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starwomyn 70F
5429 posts
5/8/2006 12:13 pm

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5/8/2006 8:17 pm

Belgium's cat parade: Once cruel, now just playful

Belgium's cat parade: Once cruel, now just playful

By Jayne Traendly, Special to Stars and Stripes
Stripes European Travel, Thursday, May 4, 2006


Hissssss! Be warned. Another element has been added to this year’s Cat Parade in Ypers, Belgium: a 130-yard-long cage of wild cats.
The 2003 parade featured the more “playful” side of the cat with the cartoon character Garfield. So this time, says Michele Martens of the city’s tourist board, “the director wanted to include the more aggressive parts.”

Every three years since 1955, the residents of this Belgian town have celebrated the cat by transforming themselves into human-sized felines for a festival weekend that includes art, music, folklore activities and the parade. But it’s a wonder Ypres’ cats haven’t let loose with this wild side before, considering their tragic history in Belgium.
The story didn’t begin so grim. In fact, legend has it that in pagan times, a giant statue of a cat god stood where the Cloth Hall in the town center now is located. But this cat adoration turned to fear when the locals converted to Christianity and the once-honored figure was transformed into a symbol of the devil.
It was all downhill after that. Throughout the Middle Ages in Europe, the cat was associated with witches and demons, suffering a list of atrocities too numerous to mention. And Ypres’ populace was no kinder.
The town’s history records show that a cat festival was celebrated in the 15th century, closely related to the Ash Wednesday fair. But this event was no fun for felines. The highlight involved the town jester hurling live animals out of high towers, an act that symbolized the exorcism of demons. At some point, this tossing was officially transferred to the Cloth Tower belfry.
Hissssss!
Unfortunately, this flinging of felines lasted for centuries. It wasn’t until 1817, according to a 19th-century Ypres archivist, that the last cats were thrown and the pitiless practice was banned.
Since its earlier days, the cat parade has grown, this year so much that part of it will be on Saturday, May 13, starting at 8:30 p.m. This shorter spectacle will feature the sections about the city’s history and the witch trials.
“It’s sort of an introduction to the larger one,” Martens said.
On Sunday at 3 p.m., the cats break loose for the grand procession. The wild cats join the traditional cast of cat characters: Cieper, wife Minneke Poes and their kitten, Piepertje, towering above the crowd. Exotic Egyptian cats ride in painted boats carrying Egyptian worshippers to the cat sanctuary in the town of Bubastis. Giant wild cats draw the German goddess Freya in her heavenly carriage. Black cats curl around their witch companions.
Cats from the musical “Cats” dance along the route. Other felines march in formation and ride horses in a cat cavalry, hiss and spring into the crowd and schmooze with the audience. Litters of kittens prance among the adults.
At the end, the jester arrives on his float in a flurry of confetti to ascend the steps of the Cloth Hall’s 230-foot belfry and carry out the traditional tossing of the cats – using plush animals. In former years, these toys were filled with money, but the practice was discontinued when the fights among the scrambling crowds got too wild.
“Humans call this fighting wild?” the Ypres cats must have said in disbelief. No ears back? No snarls? No extended claws?
So once again the town’s felines will hold a colorful parade and show these people how to do it right in Belgium’s “capital of cats.”Jayne Traendly is a regular contributor to Stripes’ Travel columns and a freelance writer living in Germany.



Abracadabra


moon2u 73F

5/8/2006 1:10 pm

I have never heard of this one yet. Star, just think, I could be a Nun-like, cat-woman perv at this soiree' hehehehehehehe moony