• Advertise
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Dirt Road Newpaper established 2008. Serving the tip of Nicoya Peninsula CR
30 °c
Cobano
28 ° Thu
27 ° Fri
No Result
View All Result
Santa Teresa Dirt Road
  • Home page
  • Nature ECO
    • Nature ECO Tours
  • Food & Restaurants
    • Restaurant Guide
  • Surf & Beach
    • Surf & Beach Guide
  • Health & Fitness
    • Health & Fitness Guide
  • Community
    • Business Services
    • Home & Construction
    • Retail Business´s
  • Tours & Travel
    • Tours & Travel Guide
  • Real Estate
    • Real State Guide
  • Vacation Rental
    • Vacation Rentals Guide
  • Home page
  • Nature ECO
    • Nature ECO Tours
  • Food & Restaurants
    • Restaurant Guide
  • Surf & Beach
    • Surf & Beach Guide
  • Health & Fitness
    • Health & Fitness Guide
  • Community
    • Business Services
    • Home & Construction
    • Retail Business´s
  • Tours & Travel
    • Tours & Travel Guide
  • Real Estate
    • Real State Guide
  • Vacation Rental
    • Vacation Rentals Guide
No Result
View All Result
Santa Teresa Dirt Road
No Result
View All Result
Home Art & Culture
Good Friday Via Crucis procession at Iglesia Católica de Cóbano Costa Rica with community gathered in street service

The community gathers outside Iglesia Católica de Cóbano on Good Friday, as the Via Crucis procession moves through the streets in one of the most meaningful moments of Semana Santa.

One Week, Many Traditions: How Santa Teresa Celebrates Semana Santa (Easter), and Passover

March 25, 2026
in Art & Culture, Community
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Semana Santa in Costa Rica: Traditions, Faith, and Beach Life in Santa Teresa

In Costa Rica, Semana Santa—Holy Week leading up to Easter—is one of the most culturally and spiritually significant times of the year, rooted in centuries of Roman Catholicism tradition. Across the country, especially in cities like San José and historic centers such as Cartago, the week unfolds through solemn church services, dramatic street processions known as the Via Crucis, and community-wide observances that bring entire towns to a reflective pause—particularly on Good Friday. These reenactments of the final days of Christ are often elaborate and deeply emotional, blending faith, history, and local identity into a powerful shared experience. Yet, beyond the churches and candlelit streets, Semana Santa also marks a nationwide migration, as thousands of Costa Rican families leave the cities behind and head toward the coasts—transforming beach towns like Santa Teresa into vibrant, bustling hubs where tradition meets the rhythm of the ocean.

Semana Santa in Santa Teresa: Tico Traditions, Processions, and Beach Rituals

In Santa Teresa Costa Rica and its neighboring beaches—Mal País Costa Rica, Playa Hermosa Costa Rica, and Manzanillo Costa Rica—Semana Santa unfolds in a rhythm that is deeply Tico at its core. This is the week when families return to the coast, reconnect, and move between faith and celebration in a way that feels both grounded and alive.

The most visible local tradition comes midweek into Good Friday (Viernes Santo), when the community gathers for a small-town Via Crucis procession. In Santa Teresa, this often takes the form of a humble but powerful march through the main roads—led by local school groups, with children playing drums and instruments, and residents walking together in quiet reflection. It’s not polished or staged, and that’s exactly why it resonates. You hear it before you see it—the slow beat of drums rolling down the dirt road, calling people out of their homes to join.

Good Friday itself carries a slower, more reverent tone. Many local families observe traditions passed down through generations—keeping the day quiet, avoiding the ocean, and spending time together. There’s a sense of pause, even here, where life usually runs barefoot and fast.

But step onto the beaches, and the other side of Semana Santa comes alive.

From Thursday through Sunday, the coastline fills with Costa Rican families who have made this journey for decades. Tents go up early. Coolers are unpacked. Grills fire up under almond trees. The beaches of Mal País, Hermosa, and Manzanillo transform into full family gatherings—multi-generational, music playing, kids running wild, the smell of food drifting through the salt air.

Food is a central part of the tradition, and during Semana Santa, it follows its own rules. Many Ticos avoid red meat, especially on Good Friday, turning instead to the flavors of the sea and countryside:

  • Fresh ceviche and whole fried fish
  • Arroz con mariscos shared in large portions
  • Homemade empanadas de piña.
  • Tamal mudo, picadillo de palmito
  • Miel de chiverre, slow-cooked and rich, passed between families like a seasonal ritual

In Manzanillo Costa Rica, there has long been a tradition of community beach activities during Semana Santa, including the well-known sandcastle contests that brought families together right at the edge of the tide. While these events have shifted over the years and may not happen as formally as they once did, the spirit remains—families building, playing, and claiming their space on the sand for the week.

This is Semana Santa, Tico style—
where a solemn procession on Friday can give way to laughter on the beach by afternoon, where recipes carry memory, and where the coastline becomes a living, breathing gathering of family, tradition, and time shared under the sun.

Local residents reenacting a station of the Via Crucis during Semana Santa in Santa Teresa Costa Rica
One of the 14 Stations of the Cross comes to life as local residents take part in the Via Crucis reenactment—honoring tradition through community, presence, and shared story.

