Category: Current Affairs

  • Mexico’s Bicentennial Celebration of Independence: September 15, 2010

    Mexico-2010_long
    The official logo for Mexico's bicentennial and centennial celebrations–yes, both are being celebrated this year.

    Mexico's rich heritage and history reach back thousands of years.  It's hard to grasp the reality that Mexico is just now celebrating its bicentennial, and even more difficult to hold onto the idea that we are also celebrating our centennial.  The bicentennial of what, and the centennial of what?  What does it all mean? 


    Hidalgo con Estandar

    Padre Miguel Hidalgo, whose 1810 cry for freedom from Spain set the fight for independence in motion.  His original banner bearing a likeness of Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (Our Lady of Guadalupe) is part of Mexico's historic patrimony.

    Mexico's struggle for freedom from Spanish colonization began
    sometime between midnight and dawn on September 16, 1810, when Father
    Miguel Hidalgo gave the Grito de Dolores (Cry of Dolores) from
    the parish bell tower in the town known today as Dolores Hidalgo,
    Guanajuato.  Mexico celebrates its Fiestas Patrias (Patriotic Holidays)
    on September 16 with parades of school children and military battalions,
    politicians proclaiming speeches, and general festivity. 

    Crucero Banderas
    Flag sellers' carts blossom all over Mexico for the two or three weeks before Independence Day.

    Hundreds of books have been written about Mexico's break from Spain,
    millions of words have been dedicated to exploring the lives of the
    daring men and women who knew, a bare 200 years ago, that the time had
    come for freedom.  You can read some of the history on the Internet.  Another excellent source for Mexican history is The Life and Times of Mexico, by Earl Shorris.  You'll find that highly readable book available on the left-hand side of this page.  Just click on the book cover to order it from Amazon.

    Ruta Independencia
    For well over a year, Mexico has been covered with these road signs and others that are similar–to the point that several tourists have asked Mexico Cooks!, "Why are all the highways here called Route 2010?"

    In addition to the bicentennial of the beginning of independence from Spain–the original ruta a la independencia–Mexico is also celebrating the 100-year anniversary of the 1910 Mexican revolution.  That armed uprising was led by Francisco Madero to protest the long presidency/autocracy of Mexico's President Porfirio Díaz.  The roots and facets of the 1910 revolution are complex and the outcome was equally complex.  Mexico's Constitution of 1917, which still embodies Mexican law, actually predates the end of the revolution, which many historians peg to 1920.  Nonetheless, civil conflict continued to erupt in Mexico until nearly 1930.

    Madero_en_Cuernavaca
    Francisco Madero (standing in car waving hat) arriving in Cuernavaca, June 1912.  Photo courtesy Wikipedia.  Click on any picture for a larger view. 

    Bandera Monumental Morelia
    This bandera monumental (monumentally-sized Mexican national flag) waves over one of the highest points in the city of Morelia.  In 1999, former Mexican president Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León initiated the program of oversize flags made to fly over some of Mexico's historic cities.  These enormous flags generally measure more than 14 meters high by 25 meters long and fly from 50-meter-high flagpoles.

    Balcón del Grito Zócalo
    The balcony of Mexico City's Palacio del Gobierno (government office building).  On the night of September 15, President Felipe Calderón will stand on the balcony to give the annual grito (shout) that replicates Padre Hidalgo's rallying cry for independence.  In every Mexican town, no matter its size, the elected official will also give the grito during that night.

    Zocalo-cd-mexico-y-catedral
    Mexico City's metropolitan cathedral and the zócalo (main square) with its bandera monumental, ready for Independence Day festivities.  The 2010 verbena patria (patriotic festivity) in the nation's capital promises to be extraordinary, in keeping with the idea of the bicentennial.

    The preparations for the 2010 bicentennial celebration have been enormous, and enormously expensive.  In Dolores Hidalgo, Guanajuato, where Hidalgo gave the 1810 cry for independence, the budget for the celebration is more than 550 million pesos.  At today's exchange rate, that figure is equivalent to approximately 42 million United States dollars.  In Morelia, considered to be the cradle of independence–it was in this city, then called Vallodolid, that the independence conspiracy was developed–the budget is a paltry 28.5 million pesos (a bit over two million United States dollars).  Many Mexicans are thrilled with the bicentennial party plans, while many others are outraged at this huge expenditure that comes at a time when Mexico is suffering not only an economic but a political and psychological crisis.

    Kiosko 16 de septiembre
    A tiny kiosko (bandstand) in a small-town plaza in the state of Jalisco, decorated for its Fiestas Patrias.

