A Boozy Maltese Easter
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A bust of Christ in a niche beside the front door of a Maltese home.
Such niches are a common architectural feature on the island. -
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A Maltese bus inscribed with a bit of local driving philosophy.
The old bus fleet—average age of a coach: 35 years—was recently retired, replaced by new buses made in China and operated by a German company. Click here for a gallery of photographs of the antique buses, which were owned and operated by their Maltese drivers.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A Maltese street decked out with banners for Easter.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A brass band plays during the Easter celebration in the Three Cities.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
An effigy of Christ before his Easter Sunday sprint down the streets of Cospicua.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
The effigy of Christ after his Easter Sunday sprint down the streets of Cospicua.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A cross made up of candles in the streets of Cospicua.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A can of Malta’s domestic beer, Cisk
(Pronounced chisk.)
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
Confetti lines the streets of Cospicua in the wake of its Easter procession.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
Residents of the Three Cities visit a bar after the Easter procession.
-
Photograph by Happy Menocal.
One more pop before the holiday is over.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
The exterior of the Church of the Assumption of our Lady, better known as the Mosta Dome.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
The Mosta dome, interior.
-
Photograph by John Swansburg.
A replica of the Luftwaffe bomb that pierced the Mosta dome but failed to detonate, sparing the church and its parishioners.
Return to the article, "Malta: 10 Days, 6,000 Years of History"