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A day of protest and celebration

Sep­tem­ber 11 is La Diada, Cat­alo­nia’s na­tional day, and as has hap­pened every year for over a decade the pro-in­de­pen­dence Cata­lan Na­tional As­sem­bly (ANC) has or­gan­ised a mass demon­stra­tion in the cen­tre of Barcelona in favour of Cata­lan self-de­ter­mi­na­tion. The cen­tral event will take place in Plaça Es­panya, with four columns of pro­test­ers set­ting out from dif­fer­ent places around the city and con­verg­ing on the large square at the foot of Mon­tjuïc moun­tain.

Each col­umn has been named to rep­re­sent a dif­fer­ent as­pect re­lated to Cat­alo­nia, Cata­lan iden­tity and the ANC’s goals and pri­or­i­ties. The Llib­er­tat (Free­dom) col­umn will begin from Ciu­tat de la Justícia and will move along Gran Via, the Llen­gua (Lan­guage) col­umn will set out from Es­cola Proa in the Bor­deta neigh­bour­hood, the Soberanía (Sov­er­eignty) col­umn will begin in Plaça Leta­mendi, and the main col­umn, País (Coun­try), will set out from Plaça dels Països Cata­lans.

Under the motto ’Via fora’, the ANC demon­stra­tion will as al­ways begin at the sym­bolic time of 17.14h (1714 was the year that Barcelona fell to Bour­bon troops). The colours cho­sen for this year’s protest are blue and yel­low, the colours of the Eu­ro­pean flag, and are meant to rep­re­sent Cat­alo­nia as a Eu­ro­pean state out­side Spain.

While the demon­stra­tion is the largest event tak­ing place on Sep­tem­ber 11, there are plenty of other cel­e­bra­tions planned dur­ing La Diada. In fact, the tra­di­tional events begin the night be­fore, at the Fos­sar de les Mor­eres, an iconic lo­ca­tion for the in­de­pen­dence move­ment and a memo­r­ial built over the graves of the de­fend­ers of Barcelona dur­ing the siege of 1714.

Rafael Casanova

Cat­alo­nia’s na­tional day it­self al­ways be­gins, how­ever, with the tra­di­tional lay­ing of a flo­ral of­fer­ing at the mon­u­ment of Rafael Casanova. As mayor and com­man­der in chief, Casanova was the man in charge of the de­fence of Barcelona when the city fell fi­nally to the Bour­bons in 1714.

Mean­while, at noon, the Òmnium Cul­tural or­gan­i­sa­tion will hold the ’Fi­esta de la Llib­er­tat’ (Fes­ti­val of Free­dom), a mu­si­cal cel­e­bra­tion in­volv­ing the fi­nal­ists of the TV3 chan­nel’s music tal­ent show, Eufòria. Later that day, from 7pm until mid­night, Òmnium will host a se­ries of con­certs at the Arc de Tri­omf mon­u­ment, fea­tur­ing mu­si­cians Triquell, Jazz Woman and Figa Flawas.

The na­tional day cel­e­bra­tions will be brought to a close with the an­nual in­sti­tu­tional event on be­half of the Cata­lan gov­ern­ment at Mon­tjuïc’s Puig and Cadafalch tow­ers. This year’s event will de­fend the Cata­lan lan­guage as a “nexus of union for di­ver­sity” and will fea­ture a va­ri­ety of mu­si­cal and lin­guis­tic per­for­mances by dif­fer­ent artists from around the coun­try.

la diada

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