A family of Yolanda survivors from Tacloban City ignored the bleak weather forecast and travelled to Cebu to fulfill their “panata” or vow to honor the Señor Santo Niño on his feast day.
“This is a yearly religious activity that we do together as a family. This is our ‘panata’,” said Mariza Abarquez, who arrived Saturday with 12 relatives.
They were supposed to arrive on Friday, but ferry operators suspended their service after the low pressure area that has affected Mindanao and parts of the Visayas intensified into a tropical depression.
“I prayed to the Holy Child that we could make it here,” she added.
LIVELIER THAN EVER
It’s more fun in 2014.
Peachie Madrid, who has been joining the Sinulog for more than 10 years, made this assessment, as she and her three children watched the street dancing competition along Osmena Blvd.
“Mas lingaw siya this year kay murag mas daghan mang tawo oi kaysa sa una,” the Toledo City resident told Cebu Daily News.
(This year’s celebration is more lively . There were more people who came this year compared to previous years.)
Hat spot
Without the rain, typhoon Agaton’s presence was not felt by Sinulog revelers. Many welcomed the cool – at times chilly – breeze as overcast skies prevailed over Cebu yesterday. Not everyone though was happy.
Felipe Cotamco, who sells straw hats at the Fuente Osmena, said in previous Sinulogs – where the sun was up – he sold 80-90 hats in the first three hours of the grand parade.
Yesterday, he only sold 10 pieces by mid-morning.
The slow business prompted the 72-year-old to slash his price from P35 to P25. Cotamco said he earns P5 for every hat sold.
“My earnings would have helped in the repair of my house,” he said in Cebuano. Cotamco’s house in Bogo City was among those destroyed by supertyphoon Yolanda. / Correspondent Victor Anthony V. Silva