PODCAST: Castells - the cross-border and gravity-defying spirit of teamwork

Filling the Sink catches up with Castellers of London and of Vilafranca and we hear about a new mental health initiative

Castellers of Vilafranca building a '9 de 9 amb folre' human tower
Castellers of Vilafranca building a '9 de 9 amb folre' human tower / Jordi Borràs / ACN
Catalan News

Catalan News | @catalannews | Barcelona

June 29, 2024 09:18 AM

June 29, 2024 10:07 AM

For more than 200 years, Catalans have celebrated the sky-reaching tradition of castells, literally castles in Catalan, when groups of people gather to climb on top of each other to build the highest castle.

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Although the tradition suffered waves of decline up to the point of disappearance, it experienced a renaissance in the 1980s, and in 2010 UNESCO included castells on its list of intangible cultural heritage of humanity,  bringing the popularity of human towers’ popularity to unprecedented heights. 

Lea Beliaeva Bander is joined by Oriol Escudé Macià to chat out the ins and outs of castells, including learning vocabulary such as “colla”, “pinya”, “enxaneta”, and “gamma extra”, and finding out who the typical casteller is, and much more. 

We talk to one of the largest colles, or castells groups, the Castellers de Vilafranca, about the importance of good mental health when doing the activity, and we also talk to Stephen “Cuss” Anderson, the president of the Castellers of London, who brought the towers overseas after seeing castells in their hometown of Valls near Tarragona.

This week’s Catalan phrase is “per pinya,” which means “to stick together” or “support each other” typically in challenging situations. 

Get in touch with the podcast team: fillingthesink@acn.cat

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