
            For the adventurous traveler, a trip 
            to Quiapo will provide a taste of the third-world surreal and fringe, 
            a merging of Filipino religiosity and the commerce of the alternative. 
            Long before the surreal-and-fringe, 
            Quiapo was a thriving fishing village, a complex of intersecting rivers, 
            canals, and marshes, abundant with the water lily Kiapo, from which 
            it derived its name.
          By the latter part of the 16th 
            century, Quiapo had become a flourishing center of commerce, awash 
            not merely of water lilies, but also of a profusion of crafts and 
            trade stores, theaters and movie houses and open markets, attracting 
            the elite, the 'illustrados' and the nouveau riche who came to build 
            their luxurious homes and mansions.
            
            Part of the boom and burgeoning commerce was attributed to the Black 
            Nazarene. Brought to the country by the Recollect Friars in the early 
            1600s, the Señor, the endearing name for the Black Nazarene, 
            finally found permanent residence at the Quiapo Church, relegating 
            its patron saint, St. John de Baptist to a demoted status, obscurity 
            and lessened reverence.
          But time and change have ravaged 
            Quiapo of that historical past. Now it stands transformed, a shadow 
            of its gentrified past, its sole vestige, the Quiapo Church– 
            razed many times by fires and earthquake, but always arising anew 
            from those recurrent calamities– monolithic and towering over 
            the miasma of third world commercialism that surrounds it.
           |
|
          And housed within is the Black 
            Nazarene, the main draw to the Quiapo Church. A wooden image that 
            has spawned a culture of devotion and idolatry unlike any other in 
            the Philippines, drawing countless devotees, mostly from the 'masa', 
            but also from the ranks of the desperate professionals, crowding the 
            church every Friday, paying homage in all piety, some in open humility, 
            with desperate promises, walking on their knees to the altar – for a favor, for a miracle, for 
            penance, for giving thanks. 
          And around the church, an enclave 
            of commerce prospers, an outdoor market that caters to the masa seeking 
            bargains for its mundane needs, spiritual accoutrements and alternative necessities. The 
            market under the bridge - "sa ilalim ng tulay" - is still 
            a popular draw, where, with right kind of haggle, everything is cheaper 
            than anywhere else. Carriedo is now a street market that stretches 
            from end to end, blaring decibels of deafening music, mongering all sorts of "branded" 
            imitations and pirate DVDs of current theater fares. Beggars invariably 
            materialize, drawn to the tourist-, charitable- and rich-looking visitors. 
            For the appetite lined with fortitude, there is a wide choice of sidewalk 
            and push-cart cuisine and native delicacies.
          And 
            immediately abutting and circling the Quiapo church, there is the 
            commerce for the devotees and the dabblers in the alternative. Almost 
            any day finds the prayers, hymns, homilies, litanies and novenas spilling 
          into the streets, and amplified into the edges of Raon's electronic 
          commerce.
          
