By Grazielle Mae A. Sales
PGIN-CMO
Ilocano devotees took time out to welcome the Santo Niño de Cebu
(Holy Child of Cebu) which visited the province on July 1 to 8, 2014 to mark
the milestone of its arrival in the country about half a millennium ago.
The Santo Niño de Cebu is a
statue of the Holy Child Jesus whose history dates back to the birth of
Christianity in the Philippines.
Portuguese explorer,
Ferdinand Magellan, in the service of the kingdom of Spain, arrived in Cebu
during his voyage to the Far East in 1521. He persuaded Rajah Humabon and his
chief wife, Humamay to pledge their allegiance to Spain and convert to
Christianity.
Upon the return of Magellan’s
expedition, the royal couple was baptized and Italian historian Antonio
Pigafetta personally handed the image of the Holy Child to Humamay as a
baptismal gift.
History has it that in 1565,
the second Spanish expedition took place and mariner Juan de Camus, crew of
Miguel Lopez de Legazpi, found the image on an altar in one of the burnt ruins.
Legazpi in turn instituted a fiesta to commemorate the finding of the icon, a
celebration that survives until now as “Kaplag” (finding).
On that actual site of
“Kaplag” was where the first Augustianian church and convent in the archipelago
was built now known as the Basilica Minore del Sto. Niño de Cebu, the shrine of
the Holy Child’s image.
The pilgrim image stands at
approximately 12 inches and is clothed in a loose garment and red and gold
embroidered vestment. It has a golden crown and holds a golden globus cruciger, a replica of the world,
in the left hand.
‘Niñong Gala’
People who witnessed the miracles of Santo Niño said that he
appears as a little boy who often wanders around to play with children or
rescue those who are in need, thus the nicknames “Niñong Gala” and “Viajero”
(wanderer). Among the Holy Child’s purported miracles were saving a
six-year-old child from a fire and returning the lost carabao of a farming
couple.
Many of the devotees thus
tend to leave shoes, slippers and toys for Santo Niño at the Basilica which the
priests later on donate to several orphanages.
“It’s a huge honor and
blessing, the very first time that the Santo Nino of Cebu, the evangelizer of
the entire country who Christianized us five hundred years ago, will travel to
the Northern Luzon,” Ilocos Norte Gov. Ma. Imelda “Imee” R. Marcos said.
She also added that the Sto.
Niño's visit is a “double joy” for the province for it coincided with the 85th
birthday of former first lady and now Rep. Imelda R. Marcos (2nd
district, Ilocos Norte).
The visit of the Santo Nino
de Cebu in several parts of the country is one of the religious and devotional
rites for the nine-year preparatory celebration to mark the 500 years of Roman
Catholicism in the country.
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