Llagostera, Girona, Catalonia.
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Llagostera, Girona, Catalonia.
On this International Workers' Day we remember Isavel Vilà i Pujol, known as "Isabel Cinc Hores" ("Isabel Five Hours" in the Catalan language), fighter for children's rights.
Born in Calonge in 1843, she came from a working class family who worked in the cork stopper industry. In that time, the stopper industrial areas showed huge social inequalities. While the working class had a life expectancy of 48, the priests and other Church members lived on average to 64 years old. The workers' reduced life was a result of abusive work conditions and long hours (12 to 13 hours of work each day). They were not recognised a right to strike nor to unionize, and the owners fired anyone they wanted at any moment without giving explanations nor payments for it. Women were paid half as much as men for the same job, and children started working in the cork stopper factories at 6 years old for very little pay. The factories were humid and workers often dealt with toxic materials, which added to their insufficient diet, often caused illnesses and workplace accidents.
Isavel started working at a young age, and though she could barely read and write she was decided that she wanted to study and learn. In her free time, she studied and visited the ill. She took part in the republican uprisings against the Savoia Spanish monarchy and Spanish centralism, which were widespread protests in Catalonia, and joined the AIT (International Workers' Association) anarchist union. She decided to become a teacher, and while studying criticized the difficult spelling rules, which she considered too strict just like social rules in life (she simplified her name, from "Isabel Vila" to "Isavel Vila", since in her and most dialects of Catalan, b and v are pronounced the same).
She organized the workers of Llagostera (the town where she lived) and nearby Sant Feliu, and worked together with other women to protest for the abolition of the military draft, the separation of Church and state and freedom of religion.
She was most well-known for her fight for children's rights. The government passed a law limiting children's labour to 5 hours for boys under 13 and girls under 14 and to 8 hours for boys under 15 and girls under 17, but this law was not applied. She confronted local authorities demanding this law be respected, insisting that children need to grow healthy and that child labour perpetuates illiteracy. She was ridiculed for it both by the local bourgeoisie and by fellow trade unionists, who did not understand that children shouldn't be at work.
The coup in 1874 and the restoration of the Bourbonic monarchy illegalized the International and workers' associations. The government issued an arrest order for Isavel, who crossed the border with France and went on exile in Carcassona (Occitania). A rich Freemason family (the Muntada family) hosted her at their home, and during her exile Isavel could study to become a teacher.
She could come back to Catalonia 7 years later, when there was some political change. For the rest of her life, she worked as a teacher and created non-religious schools for working class children with new pedagogic methods. She quickly gained recognition as a great professional, but was excluded by other leftist school organizations. She spent her last years teaching in a free school for girls that she had founded in Sabadell, until she died in 1896.
New photos: Shakira and Gerard Piqué with Milan and Sasha at today's UE Llagostera, FC Andorra game. (Oct 18, 2020)
This is divine justice. A life is full of difficult decisions, some of which bring us closer to heaven, and some of which distance us from it. History has always said that the good go to heaven and the bad to hell. It is at this door that the decision is made whether people enter sinlessly or not.
It is said that there was a priest who was very faithful to this story. He could not begin his prayer without first being blessed by Celia, the figure at the entrance to the church. Pilgrimages had a stop at this entrance, no one could continue their journey without her blessing.
A few years ago there was a robbery inside the church. The target was the gold jewellery of the murals and the relics of the legendary Celia. When the authorities arrived they found the two thieves dead from a heart attack. They received divine punishment for their blasphemy and cruelty. Since that day, the church is protected every day of the year by the spirit of Celia, who watches over all the inhabitants of Llagostera.
Llagostera
Sea urchins are very typical food in some parts of the Comarques Gironines area of Catalonia. They are especially typical in Llagostera, where every year they celebrate a “garoinada” where the whole town cooks sea urchins.
Photos by Els Tinars restaurant in Llagostera (Comarques Gironines, Catalonia).
These are the stairs to heaven. In the village of Llagostera, these stairs join the church square with the water square. These stairs are so called because when people used to climb the coffins to the church, they did it by these stairs.
I am sure that they are the place where more dead people have passed through the town, removing the cemetery, obviously. At night they have a very scary air and it is one of the tourist attractions of the village.
These were remodelled because there was an accident in the 90s, where a car crashed into them. It is said that the car was going alone and that nobody was driving it. That's why they were closed for a long time until they were renovated along with the rest of the square. It is still said that you can hear the lost driver looking for his car at night.