'한해 소원을 미니어처에 담아'…볼리비아 알라시타 축제
송고시간2021-01-26 07:55











<저작권자(c) 연합뉴스, 무단 전재-재배포 금지> 2021/01/26 07:55 송고
송고시간2021-01-26 07:55
<저작권자(c) 연합뉴스, 무단 전재-재배포 금지> 2021/01/26 07:55 송고
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(엘알토 AP=연합뉴스) 24일(현지시간) 알라시타 축제가 열린 볼리비아 엘알토에서 한 시민이 마스크를 쓴 채 한 해 소원을 담은 미니어처 모형을 들고있다. yumst@yna.co.kr (끝)
Women wearing masks amid the COVID-19 pandemic, walk whit miniature fake money during the annual Alasita Fair in El Alto, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. People attended the opening day of the fair to buy tiny replicas of things they aspire to acquire during the year, like homes, cars, wealth. The Aymara word "alasita" means "buy me." (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
A statue of "Ekeko," the god of prosperity stands over replicas of good people wish for, during the annual Alasita Fair in El Alto, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. People attended the opening day of the fair to buy tiny replicas of things they aspire to acquire during the year, like homes, cars, wealth. The Aymara word "alasita" means "buy me." (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
A woman wearing a mask amid the COVID-19 pandemic, sells miniature coronavirus vaccines during the annual Alasita Fair in El Alto, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. People attended the opening day of the fair to buy tiny replicas of things they aspire to acquire during the year, like homes, cars, wealth and COVID vaccines. The Aymara word "alasita" means "buy me." (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
epa08963148 A citizen of El Alto invokes the Ekeko or god of abundance to fulfill his dreams, after making purchases during the traditional Alasita fair or miniature festival, in El Alto, Bolivia, 24 January 2021. Miniatures of health certificates, face masks, negative tests of the covid-19 and even piggy banks in the form of the new coronavirus are part of the offer of the creative Bolivian artisans for the Alasita, the traditional fair of abundance that did not stop being held in the city of El Alto despite the pandemic. EPA/Martin Alipaz
An Aymara spiritual guide wearing a mask amid the COVID-19 pandemic, blesses a miniature car during the annual Alasita Fair in El Alto, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. People attended the opening day of the fair to buy tiny replicas of things they aspire to acquire during the year, like homes, cars, wealth. The Aymara word "alasita" means "buy me." (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
epa08963149 People pray in a church to bless their purchases during the traditional Alasita fair or miniature festival, in El Alto, Bolivia, 24 January 2021. Miniatures of health certificates, face masks, negative tests of the covid-19 and even piggy banks in the form of the new coronavirus are part of the offer of the creative Bolivian artisans for the Alasita, the traditional fair of abundance that did not stop being held in the city of El Alto despite the pandemic. EPA/Martin Alipaz
Woman wearing a mask amid the COVID-19 pandemic, sells fake Coronavirus test certificates during the annual Alasita Fair in La Paz, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. People attended the opening day of the fair to buy tiny replicas of things they aspire to acquire during the year, like homes, cars, wealth, and health certificates. The Aymara word "alasita" means "buy me." (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
epa08963146 Dozens of people shop at the traditional Alasita fair or miniature festival, in El Alto, Bolivia, 24 January 2021. Miniatures of health certificates, face masks, negative tests of the covid-19 and even piggy banks in the form of the new coronavirus are part of the offer of the creative Bolivian artisans for the Alasita, the traditional fair of abundance that did not stop being held in the city of El Alto despite the pandemic. EPA/Martin Alipaz
A small statue of "Ekeko," the god of prosperity stands amid the COVID-19 pandemic, during the annual Alasita Fair in La Paz, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. Ekeko is rendered as a short, pudgy, mustached man who wears traditional Andean clothes and carries baskets of grains. (AP Photo/Juan Karita)
Traditional medicines stand next to a statuette of a coronavirus during the annual Alasita Fair amid the new corocornavirus pandemic in El Alto, Bolivia, Sunday, Jan. 24, 2021. People attended the opening day of the fair to buy tiny replicas of things they aspire to acquire during the year, like homes, cars, wealth. The Aymara word "alasita" means "buy me." (AP Photo/Juan Karita)