    Today, Mexico is as it has always been: a country of profound contrasts.  Life parties with death in 2010 just as much as it did in 1810 and 1910.  The road behind us and before us is littered with confetti and spent shell casings.  Our continuing task is to find la ruta a la independencia (the path to independence).

    PosadaCalaveria
    José Guadalupe Posada (1851-1913), La Calavería.

    Viva México!  Qué viva!

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  • San Francisco Pichátaro: Michoacán Ferias y Fiestas Pueblerinas 2010 :: Small-town Michoacán Fairs and Festivals 2010

     
    Pichátaro Pajaritos de la Suerte 1
    At the 2010 XI Feria del Mueble Rústico y Textil Bordado (Eleventh Annual Rustic Furniture and Embroidered Textile Fair) in San Francisco Pichátaro, Michoacán, Hugo the canary is ready to hop out of his colorful cage to pull an envelope with your particular fortune out of a box filled with hundreds of others.  Hugo and Luis's owner said that we should read the wee paper folded inside the envelope and then burn it–but don't tell a soul what it says or "tu suerte no se haga realidad" (your fortune won't come true).  Canarios de la suerte (fortune telling canaries) have been popular in Mexico for long, long years.

    Pichátaro Atrio del Templo
    Just outside the atrium wall of Pichátaro's Templo de San Francisco de Asís (Church of St. Francis of Assisi), the carnival rides await the evening's crowd.

    Pichátaro Blusa 1
    A finely cross-stitched guanengo, the blusa típica (traditional blouse) worn by Michoacán's Purhépecha women.  This guanengo was for sale, but we didn't ask the price.

    Pichátaro Angeles Tallados
    Hand-carved wooden angels play the harp and lute.

    Pichátaro Baúl
    A baúl (chest) sits on its matching stand.  All of the furniture pieces pictured in this article were awaiting judging in the annual concurso (competition).

    Pichátaro Detalle
    Detail of chest of drawers, San Francisco Pichátaro 2010.

    Pichátro Ratoncito con Dulces
    These hand-made plastic mice, for sale by their creator Apolinar Aguilar Bovadilla, are filled with candy and cost 10 pesos apiece.

    Pichátaro Belts, Blankets, and Good Ol' Boys
    Three cuates (buddies) from Michoacán sell blankets, belts, and cacahuates (peanuts) by the bag.

    Pichátaro Cocadas
    Miguel Martínez has been selling home-made cocadas (coconut candy) for the last eight years.  He laughed when I asked if they were made in his home.  "No, but they're made in somebody's home!"  The yellow cocadas at the top of the photo are flavored with rompope (similar to eggnog); the white and brown cocadas are flavored with vanilla and cajeta (similar to butterscotch); the cocada in the foreground is sweetened and flavored with one of Mexico's dessert-making standbys: La Lechera sweetened condensed milk.  

    Pichátaro San Francisco de Asís Interior
    Pichátaro's Templo de San Francisco de Asís, interior.  Photo by Mexico Cooks! from the 2009 fiestas; the crowd was so densely packed this year that we could not see inside the church.

    Pichátaro Santo con Castillo
    In the churchyard, St. Francis patiently awaits the burning of the castillo (set-piece fireworks), pictured in part at the left.  The paper tubes are filled with gunpowder.  The men who were putting the finishing touches on the castillos said they would be burned at about eleven o'clock at night–nearly twelve hours from the time we arrived at the fiestas.  Much as we wanted to wait, we had to leave.

    Pichátaro Concurso de Tallado
    We watched part of the two-hour concurso de tallado en vivo (live competition for woodcarving) for a while.  Hands, tools, and chips flew as the young men worked their designs.

    Pichátaro Recámara Cabecera Siembra
    This double bed headboard and its two accompanying nightstands riveted the attention of everyone who saw the pieces.  Titled "Siembra" (Sowing), the set was carved by Maurilio Morales Goche.  While Mexico Cooks! was talking with the artist's mother, the fabulous bedroom set was deservedly honored with the first place ribbon in the 2010 carving competition. Enlarge any of the photos for a close-up look.

    Pichátaro Recámara Cabecera Siembra Detalle 1
    "Siembra" headboard detail with mature ears of corn and bird.


    Pichátaro Recámara Cabecera Siembra Detalle 2
    "Siembra" headboard detail with flowers, corn leaves, and hummingbird.

