Ethiopia's Timkat draws crowds to ancient royal baths

By mid-morning the sombre mood has turned jovial, and scores of people disrobe to submerge themselves in the blessed waters flanked by priests dressed in long, gold-embroidered gowns and towering headdresses.
The bathers are celebrating the baptism of Jesus Christ in the Jordan River and are joined by hundreds of tourists who have come to the northern Ethiopian city of Gondar to see the annual celebration that highlights the country's rich and
well-preserved religious heritage.
"Everybody really commits to this tradition and to this religion, it seems to be really popular and not something from history, it is vivid," said Olivier Michel, 28, who travelled from France to see the event.
This historical heritage draws hundreds of thousands of tourists to the country each year, making Ethiopia a unique destination for travellers looking for something different from East Africa's better-known safari or white sand beach destinations.
It is a heritage that has survived Ethiopia's rapid growth and development, obvious in its major cities -- Gondar included -- where new buildings and roads are constructed at a dizzying pace.
"Everybody continues the traditions, but at the same time you can see that the country is evolving, everything is changing. But it looks like the people really want to keep everything that makes them go together, what makes them have this common culture, so that's a great mix," Michel added, as crowds of people continued to pour into the pools to mark the holiday.
The celebration draws thousands of Ethiopia's Orthodox Christians, who make up almost 63 percent of the country's 91 million people, according to official figures.
It starts on the eve of Timkat, which means "epiphany", when Gondar's top eight priests transport cloaked tabots -- replicas of the Arc of the Covenant -- atop their heads to the baths in an elaborate procession through town, complete with lively song, dance and prayer.
The prayers continue overnight, with chanting that echoes throughout the city, as worshippers continue streaming into the stone baths, built by hand for Emperor Fasilledes in 1632 and now a UNESCO heritage site.
Local residents welcome the attention, and say they are happy to expose a slice of Ethiopia's history to the rest of the world.

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