Lite3 is designed for educational and scientific research. Using the latest proprietary joints, control systems and advanced algorithms deep in the cloud, it has stronger, more flexible and more reliable motion capabilities. Lite3's open modular structure and interface make it adaptable and scalable, allowing it to develop advanced perceptual abilities such as autonomous navigation, visual positioning and environmental reconstruction. Also on display was the X20 robot, the latest version of DEEP Robotics' Jueying series, which has already been deployed for industrial use. Tasks it performs include power inspections, emergency rescue work, public safety inspections, tunnel, mining and industrial site inspections, and construction site reconnaissance.
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Moros y Cristianos: Party with controversy: Spain’s festival of Moors and Christians | Aljazeera
Party with controversy: Spain’s festival of Moors and Christians
Some see the annual festival marking the reconquest of Iberia from Arab rulers as racist and disrespectful.

By day, she works in an import-export business, but tonight she is dressed up for the fiesta of the Moros y Cristianos, Spanish for Moors and Christians, which celebrates the reconquest of Iberia by Christian armies over Arab forces more than 500 years ago.
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Like scores of other towns in southeastern Spain, Elda marks the battles of the past with a very 21st century festival.

- Arab rulers dominated nearly all of the Iberian Peninsula for about 700 years and the modern-day links with this historical chapter abound, from place names or words in modern Spanish.
On the final day, there is a mock re-enactment of the reconquest when Christians win back Elda from its Arab rulers.
A huge plastic castle takes the place of Elda Castle, which lies in ruins.
The crowds dress up in yellow or red loon pants and colourful tunics.
- No offence
“This cost me about 600 euros [$643] to rent but we do this once a year and it is important for us. Thousands of people come for a night out or to take part. I don’t think it has much to do with history, but people just want to have fun,” Verdu-Martinez, 17, a school pupil, told Al Jazeera.

- The Reconquista – or reconquest – is known in Spain as a period in history covering the military campaigns of Christian kingdoms against the Moors, a term applied to Arabs, North African Berbers and European Muslims, from the eighth century to 1492.
- It started with the Battle of Covadonga in 718 or 722, in which an Asturian army achieved the first Christian victory in 1492 with the fall of the Nasrid kingdom in Granada to the Spanish Crown of Ferdinand II and Isabella I of Castile.
Controversy
- Moroccans are the largest group of foreign nationals, with more than 872,000 citizens, according to Spanish government figures for 2021.
- Organizers deny this is racist and insist make-up is only used to portray Africans who lived within the Arab kingdom.
“We welcome all parts of the community. This make-up is only used to reflect Black people who were part of the Moors community,” he told Al Jazeera.

- Aziz Masdour, who runs the Annor Halal butchers in Elda, said Muslims in the town were not offended by the use of the term moro.
- Last year, the festival in the town of Orihuela near Alicante was criticised as racist, because Black people were pulling a carriage in which the Moorish ambassador – or leader – was white.
- The Reconquista was seized on as a liberation war during the rise of Spanish nationalism in the 19th century and used during the long dictatorship of General Francisco Franco between 1939 and 1975 as a symbol of Spanish state-building.
- Culture wars like this may become real for modern-day Spaniards because Vox is poised to play kingmaker in the July 23 snap general election.
Back in Elda, each side is divided into troupes, including the Moors, Christians, Moroccans, Gypsies and Pirates.

Make-up artists like Rosanna Aroca spend two hours a day transforming 15 men into Moors with red, white and black faces.
- Elda, like scores of other towns in southeastern Spain, spends an entire year planning this party, which organizers insist bears little resemblance to the bloody battles of the Middle Ages.
- Pepe Blanes, a historian of the Moors and Christian festival in Elda, said the festival started in the Valencia, Alicante and Albacete area in the 19th century.
“In the age of Romanticism in the 19th, these fiestas began when people looked to the past. They looked at the Reconquista but the fiesta has little to do with what actually happened during those wars,” he said.
“Until the great error of expelling the Muslims after 1492, life in Spain was one of living together between Christians and Muslims.”
Blanes conceded that at times the fiesta has been controversial.
“The word moro can be disrespectful towards people from North Africa or Morocco but this is not the case in the fiesta of Moors and Christians,” he said.
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