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Andorra's March Cultural Calendar Expands with History Talks, Theatre, Witchcraft

Andorra adds roundtables on constitution and pandemic, Franco-era theatre, witchcraft events, and new History Days to its March cultural lineup,.

Synthesized from:
Diari d'Andorra

Key Points

  • Witchcraft Days continue with poetry recital, feminist Salem documentary, and Pyrenees talk.
  • Roundtables on pandemic's 6th anniversary and 1989-1992 constitutional process.
  • Theatre *Ressonàncies* explores women's stories from Franco era via real letters.
  • New History Days in Canillo feature local history talk and documentary; multiple exhibitions ongoing.

**Andorra's March cultural calendar expands with new history talks, theatre, and witchcraft events**

Andorra's cultural programme through March now includes fresh additions such as a roundtable on the early stages of the constitutional process, a theatre piece on women's lives under Franco, and the first History Days in Canillo, alongside ongoing witchcraft events and exhibitions.

On Friday, the 5th Witchcraft Days continue at Sala Sergi Mas in Sant Julià de Lòria. The evening opens at 6:30pm with a book stall by Llibreria La Trenca i Cugula and a poetry-music recital featuring Ivet Eroles and Núria Llob. This is followed by director Yolanda Pividal and producer Ruth Somalo presenting the documentary *A Witch Story*, which examines the Salem witch trials through a feminist lens. At 7:10pm, archaeologist and museologist Dr. Martín Almagro Gorbes delivers a talk titled "Prehistoric origins in the sacred landscapes of the Pyrenees."

Also on Friday at 7pm in Escaldes-Engordany's comú assembly hall, former Health Minister Joan Martínez Benazet and former Finance Minister and government spokesperson Eric Jover discuss "Divendres 13: La pandèmia a Andorra," marking six years since the pandemic's arrival. In Andorra la Vella, a 7pm roundtable in the Consell General's vestibule, moderated by Yvan Lara, features Tom Cerqueda, Josep Enric Dallerès, Albert Gelabert, Jordi Mas, and Vicenç Mateu on "Les primeres pases del procés constituent (1989-1992)." At 8pm in Canillo's library, the reading club meets at 7:30pm to discuss Mercè Rodoreda's *Jardí vora el mar*. Ordino's Auditori Nacional d’Andorra hosts the 8pm launch of *Enderrock* magazine's special issue on the Andorran music scene, including the compilation album *Música Andorra 2026* with 21 tracks by local artists. At 8pm in Escaldes-Engordany's comú hall, the theatre production *Ressonàncies. Veus que vibren, històries que transformen* draws on real letters from the Francis advice column to explore women's emotional education during the Franco era.

New history programming features Canillo's First History Days at 6pm in Cal Federico, with historian Robert Pastor giving a talk and a documentary screening on local documentation, archaeology, collective memory, and popular traditions.

Earlier events include a free trial for the "Pou: Path of Unfoldment" meditation course at 1:30pm on Monday at Hotel Roc Blanc in Escaldes-Engordany, led by Silvia Monné; artist Edith Taioni's "Misez su la Couleur" exhibition presentation and Clara Acena's 7:30pm talk on energy levels at the same venue; and Canillo comú's 7pm parish tourism strategy launch in the Palau de Gel auditorium.

Exhibitions continue through March: C215's "Figures de l’emancipació," honouring key figures in France's fight for emancipation and freedom, at Espai Caldes in Escaldes-Engordany until March 13; "Pioners 1884-1954: L’Andorra dels primers fotògrafs" at the Govern d’Andorra's exhibition hall in Andorra la Vella until March 13; Naiara Escabias's "Respirs de Canillo" at Cal Federico in Canillo until March 31; Maite Bernet's "L’univers de la Maite"—engravings, jewellery, ceramics, and enamels—at Centre Cultural La Llacuna in Andorra la Vella until March 26; and "Imatges sense fronteres" by Associació Fotogràfica Valls del Nord at La Massana's Biblioteca Comunal Antoni Morell until March 31.

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