Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

In Granada, we saw the march of the pointy-hatted sinners

It was incredibly rousing, as though Spain had declared war on Ukip and was setting off on some new Armada

Dom Joly
Sunday 05 April 2015 13:30 BST
Comments
It was Holy Friday in Spain (AFP/Getty)
It was Holy Friday in Spain (AFP/Getty) ((AFP/Getty))

I hadn’t planned to be in Spain for Semana Santa. It was just good luck. We are halfway through our annual family road-trip and we’re ticking off Iberian destinations like the Griswold family on speed. I didn’t know too much about the Holy Week festivities – I should have done some research, but I loathe reading about things beforehand. I like to experience things first and then find out what the hell is going on.

Our first night in Granada was certainly an experience. I was lounging in bed watching the leaders’ debate when an unholy cacophony from the street forced me on to the balcony. Below, a long line of maybe 300 people, in black robes and tall pointy hats with slits for eyes, marched down the street carrying candles. It looked like a Ku Klux Klan rally and was seriously spooky. The pointy-heads turned out to be “sinners” who wore the costume in order to remain anonymous.

Next up came a vast Disneyesque marching band with lines and lines of drummers passing in step, their hypnotic beat bouncing off the walls of the winding lanes around them. It was incredibly rousing – as though Spain had declared war on Ukip and was setting off on some new Armada.

For the next five hours the procession continued as enormous floats of Jesus and chums were carried through packed streets. The noise made it impossible to hear the leaders’ debate, so I watched with the sound off.

Nigel Farage looked like a toad in a sauna. As the debate progressed he was clearly heating up and his eyes started to flicker and look a little panicky. It looked as if he’d dropped a tab of acid before coming on and was desperately trying to fight the effects. Meanwhile, David Cameron did his best to look respectful and not like a spoon. He faked being interested in what the other candidates were saying. Just occasionally his mask slipped and you could see the Bullingdon man wondering how any of these oiks had got past security.

Ed Miliband had his own problems. His advisers had clearly told Wallace to fix his gaze on the far distance as this might help him look statesmanlike. All it did was to make him look a tad deranged. I couldn’t help thinking that he was dreaming of that large plate of cheese he had left in the green room. Nick Clegg meanwhile had done something weird with his make-up. It served to make his face appear pale and featureless. He had the look of a man who had sinned and was in desperate need of a big pointy hat to hide behind.

In contrast, the women looked relatively normal. I have no idea what they said but they all looked like people you’d bump into in the street and not be too alarmed by (except maybe the Plaid Cymru one… she had something of the fright about her).

Meanwhile, down in the streets, a procession of black-clad women marched dolefully in the direction in which Jesus had disappeared. In the good old days they would have been burning Katie Hopkins at the stake.…

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in