    Pichátaro Pastel de Fiesta
    A slice of pastel de fiesta (fiesta cake) is essential to make the party complete.  Always dyed in garish colors (Mexico Cooks! is partial to the florescent pink), the cake is layered with thick atole (in this case, made stiffer than pudding and dyed in colors to contrast with the cake).  The beautiful little girl in the background is Flor García Aparicio, age three, daughter of the vendor.

    Next year you'll have to come along with us to San Francisco Pichátro for the fiestas patronales (patron saint's feast days).  You can't miss the furniture, or the fun…or the cake.

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  • Sin Maíz, No Hay País: Without Corn, There is No Country

    On July 22, 2010, UNESCO awarded Mexico's ancient corn-based cuisines–in particular the traditional cuisine of Michoacán–with the very first coveted World Heritage designation granted to a cuisine: Patrimonio Intangible de la Humanidad.  Dra. Gloria López Morales, head of Mexico's Conservatorio de Gastronomia Mexicana, made the announcement in Bogotá, Colombia, where she was attending a culinary conference organized by that country's Mexican embassy.  After six years of concerted efforts by Dra. Morales and many others involved in the preservation of Mexico's rich culinary history, the award brings honor to our beloved country and her exquisite traditional kitchen. 

    This article, originally published by Mexico Cooks! on June 14, 2008, offers a brief overview and a bit of insight into Mexico's history of corn and its uses.

    Mayan Corn God Yum Kaax
    Yumil Kaxob, the Mayan corn god.

    Mexico is corn, corn is Mexico.   From prehistoric times, Mexico has produced corn to feed its people. Archaeological remains of early corn ears found in the Oaxaca Valley date as far back as 3450 B.C.  Ears found in a cave in Puebla date to 2750 B.C.

    Diego Rivera, Festival de Maiz
    Diego Rivera, Festival de Maíz, 1923-24.

    Around 1500 B.C. the first evidence of large-scale land clearing for milpas appears. Indian farmers still grow corn in a milpa, (corn field), planting a dozen crops together, including corn, melon, tomatoes, sweet potato, and varieties of squash and beans. Some of these plants lack nutrients which others have in abundance, resulting in a powerful, self-sustaining symbiosis between all plants grown in the milpa. The milpa is therefore seen by some as one of the most successful human inventions – alongside corn.1

    Listen as this group from Burgos, Tamaulipas, sings a song from the early 20th Century: Las Cuatro MilpasThe song's sad verses recount the loss of a family's home and its milpas.        

    "Only four cornfields remain         
    Of the little ranch that was mine,

    And that little house, so white and beautiful
    Look how sad it is!

    Loan me your eyes, my brown woman,
    I'll carry them in my soul,
    And what do they see over there?
    The wreckage of that little house,
    So white and beautiful–
    It's so sad!  The stables no longer shelter cattle,
    Everything is finished!  Oh, Oh!
    Now there are no pigeons, no fragrant herbs,
    Everything is finished!

    Four cornfields that I loved so much,                 
    My mother took care of them, Oh!
    If you could just see how lonely it is,
    Now there are no poppies and no herbs!"

    The family-owned milpa is quickly disappearing from Mexico's flatlands and hillsides, giving way to agro-business corn farming.  Today, Mexico's corn industry produces more than 24 million tons of white corn a year.  Nearly half again that amount is imported from other countries. The imports are primarily yellow corn used to feed animals.

    Woman Blowing on Corn, Florentine Codex
    Woman singing to or praying over corn as she puts it in the fire– so that the corn will not be afraid of the heat.  Florentine Codex, Fray Bernardino Sahagún, third quarter 16th Century.

    According to the Popul Vuh, the Mayan creation story, humans were created from corn.  Do you know the story? 

    At first, there were only the sky and the sea.  There was not one bird, not one animal.  There was not one mountain.  The sky and the sea were alone with the Maker.  There was no one to praise the Maker's names, there was no one to praise the Maker's glory.

    Milpa
    Traditional milpa (cornfield) in the mountains of central Mexico.

    The Maker said the word, "Earth," and the earth rose, like a mist from the sea.  The Maker only thought of it, and there it was.

    The Maker thought of mountains, and great mountains came.  The Maker thought of trees, and trees grew on the land.

    The Maker made the animals, the birds, and all the many creatures of the Earth. 

    Masa Tricolor
    Masa tricolor (three-color corn dough) ground by hand using the metate y mano.

    The Maker wanted a being in his likeness.  First the Maker used dirt to create a Human, but
    made of mud and earth.  It didn't look very good.  Dry, it crumbled and wet, it softened.  It looked lopsided and twisted. It only spoke nonsense.  It could not multiply.  So the Maker tried again.

