The men being nailed to crosses in a Philippine village were seeking salvation, but for corporate sponsors and small-time vendors the Good Friday event was all about quick riches.
Posters advertising the Philippines’ biggest telecommunication companies, US fast food chain McDonald’s, energy drinks and a local motel chain hung across the sun-baked fields where the crucifixion re-enactments took place.
Local resident Rosemarie Musngi, 44, said she went to church first before setting up shop selling fried fish, snacks and souvenir shirts beneath a branded tent she had rented from a major telecom.
Photo: EPA
“We prayed to God to let us earn a little money... we prayed for people to buy all of our merchandise,” she said.
Cultural events of a religious bent are no barriers to making a buck in Asia’s Catholic heartland, home to some of the world’s most colorful displays of worship and also a feverish brand of capitalism.
The village of San Pedro, 90 minutes’ drive from Manila, is one of at least three that hold day-long passion plays every Good Friday depicting the sufferings of Jesus Christ.
The events are capped by men being nailed to crosses and also feature bare-chested men whipping their backs bloody.
The devotees typically say they endure the suffering to be closer to God, for his favor and for bad deeds to be forgiven.
Among the Good Friday events’ key sponsors are two of the country’s largest mobile phone outfits.
In exchange for free advertising and a place to hawk its merchandise, one of them, Smart Communications, live-streamed the event on the Internet and provided free Wi-Fi access on-site.
This enabled participants to instantly upload selfies taken with the crucified devotees for background.
“We are promoting our products — new promos and new technologies,” Smart’s area sales manager Roland Carlos Sunga said.
“We are selling like hotcakes,” he said, citing a deal where a subscriber could buy a phone and some Internet data for the equivalent of US$19.
As the extreme events have become more popular, villages staging rival passion plays have tapped into the corporate sector to foot the rising cost of handling much larger crowds, from directional street signs to chairs to portable toilets.
Corporate sponsors provided goods and services — such as the Wi-Fi and signage — worth about 300,000 pesos (US$6,500) to support the event, according to Ching Pangilinan, the San Fernando city tourism chief.
She said the events draw a combined 30,000 spectators each year, including about 1,500 Westerners.
“Religious events ... are excellent opportunities for advertising and marketing as they tap positive vibes,” said Louie Checa Montemar, a development studies professor at Manila’s De La Salle University.
“Who, after all, would really openly question or go against what is perceived or assumed to be ‘good’?” he said.
The Philippine crucifixions are also considered a niche market for tourists from nations with a shared Catholic heritage, such as those in Europe and Latin America, said Clang Garcia, operator of Manila-based Jeepney Tours.
“It has potential, though not everyone likes the idea of the blood and all. It’s not a mainstream destination,” Garcia said, adding that the tourist traffic there pales in comparison with the country’s giant religious festivals.
These include the more conventional multi-day, Mardi Gras-like events that draw millions such as the one in the central city of Cebu in honor of a statue of the infant Jesus Christ.
Absent at the San Pedro crucifixions were official representatives of the Catholic Church, the country’s dominant religious institution.
Archbishop Broderick Pabillo, an auxiliary bishop of Manila, said the Church discouraged the extreme forms of piety that fascinated many of the country’s more than 80 million Catholics, as well as the commercialism that followed it.
“To use that for commerce is not a manifestation of the faith,” Pabillo said.
“There is really a danger that we will not promote the reason for the season of Holy Week. The focus should be on Jesus... on his sacrifice, not on us, not the one who mimics the crucifixion,” he added.
However Pangilinan said the local authorities did not treat the crucifixions as a religious event — even though the participants did it to underline their faith.
“It’s a cultural activity, a part of the heritage of our people,” she said.
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