BajaNomad

Day of the Dead: Día de los Muertos, a Personal View

Gypsy Jan - 10-28-2012 at 02:11 PM

From baja.com

Writer Yesica Pineda takes a personal look at Day of the Dead: Día de los Muertos. Celebrate with her.

"Dia de los Muertos: Day of the Dead. A poignant time of celebration.

"Rest in Peace." How would you like to be celebrated once you are dead? Personally, I want people to be happy when they think of me.

Maybe because I myself grew up in a family that celebrates the death with joy, or maybe because, as a Mexican girl, I identify with a way of living that honors death as a way to remember how to honor life. After all, Mexico is known around the world for its beautiful celebrations on November 1-2, Day of the Dead: Día de los Muertos.

It is tradition to create an altar where our Dead's favorite food and drinks are placed, with the idea that the dead will come and celebrate with the living. During this time, Mexico is filled with multidimensional energy - a unity that is represented through art and music and some pageantry. San Jose del Cabo is no exception: Festivals and art exhibits color the town.

This year our authentic Art District launches the Art Walk with this festivities.

Each gallery will have altars and decorations, live music and dancing in the street in conjunction with the town's celebration which presents Día de Muertos Festival.

One of my favorite Mexican traditions related to the Day of the Dead is what we know as "calaveras." The calaveras are laconic epitaphs written in verse and dedicated to friends and others only on the Day of the Dead. What makes them such a great tradition is once a year, everybody is free to express what they think about each other without fear, because everyone expects it to be a truthful and humorous observation. Because people don't find it easy to speak their minds about each other, the calaveras are considered a type of brave literature. It dates back to the XIX century. The writer must see death with a good sense of humor, write it in verse (octaves or tenths), the rest is freestyle. Here is my calavera for this year! To my father:

Este poeta y trovador
valiente siempre y soñador
esta vez por ser valiente
se quedó soñando en muerte.

Day of the Dead history

Indigenous people wouldn't let 'Day of the Dead' die

by Carlos Miller The Arizona Republic

More than 500 years ago, when the Spanish Conquistadors landed in what is now Mexico, they encountered natives practicing a ritual that seemed to mock death.

It was a ritual the indigenous people had been practicing at least 3,000 years. A ritual the Spaniards would try unsuccessfully to eradicate.

A ritual known today as Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead.

The ritual is celebrated in Mexico and certain parts of the United States, including the Valley.

Celebrations are held each year in Mesa, Chandler, Guadalupe and at Arizona State University. Although the ritual has since been merged with Catholic theology, it still maintains the basic principles of the Aztec ritual, such as the use of skulls.

Today, people don wooden skull masks called calacas and dance in honor of their deceased relatives. The wooden skulls are also placed on altars that are dedicated to the dead. Sugar skulls, made with the names of the dead person on the forehead, are eaten by a relative or friend, according to Mary J. Adrade, who has written three books on the ritual.

The Aztecs and other Meso-American civilizations kept skulls as trophies and displayed them during the ritual. The skulls were used to symbolize death and rebirth.

The skulls were used to honor the dead, whom the Aztecs and other Meso-American civilizations believed came back to visit during the monthlong ritual.

Unlike the Spaniards, who viewed death as the end of life, the natives viewed it as the continuation of life. Instead of fearing death, they embraced it. To them, life was a dream and only in death did they become truly awake.

"The pre-Hispanic people honored duality as being dynamic," said Christina Gonzalez, senior lecturer on Hispanic issues at Arizona State University.

"They didn't separate death from pain, wealth from poverty like they did in Western cultures."

However, the Spaniards considered the ritual to be sacrilegious. They perceived the indigenous people to be barbaric and pagan.

In their attempts to convert them to Catholicism, the Spaniards tried to kill the ritual.

But like the old Aztec spirits, the ritual refused to die.

To make the ritual more Christian, the Spaniards moved it so it coincided with All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day (Nov. 1 and 2), which is when it is celebrated today.

Previously it fell on the ninth month of the Aztec Solar Calendar, approximately the beginning of August, and was celebrated for the entire month. Festivities were presided over by the goddess Mictecacihuatl. The goddess, known as "Lady of the Dead," was believed to have died at birth, Andrade said.

Today, Day of the Dead is celebrated in Mexico and in certain parts of the United States and Central America.

"It's celebrated different depending on where you go," Gonzalez said.
In rural Mexico, people visit the cemetery where their loved ones are buried. They decorate gravesites with marigold flowers and candles. They bring toys for dead children and bottles of tequila to adults. They sit on picnic blankets next to gravesites and eat the favorite food of their loved ones.

In Guadalupe, the ritual is celebrated much like it is in rural Mexico.

"Here the people spend the day in the cemetery," said Esther Cota, the parish secretary at the Our Lady of Guadalupe Church. "The graves are decorated real pretty by the people."

In Mesa, the ritual has evolved to include other cultures, said Zarco Guerrero, a Mesa artist.

"Last year, we had Native Americans and African-Americans doing their own dances," he said. "They all want the opportunity to honor their dead."

In the United States and in Mexico's larger cities, families build altars in their homes, dedicating them to the dead. They surround these altars with flowers, food and pictures of the deceased. They light candles and place them next to the altar.

"We honor them by transforming the room into an altar," Guerrero said. "We offer incense, flowers. We play their favorite music, make their favorite food."

At Guerrero's house, the altar is not only dedicated to friends and family members who have died, but to others as well.

"We pay homage to the Mexicans killed in auto accidents while being smuggled across the border," he said. “

[Edited on 10-28-2012 by Gypsy Jan]

Eli - 10-28-2012 at 09:09 PM

My favorite holiday of the Year, Day of the Dead = A celebration of life!