             And 
              on Fridays, Quiapo Day, the day of special homage to the Nazarene, the multitudes 
                multiply.
And 
              on Fridays, Quiapo Day, the day of special homage to the Nazarene, the multitudes 
                multiply. 
                It becomes a carnival of sight, sounds and smell—a street theater 
                    of the crowding masa seeking options for their salvation needs, costumed 
                    penitents, faith healers, rows of palm readers and Tarot-shuffling 
                    fortune tellers, ballon-mongers, and flower vendors for altar offerings. 
                    A profusion of make-do stalls hawk a dizzying array of wares for the 
                    faithful and alternative rituals — candles in a variety of colors 
                    and shapes for specific spells and counter spells, incense, tawas, 
                    lotions and snake oils. Icons and cellophaned-wrapped figurines of the Sto. Niño, Nazarene, and the Virgin Mary in laminates, wood or plaster. Anting-antings, pendants 
                    and talismans. Rosaries in all sizes and prices. Leaves, twigs, sprigs, 
                    seeds, roots, juices  or decoctions of herbal medicinal plants – 
                fresh, dried or powdered, bundled, bottled or bagged, decocted for 
                a sundry of day-to-day maladies or desperate needs. And in the air, 
                a composite of odors, buried in each other, of urban pollution and 
                refuse, burning candles, wilting medicinal plants, incense, and multitudinous 
                sweat, intermittently relieved by doses of scents wafting from stringed 
                sampaguitas. Outside the church, the faithful patiently shuffles in 
                their long communion lines. Inside, they cram to the doors, many busily 
                digesting the homily, some beading through rosaries in silent prayer, 
                while some clutch at their cellphones frantically texting . . .their 
                prayers. And outside, high above in a corner of the church facade, 
                lords a a giant flat-screen LCD television from which the priest renders 
                his hymns and homily, and after the services, replaced by a static 
                image of the Nazarene, probably pondering this festival of prayer 
          and commerce.
or decoctions of herbal medicinal plants – 
                fresh, dried or powdered, bundled, bottled or bagged, decocted for 
                a sundry of day-to-day maladies or desperate needs. And in the air, 
                a composite of odors, buried in each other, of urban pollution and 
                refuse, burning candles, wilting medicinal plants, incense, and multitudinous 
                sweat, intermittently relieved by doses of scents wafting from stringed 
                sampaguitas. Outside the church, the faithful patiently shuffles in 
                their long communion lines. Inside, they cram to the doors, many busily 
                digesting the homily, some beading through rosaries in silent prayer, 
                while some clutch at their cellphones frantically texting . . .their 
                prayers. And outside, high above in a corner of the church facade, 
                lords a a giant flat-screen LCD television from which the priest renders 
                his hymns and homily, and after the services, replaced by a static 
                image of the Nazarene, probably pondering this festival of prayer 
          and commerce.
          
            
              | Time was, Quiapo's renown was not just the Church and the Nazarene. There was also Plaza Miranda, the square that abuts the church, site of  political rallies and "meeting de avances."  It was the place that provided a stage for the voices of dissent, the freedom to discourse and debate. President Ramon Magsaysay once uttered: "Can we defend this in Plaza Miranda?" There was a time when the question resounded as affirmation for the ideas and the freedoms Plaza Miranda  stood for.  But so suddenly, it came to an end.  August 21, 1971, during the Liberal Party's political campaign rally, two hand grenades tossed on-stage claimed the life of a 5-year old child and Manila Times photographer Ben Roxas, and left scores injured in its wake.  It was Plaza Miranda's death knell. Initially, the incumbent President Marcos was blamed. In turn, he blamed the communists,  and suspended the writ of habeas corpus, and soon after,  declared Martial Law. In the aftermath, Plaza Miranda ceased to be. Now it stands a historical footnote, refurbished by  architectural facelifts, adorned with plaques and sculptures that celebrate its past - a past probably lost to the masa's recurring street theater of religion and the alternative. | 
          
           In 
            January, the annual procession honoring the Black Nazarene is held.
In 
            January, the annual procession honoring the Black Nazarene is held.             
            A week-long festivity that starts with a novena on the first of January, 
            culminating on the 9th of the month with a massive and multitudinous 
            procession in the frenzied fervor of a sea of men escorting the 150-pound 
            image of the Señor, all straining and struggling to touch the 
            statue, for a hope, for a wish, for the desperate miracle.  (More: Nazarene Festival 2011/  the Nazarene Festiaval 2012) / Nazarene Festival 2016
            
             
            Quiapo is what remains of that triumvirate of a more glorious past 
            – Escolta, Sta. Cruz, and Quiapo –  that once veritable "downtown" 
            destination for the shopping and movie-house needs of the burgis and 
            the studentry of the university belt. And for Quiapo, the church is 
            what remains, anchor to its perimeter of thriving third-world commerce.
            
            And for the intrepid 
            traveler or the peripatetic soul with a little daring, for the flavor 
            of the fringe and a fascinating window to a culture, any Friday is 
          worth that half-day trip and venture to Quiapo.