Ituren is a predominantly Basque-speaking community, maintaining its Basque traditions. The annual fiesta is held during the third week of July and includes traditional Basque dancing and rural sports competitions. In October wood-pigeon, wild boar hunting, and mushrooming are part of the local tradition. The neighbouring village of
Elgorriaga holds a mushroom festival on the first Sunday of the month.
Carnival Ituren is by far best known for the ‘
pagan’ carnival which it shares with the neighbouring village of
Zubieta. This carnival takes place on the first Monday and Tuesday after the last Sunday in January and has earned international recognition with some anthropologists arguing that it is the oldest pre-Indo-European carnival in Europe. The protagonists are the called
Joadunak (
Zanpanzar). During the carnival the young men from the village, the
Joaldunak, don sheepskins and conical hats with ribbons; they carry horse hair whips and strap large cows bells around their waists which they ring in a deep, rhythmic and atavistic dirge. The rest of the villagers dress up as demons and witches who scatter in their wake as the carnival symbolises the eternal struggle between the forces of good and evil; light and darkness, winter and spring. ==References==