

Beating the odds: Spain’s Christmas lottery tradition
11 snips Dec 20, 2024
Oriol Escudé, a Catalan News journalist, dives into Spain's cherished Christmas lottery, the Loteria de Nadal. Discover how this age-old tradition, dating back to 1812, was initially created to fund Cádiz's defense against Napoleon. He explains the magical role of the San Ildefonso school choir and the community's emotional connection to 'El Gordo'. As ticket vending intertwines with festive spirit, Escudé highlights the culture of shared luck and the bittersweet realities of taxation for winners. Delight in the Catalan saying for good fortune without effort, adding a festive twist!
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Spain's Christmas Lottery
- The Spanish Christmas Lottery, Lotería de Navidad, is the world's largest lottery, deeply ingrained in Catalan culture.
- It distributes smaller prizes to many winners instead of one massive jackpot.
El Gato Negro Ritual
- At El Gato Negro, a famous lottery shop, customers ring a bell and rub their tickets on a black cat statue for good luck.
- Despite the shop's seemingly unlucky name, people travel from afar to participate in this ritual.
San Gim de Freixenet's Number
- Since 1903, the town of San Gim de Freixenet has played the same lottery number, 11457, chosen by playing cards.
- The number has never won, yet the tradition continues as a family inheritance.