- Source: Ruben Enaje
Ruben Enaje is a Filipino carpenter, sign painter, and former construction worker. He is noted for being crucified 35 times as of 2024. He has been crucified every year on Good Friday since 1986, except from 2020 to 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2024, he was crucified for the 35th time.
Background
Enaje, who was once a construction worker in the Philippines, fell down from an unfinished building in Tarlac, and unexpectedly survived. After the incident, saying that it was to thank the Lord for saving him, Enaje started participating in crucifixions, of his own free will, in a ritual done on Good Friday every year. Initially done only for nine years since the incident, he continued with his another set of nine years as a petition for the healing of his daughter from asthma and another nine years for the good health of his wife.
Crucifixions
Enaje was crucified for his first time in 1986. He had promised God that he would be crucified 27 times, which came to pass in 2013. He continued thereafter as there were no replacements found. He offered his 30th crucifixion, in 2016, to the people of Belgium, who had recently suffered from a terrorist attack, and prayed for a more peaceful outcome of the 2016 Philippine general election.
In 2019, Enaje re-iterated his hopes to finally find a replacement, having been crucified once a year for 33 years (the same number of years that Jesus was alive). He was crucified for the 34th time in 2023, resuming his participation in the crucifixion after it was halted from 2020 to 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He initially said that such enactment would be his last. However, he was crucified once again in his 35th reenactment on the following Good Friday for world peace, especially for the war in Ukraine, Gaza, and the territorial disputes in the South China Sea.
See also
Crucifixion in the Philippines
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ruben Enaje
- Reuben
- Crucifixion in the Philippines
- Crucifixion
- San Fernando, Pampanga
- Holy Week in the Philippines