Clara, so purely pure,
That is all I request from you
Bestow me seventeen husbands,
From their blows I will not complain.
The Tourism Department has launched many laudable tourist programs. They have rightly concentrated on tourist spots that are opened year round. But they must not neglect the old festivities that are part of our history and folk tradition. Classic May examples are the feast of San Isidro Labrador which fell on May 15 and the feast of San Pascual Baylon celebrated in Obando yesterday.