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Steam engines and fire walking – photos of the weekend
Steam engines and fire walking – photos of the weekend

The Guardian

time03-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Steam engines and fire walking – photos of the weekend

A woman dressed as the Statue of Liberty sits on an inflatable couch during the Rage Against The Regime rally Photograph: CJ Gunther/EPA A barefooted participant prepares to walk through burning charcoal as he performs the traditional ritual of fire walking Photograph: VCG/Getty Images Protesters walk on King Street Bridge during a pro-Palestine rally Photograph: Flavio Brancaleone/EPA Protesters wave Thai flags as they gather at Victory Monument, demanding prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra resign Photograph:Pope Leo XIV arrives by helicopter for the Jubilee of Youth prayer vigil on the outskirts of Rome Photograph:A forest firefighter holds a lit pine cone during a rally to demand salary increases Photograph: David Canales/Sopa Images/Shutterstock Palestinians gather at an aid distribution point to receive the limited supplies of flour and baby formula delivered through the border crossing Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images Miniature steam engines at the Whitby Traction Engine Rally on the Yorkshire coast Photograph:Léon Marchand in action for France in the men's 400m medley at the World Aquatics Championships Photograph: Claudia Greco/Reuters Actor Anya Taylor-Joy watches a qualifying session of the Formula One Hungarian Grand Prix at the Hungaroring racetrack Photograph: Anna Szilágyi/EPA Participants in the grand parade of the Toronto Caribbean carnival Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images A circus performer prepares for Karandash-Fest, a street festival in western Russia Photograph: Pavel Bednyakov/AP Carson Surf Dog jumps off his board after catching a wave during the World Dog Surfing Championships Photograph: Eakin Howard/AP

Fire Walkers Defy Pain in Ancient Greek Ritual
Fire Walkers Defy Pain in Ancient Greek Ritual

Asharq Al-Awsat

time24-05-2025

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Fire Walkers Defy Pain in Ancient Greek Ritual

Under a cloud of incense smoke, a group of men and women in a village in northern Greece swayed slowly to the music before removing their shoes and rushing, barefoot, onto waiting embers. The fire walking ritual, held on the day of the Orthodox feast of Saint Constantine and Saint Helena on May 21, has been practiced for over a century in four villages of the Greek region of Macedonia, which borders Bulgaria. Each year, this ceremony -- called "Anastenaria" ("sighs" in Greek) -- attracts crowds of visitors. Considered a pagan ritual to honor the ancient Greek Dionysus and Artemis, the ancient custom was once banned by the powerful Greek Orthodox Church. For the past several decades, cooler heads have prevailed. But the rite remains shrouded in mystery. "Those who walk on fire don't like to talk about it much," explained Sotiris Tzivelis, 86, who grew up in the village of Agia Eleni, near the city of Serres. "Back then, when someone fell ill, we would call the 'anastenarides' to help heal them," he told AFP. The family requesting help would make a special handkerchief, to be blessed during the ceremony. It is one of these handkerchiefs that the ceremony leader, Babis Theodorakis, gives participants to mark the start of the ritual in the "konaki" -- a room decorated with Orthodox icons where participants prepare by dancing to the sound of the lyre and the drum. When ready, they head to a nearby meadow and form a circle around the glowing embers. "I have never walked on fire, but every year, I give our family's handkerchief to the dancers before taking it back at the end of the ritual," said Tzivelis. Pagan ritual According to local tradition, the rite originated in the villages of Kosti and Brodivo in southeastern Bulgaria, where Greek communities lived before emigrating to Greece in the early 20th century with the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. "How to walk on fire without getting burned, I can't explain it to you!" said Babis Theodorakis, the ceremony leader. Apostolis Vlaspos, 65, who has practiced the ritual for 20 years, described it as "something internal, an indescribable force". "The first time I walked on fire, I saw the image of Saint Constantine, whom we call 'grandfather', and I felt like an electric shock," he said. After circling the glowing embers three times, participants begin to walk on them, swaying to the music and clutching icons under their arms. When they return to the "konaki", visitors rush to photograph them and check that they have no burns on their feet -- proof of a miracle, according to believers. The ceremony concludes with a meal of mutton specially slaughtered for the occasion. "Those who say that people walking on fire are in a trance are wrong," said villager Kostas Liouros, 67. "What happens to them is natural and requires mental peace and great concentration," he explained. "Some say we drink alcohol or that before removing our socks and shoes, we coat our feet with herbs and things like that, but none of that is true," added another participant, who declined to give his name.

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