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F E A T U R E S

January 24, 2002
Hubo, the ritual
By Jenara Regis Newman

According to Fr. Ambrosio Galindez, OSA, "hubo" came about because there are a lot of people who want to have the privilege of giving the Santo Niño His garments. So every year He always has new clothes.

In the old days, he continues, the Santo Niño ritual dressing was done in the relative privacy of the convento's large sala. Then the privilege of dressing the Santo Niño belonged to a group of Spanish women. With the Filipinization of the congregation, the privilege of dressing the Niño also changed hands.

This time, it was the Filipino women's turn to dress the Niño. But the crowd in the sala became so numerous that around 1990, the congregation decided to make the ritual public so all the devotees who wish to can witness the Hubo.

With this change in the ritual, the dressing became the task of the priest chosen to officiate it. The ritual is incorporated in the Mass, done usually before or after the Gospel, depending on the officiating priest.

Removed in the following order are the crown; then the orb and scepter and armlet (or vambrace); the bands; the cape; the tunic; the inner garments; and finally the boots. With each item of clothing removed, invocations, commemorating Christ's suffering and death, are said.

The naked Niño is then dipped into a basin of water for His "bath", after which the Niño is dressed in his new garments in the following order: His inner garments, then His boots, His tunic, His bands, His cape, His scepter and orb and armlet, and finally His crown. Every piece put on the Santo Niño is also accompanied by prayers, this time invoking the glory of His resurrection.

The part the devotees eagerly wait for then follows: the water in which the Niño was "bathed" is sprinkled on the crowd.

After this, the Mass goes on, and the fiesta festivities officially close. But not the devotion to the Santo Niño which goes on and on, becoming more fervent and the devotees becoming more numerous with every grace, both spiritual and material, that comes from this miraculous Child. Pit Senyor!

(The Hubo ritual takes place at 4 a.m. Friday at the Pilgrim Center, to be officiated by Fr. Candido Saladaga, OSA. Masses will be held at the Pilgrim Center every hour, on the hour, from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. sponsored by the Cofradia chapters here and abroad.)

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