Menú Cerrar
Latest Posts

A VERY CALASPARRIAN CHRISTMAS TALE

The Day of the Innocents on December 28 is celebrated all over Spain but the character, Juan Pelotero, who once again year roamed the streets this year with his band of “inocentes” is peculiar to Calasparra.
Juan Pelotero is a fancy dress character in ragged clothes and his face painted blue with hollin. According to legend, he represents the “lower classes” of the town who, on December 28, can earn himself some extra money and a drink or two.
He carries a two metre long stick from which a ball of old cloth is suspended on an esparto grass cord. The game is that any Calasparrian can give him money so that he “beats” someone else. When Pelotero completes this mission he returns to demand more money in order to not return the beating. In this manner he passes from one side of the town to the other with his stick and ball collecting fees from one person or another.
However, the “innocents,” who historically have nothing to with the local character, Juan Pelotero, represent and ridicule the powers of the town: the Mayor, the Judge and the Jailor. They “fine residents for drinking and also for not drinking and for stealing. Victims had to pay in order not to be fined or end up in jail.
According to tradition, even though Juan Pelotero made some money on rounds, he usually ended up in the dirtiest part of the Fuente de la Secano, where the livestock drank and the local women washed their dirty clothes and animal tripe, for a cold bath at the coldest time of the year.
During the dictatorship Juan Pelotero failed to appear in the streets of Calasparra but today the legend and the tradition is alive and well.
This year, for the fourth year running in Calasparra, Pelotero was accompanied by the Travelling Storyteller who wound his tales in various corners of the town.


NEXOnr Calasparra