By Francisco Collazo
Translated by: Julie Schwietert Collazo
SEE RELATED:Compared with the bull fights in Mexico City, where they carry names like “Jalapeno,” “Guajillo,” or “Habanero”, or whether they are killed at the end of the festival, as in Spain, the bulls in the Colombian corralejas are simply beasts that will live to see another day and another corraleja. They are the protagonists of this event and the memories it produces: 20 bulls in all, offering a true spectacle of entertainment and horror, four hours of danger and fury that characterize the bull fights, Colombian style.

Columbia Corralejas (Photo by Francisco Collazo)
In the sand, there’s more than one bull and more than one torero; in fact, there are more than 100 men intoxicated with bravado, alcohol, and the music of the band that is there to enliven and stimulate the courage and valor of the participants without leaving the spectators out. It’s everyone against the bulls.
The day is hot, humid with the sweat and alcohol of the participants. Blood is expected, as is tragedy, and perhaps, even death. For the past 20 years, the corraleja has been the celebration of men and beasts.
There is food of every type to fill eyes and stomachs: bagre (a bottom feeding fish typical of the region), cheese arepas, coconut flavored rice, and corn tamales. Each vendor offers us his products and price wars explode on every street corner, just like the vallenato and cumbia music that blasts from loudspeakers without ceasing. Here, you don’t talk, but yell, and one hears accents from every part of Colombia: Medellin, Cali, Bogota, and all parts of the coast.
Here, Colombia is celebrating, or at least it seems that way. Rich ranchers and poor farmers, fishermen, nannies, and retired workers… all are in attendance. Today, they’re wearing new clothes, vivid and festive; the men with their typical guayabera shirts, hats, and ponchos; the children with their little hats and bowties, marked with symbols of their Colombian flag.

The corralejas ring (Photo by Franciso Collazo)
The costumes are diverse and designed with great imagination: men dressed as women, people wearing different colored wigs, and painted faces. Among the participants we find veterans of past corralejas who proudly show off their dozens of scars, each one its own story inscribed in the skin like lethal medals from wars long past.
Here, everything is for sale and everything has its price. It’s possible to rent a liquor vendor to fill your glass to the rim before you even notice that it’s half empty.
The corralejas are national festivals. The bulls confront a mass of men who are tense with challenge and glory. It’s a battle between life and death. Here, everything else is forgotten. It’s an escape for some and an opportunity to make money for others.
The entry costs between 1200 Colombian pesos and as little as 1000 pesos for the stands in the full sun. There’s free entry for those willing to observe the event under the stands, where there are no seats but capacity for everyone who wants to be there, along with the poor people, who constitute the majority.
On the day of the official start of the corraleja, there is a parade of school bands, each with its own costumes, themes, suits, and uniforms. Expensive paso fino horses, mounted by rich ranchers and farmers from miles around march down the dark streets of Mompox.

Columbian Corralejas (Photo by Francisco Collazo)
Please read our comment policy before commenting.