Easter Beyond Costa Rica: From Ancient Faith to Modern Traditions

While Semana Santa in Costa Rica leans deeply into faith, reflection, and family, Easter takes on a slightly different flavor across North America and Europe—where centuries-old religious meaning now blends with colorful, playful traditions that many grew up with.

At its core, Easter in the Christian world still marks the same moment—the resurrection of Jesus Christ, the culmination of Holy Week in Christianity. Church services, often held on Easter Sunday morning, remain central for many families, whether in United States, Canada, or across Europe.

But over time, especially in North America, Easter has expanded into something more layered—part sacred, part seasonal celebration of spring, renewal, and new life.

That’s where the familiar traditions come in:

  • Easter eggs, often brightly colored or decorated
  • Easter egg hunts, where children search for hidden eggs in gardens and parks
  • Chocolate bunnies and baskets filled with sweets

These traditions trace back not to the Bible, but to older European customs—particularly from Germany, where the idea of the Easter Bunny (an egg-laying hare) first appeared. Eggs themselves have long symbolized fertility and new life, tied to the arrival of spring after winter. Over generations, these symbols blended into Easter celebrations, especially as European immigrants carried them to North America.

Across Europe, traditions still vary widely:

  • In Italy, Easter remains deeply religious, with grand processions similar to those seen in Latin countries
  • In Spain, Semana Santa is marked by dramatic, elaborate parades with centuries-old brotherhoods
  • In France, church bells “fly to Rome” and return with chocolates for children
  • In United Kingdom, families celebrate with egg hunts, hot cross buns, and long weekend gatherings

So when these traditions arrive in a place like Santa Teresa, they come mixed—woven together by travelers, expats, and families who bring pieces of home with them.

You’ll see it in subtle ways:  It’s Easter, just… reimagined.

And when you step back and look at the bigger picture, something interesting happens.

In one small coastal town, during the same stretch of days, you have:

  • Semana Santa — rooted in reflection, sacrifice, and faith
  • Passover — centered on freedom, history, and storytelling
  • Easter traditions from North America and Europe — celebrating renewal, family, and the arrival of spring

Passover in Santa Teresa: A Tradition of Freedom and Gathering

Alongside Semana Santa, another ancient tradition unfolds quietly across Santa Teresa Costa Rica. Passover, rooted in Judaism, tells the story of the Israelites’ journey from slavery to freedom in ancient Egypt—a story carried through generations.

In 2026, Passover begins at sunset on April 1 and continues through April 9, with the most important gatherings taking place during the first nights of the holiday.

Here in Santa Teresa, Passover is marked by large shared meals known as Seders. Friends and families gather around long tables, reading from traditional texts, sharing symbolic foods like matzah and bitter herbs, and retelling the story together through prayer, questions, and song. It’s a time for reflection, connection, and remembering a story of resilience and freedom.

  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.

Passover Seder dinner at Banana Beach Santa Teresa Costa Rica with long table gathering by the ocean
A long table set by the ocean, where friends and families gather for a Passover Seder—sharing food, prayer, and tradition under the stars.

And just like Semana Santa, Passover is about more than ritual—it’s about identity, memory, and connection.

Two traditions, unfolding side by side here on the Nicoya coast.
One carried through the streets in quiet procession.
The other carried through words, questions, and shared meals.

Different histories. Different faiths.
But both rooted in something deeply human—
the need to remember, to gather, and to pass the story on.

Different origins. Different expressions.
But all circling the same deeper themes—
renewal, remembrance, and coming together.

And maybe that’s the real story here.

Not just what each tradition means on its own…
but how, in a place like Santa Teresa, they all meet—
barefoot, sunlit, and shared.

Next Post
Costa Rica national flag with headline Elecciones 2026 marking the presidential election on February 1.

Costa Rica Elections 2026: A New Government, A Security Mandate, and What Comes Next

  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.

Recommended

A calm beachfront table serving elevated Costa Rican classics, fresh seafood, and farm-to-table flavors in a truly tico setting.

Best Beachfront Restaurants in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica (2026 Guide)

2 weeks ago
Flor de itabo (yucca flower) blooming in Costa Rica, a traditional edible flower used in local cuisine during April and May

Itabo in Bloom: A Bitter Flower, a Living Fence, and a Taste of Costa Rica

2 weeks ago
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • RE/MAX Pura Vida logo with location details.
  • Logo for Kina Surf in Santa Teresa, Costa Rica.
    Read More
  • Cozy evening at Nami cafe with warm lighting and relaxed patrons.
  • Smiling real estate agent promoting Costa Rica homes and condos.
  • Logo of Costa Private Loans with palm trees inside an oval frame.
  • A sleek black and white drone graphic with text.
Santa Teresa Dirt Road




Santa Teresa’s voice since 2008.





Email Id: news@santateresadirtroad.com

Follow us

Instagram Facebook TikTok YouTube
  • Contact us
  • Advertising Form

© 2025 All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home page
  • Nature ECO
    • Nature ECO Tours
  • Food & Restaurants
    • Restaurant Guide
  • Surf & Beach
    • Surf & Beach Guide
  • Health & Fitness
    • Health & Fitness Guide
  • Community
    • Business Services
    • Home & Construction
    • Retail Business´s
  • Tours & Travel
    • Tours & Travel Guide
  • Real Estate
    • Real State Guide
  • Vacation Rental
    • Vacation Rentals Guide

2025 All Rights Reserved.