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Nozawaonsen Dosojin and Luminarias: A Pair of Fiery Festivals (31 photos)

In the past couple of days, festivals were held in two villages separated by language, culture, religion, and great distance, but both centered on the use of fire as a method of purification and blessing—and both carried out with a liberal partaking of alcohol. In  San Bartolome de Pinares, Spain, on the eve of Saint Anthony’s Day—Spain’s patron saint of animals—people ride horses through bonfires during the “Luminarias,” a centuries-old tradition meant to to purify and protect the animals. In Nozawaonsen, Japan, village men of the unlucky ages of 42 and 25 stage a fiery battle, with one side building and protecting a wooden shrine, and another trying to burn it down with bundles of flaming sticks. The festival is meant to chase out evil spirits, celebrate first births, and pray for happy marriages.

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Left: In Nozawaonsen, Japan, people rush forward with flaming sticks as they try to set fire to a wooden shrine that is protected by men from the village during the Nozawaonsen Dosojin Fire Festival on January 15, 2018. Right: In San Bartolome de Pinares, Spain, a man rides a horse through a bonfire as part of a ritual in honor of Saint Anthony the Abbot on January 16, 2018. (Carl Court / Getty, Francisco Seco / AP)
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https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/01/nozawaonsen-dosojin-and-luminarias-a-pair-of-fiery-festivals/550697/