- The entire Itaguazu community of Paraguay works throughout the year, in preparation for the festivities of San Pedro and San Pablo. The rituals are inherited from the Guaraní Indians and some, like the Rúa, represent the abductions of their women by Guaikurú aborigines. The ancient rites, with fire and masks, were transformed with the Spanish colonization incorporating Catholic religious aspects, but still maintain the richness, vigor and peculiarity of the native culture.
- "Rúa" is a documentary feature that shows how an entire community works hard, throughout the year, in the preparations for a peculiar celebration "The festivities of St. Peter and St. Paul" which are held every 28, 29 and June 30th In the same place, that of the oratory, the liturgical festivities are mixed with the pagan ones, inheritance of the rituals of the Guaraní Indians and the abductions of their women by aboriginal Guaikurúes. The tradition dates back to time immemorial, in rituals with fire and masks, before colonization.
The rites were transformed over the centuries, incorporating religious aspects, typical of the arrival of the Spanish priests in the area, but still maintain the richness, vigor and peculiarity of the native culture.
Seven local residents, referents of the community with prominent roles in the festivities of San Pedro and San Pablo, are the main characters of the documentary and narrate why they keep alive the tradition of unique rituals that must be known for visual, artistic and cultural wealth that entail as: the Rúa and the imposing Guaikurúes, with their peculiar and frightening outfits; the Kambá Ra'ánga, with their wooden masks and their creative representations, or the game with "la viva" fire that allows the dance of young women around the llamas. They also point out the importance of the inheritance that they received from their ancestors and that they want their children and grandchildren to keep it over the years. They also tell how their lives revolve, always, around the "festivities of St. Peter and St. Paul".
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