The white Madonna of the Mountains
The oldest records of the white Lady of the Mountains say that she
arrived in Montblanc in 1305. She was meant for some other place,
but as she was passing Montblanc Heaven showed the people who were
transporting her that they were to halt here and leave the statue.
In 1936, during the Spanish Civil War, a small group of revolutionaries
was sent to destroy the Madonna, but they failed. When the first
man stood before her with a pick ax already raised to smash her,
he noticed all of a sudden that the lady was looking at him like
a living person and he froze in that position, unable to move. His
comrade, seeing that the guy was unable to follow through with the
act of destruction, took the pick ax from him. But then he too was
paralyzed by Our Lady’s eyes. This struck enough fear into
the group that they decided just to hide the Madonna right where
she stood. They threw rags and paper over her and borded up the
niche that houses her above the altar, as well as any access to
the niche. It does seem however that they managed to cut one of
her fingers off. Legend says they took it as a souvenir of their
encounter. Later the church served to house refugees without anybody
knowing that Our Lady was with them all the time, hidden under rags,
behind barred doors. Nowadays one can once more climb up behind
the altar and stand right before her. She was canonically crowned
in 1906, but long before that she was already regarded as the Commander
in Chief of Montblanc.
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* All information on this page is based on Miquel Ballbè
i Boada's, Las Vírgenes Negras y Morenas en España
Vol. 1, Gafiques ISTER, Moia/Terrassa: 1991, chapter on the sanctuary
of Our Lady of the Mountains, pp. 338-46. Unfortunately his two
volume collection of 225 Black and Brown Madonnas in Spain is out
of print.
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photo: Ramper
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