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CHRISTMAS

El Niño: What to know about Spain’s other big Christmas lottery

You probably know about El Gordo (The Fat One), Spain's famous Christmas lottery, but there's another festive draw called El Niño where the chances of winning are higher.

El Niño: What to know about Spain's other big Christmas lottery
El Niño (literally meaning the child or boy) is Spain’s second biggest Christmas lottery. (Photo by Josep LAGO / AFP)

Every year at Christmas, Spaniards go lottery mad, queuing for hours to buy tickets for the famous Christmas lottery — ‘El Gordo’ (the fat one) as it is known.

If you live in Spain, you’ve probably noticed the frenzy it causes, but might not have known that Spain also a second Christmas lottery, known as El Niño.

READ ALSO: The ultimate guide to ‘El Gordo’ – Spain’s fat Christmas lottery

Here’s what you need to know.

What is El Niño?

El Niño (literally meaning the child or boy) is Spain’s second biggest Christmas lottery, and though it doesn’t draw quite the crowds and excitement El Gordo does, there are still some pretty big prizes on offer.

And, for the lottery aficionados among us (or those who failed to win the big bucks in El Gordo last month), you actually have a better chance of winning El Niño since the probability of winning is higher than El Gordo.

While for El Gordo the probability is only 5.3 percent, for El Niño it is 7.82 percent. 

However, as the total prize money is considerably bigger with El Gordo, El Niño’s higher probability of winning doesn’t equate to sums of money as high as with its predecessor. 

When is the draw?

On the 6th of January every year, which in Spain is El Día de Reyes (Three Kings or Three Wise Men), the draw for Lotería del Niño dishes out a whopping €700 million in prizes.

Unlike El Gordo, you’ll be glad to hear that El Niño has much faster draw, lasting around half an hour.

That means that you won’t be forced to listen to the seemingly endless hours of school children enthusiastically singing out the draw like they do with every ball for El Gordo.

For the El Gordo draw, when the numbers are sung by children, or more specifically by the pupils of Madrid’s San Ildefonso school.

READ ALSO: Why do children sing Spain’s Christmas lottery numbers?

If you’re in Madrid, expect to see queues outside the famous Doña Manolita lottery store ahead of El Niño draw. (Photo by Thomas COEX / AFP)
 

How do the tickets work?

In a very similar way to the tickets for El Gordo.

A number of ticket ‘series’ (each of 100,000 individual tickets) are released, and people tend to buy a ‘decimo‘ for €20. Often families or groups of friends and colleagues will team up and buy a ‘series’ together.

How much can I win?

In total, there are 37,920 prizes, three of which are considered main prizes:

  • A first prize of €2,000,000 per series (€200,000 per ‘decimo’)
  • A second prize of €750,000 per series (€75,000 per ‘decimo’)
  • A third prize of €250,000 per series (€25,000 per ‘decimo’).

Why is it called El Niño?

There are two theories. One comes from the fact that the draw is always on January 6th, Three Kings Day, something that, like most Christmas traditions, is heavily focused on children. However, the January 6th lottery existed for more than two decades before it was give its name (in around 1966) so this wasn’t seems like something of an old wives’ tale.

READ ALSO: Why Spain loves the Three Kings more than Santa

There is another theory that has gained more strength in recent years, however. Legend has it that the draw has its roots all the way back in 1879 when the fantastically named Duchess of Santoña María del Carmen Hernández y Espinosa de los Montero (known as Mariquita Hernández) helped fund the opening of the Hospital Infantil Universitario Niño Jesús in Madrid.

The Duchess’s generosity helped with the hospital’s construction, but before her death she lost her fortune and was left destitute. Therefore, the story goes that if she had won the first draw she would have recovered part of her fortune, and that the name comes from the hospital she helped build.

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SPANISH TRADITIONS

Spain to scrap national bullfighting prize

Spain's left-wing government said on Friday it would scrap a national prize for bullfighting, a move which angered supporters of the controversial spectacle but was welcomed by animal rights groups.

Spain to scrap national bullfighting prize

“A growing majority” of Spaniards are concerned about animal welfare, so “we did not believe it is appropriate to maintain an award that rewards a form of animal abuse”, Culture Minister Ernest Urtasun said.

“I think they understand even less that these forms of animal torture are rewarded with medals that come with monetary prizes using public money,” he added during an interview with private television La Sexta.

The annual prize, which was created in 2011 under a previous Socialist government and was first awarded in 2013, grants 30,000 euros ($32,000) to winners.

Top matadors such as Enrique Ponz and Julián López, known as “El Juli”, have won the prize in the past.

Bullfighting retains a passionate following in some circles in Spain and leading matadors are treated as celebrities.

But the practice’s mass appeal has faded and polls show a rising disinterest across the country, especially among the young.

During the 2021-22 season, the last period for which figures are available, only 1.9 percent of Spain’s population attended a bullfight, according to the culture ministry.

Spain’s main opposition conservative Popular Party (PP) vowed to reinstate the prize if it returns to power.

PP spokesman Boja Semper said bullfighting was a reflection of Spain’s traditions and culture.

IN DEPTH: Will bullfighting ever be banned in Spain?

He accused Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s government of being “obsessed with sticking its finger in the eye of those who do not think” as it does.

By contrast, animal rights party PACMA called for the “total abolition” of all public support for bullfighting, saying it “cannot be justified under any circumstance”.

Several regional governments, including one run by the Socialists, said they would create their own bullfighting prizes to replace the one being scrapped.

The Fundación del Toro de Lidia, an NGO that promotes bullfighting in Spain, said the culture minister had the “obligation to promote all cultural manifestations, including bullfighting”.

But animal rights groups welcomed the government’s decision.

“This measure marks a milestone in the fight against bullfighting, a controversial practice that has for years generated debate,” animal rights group Animanaturalis said.

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