    Our Grandfather and Our Grandmother, the wise deities of the Sun and Moon, were summoned.  "Determine if we should carve people from wood," commanded the Maker. 

    They answered, "It is good to make your people with wood.  They will speak your name.
    They will walk about and multiply."

    "So be it," replied the Maker.  And as the words were spoken, it was done.  The doll-people were made with faces carved from wood.  They had children.  But they had no blood, no sweat.  They had nothing in their minds.  They had no respect for the Maker or the creations of the Maker.  They just walked about, accomplishing nothing.

    "This is not what I had in mind," said the Maker, and destroyed the wooden people.

    Corundas y Churipo
    In Michoacán, unfilled tamales called corundas are eaten with churipo, a richly delicious beef and cabbage soup.

    The Maker sat and contemplated the ears of corn, the kernels of the ears.  The Maker thought, "What comes from this nourishing life will be my people," and the Maker ground the corn, ground the corn and formed Man and Woman.  On the first day, when Man and Woman, formed from corn, awakened, they rose up praising the Maker's name and giving thanks for their lives.  They bore children, they praised the Maker as they planted corn and tended the crop.  They were made in the Maker's image, born from corn.  The Maker and his people rejoiced in one another."

    Yumil Kaxob Corn God
    Stone image of Yumil Kaxob.  Photo courtesy of Michael Martin.2

    Imagine an entire people formed from corn, formed to honor the seed, the earth, the plant, the crop!  Corn cannot grow without human intervention; ancient Mesoamerican humanity could not have existed without corn.  Spiritual planting rituals continue to be celebrated in the milpas every chosen planting day. 

    Corn is still the staple food of Mexico.  Nixtamal (dried dent corn soaked in water and cal, builder's lime) is corn's basic currency.  Nixtamal is the starting point for the tortilla, the tamal, the corunda, the sope, the cup of atole, and a myriad of other masa-based preparations.

    Sin Maíz No Hay País
    This poster advertises a conference about "Nuestro Maíz" (Our Corn) held on June 3, 2008 at the Autonomous University of Chihuahua, Mexico.

    As Mexico changes, corn production also changes.  NAFTA and globalization have affected Mexico's corn industry, as has genetic modification of corn itself.  Is corn food, or is corn fuel for vehicles?  Argument rages about the future of Mexico's corn.  There is, however, no doubt: sin maíz, no hay país.  Without corn, there is no country.

    1.  http://www.philipcoppens.com/maize.html
    2.  http://www.pbase.com/pinemikey/image/85632845

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  • Point of View: Magdalena Ojeda Arana, First Lady of Michoacán

    Magdalena Ojeda Arana June 2010
    Ingeniera Magdalena Ojeda Arana is at the beginning of her third year (of four) as first lady of Michoacán.  During her term as first lady, she serves as President of Michoacán's Sistema para el Desarrollo Integral de la Familia (Whole Family Development System), the state social services agency known informally as DIF.

    In mid-2007, after more than 25 years living in other parts of Mexico, Mexico Cooks! moved to Morelia, Michoacán.  At that time, the state was in the throes of a hotly contested gubernatorial campaign.  We watched closely as the campaign progressed.  At first we saw the PRI (Partido Revolucionario Institucional) candidate move ahead in the polls.  Then the PRD (Partido de la Revolución Democrática) candidate, Leonel Godoy Rangel, took a decisive lead and never fell back.  He took the oath as governor of Michoacán on February 15, 2008, to serve a four-year term.

    During the first two years of Governor Godoy's term of office, Mexico Cooks! has talked many times with the first lady, Ingeniera Magdalena Ojeda Arana.  At every cultural event where she and Mexico Cooks! have been present, we have been enormously impressed with her from-the-heart tenderness and genuine interest in the subject at hand as we hear her talking with Michoacán's artisans, musicians, and regional cooks.  In the face of unprecedented difficulties in government, she remains steadfast as a leader. 

    Mexico Cooks! thought that you might like to meet her, too.  We scheduled a private hour of conversation at the Casa de Gobierno (governor's residence) in Morelia (the state capital) to talk about everything from her childhood in Acámbaro, Guanajuato to her view of the future of Mexico.

     Pullman Car, FNM
    Dormitorio (Pullman car), Ferrocarriles de México.  Photo courtesy of Fotolog.

    Born into a family of six–she has five brothers–she has happily innocent memories of her childhood.  Her mother worked as a bank secretary prior to marrying, but later stayed home to care for the family.  Her father worked for Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México (Mexico's national railroad system) until his retirement, and as a child she learned to love traveling by train through Mexico, listening to the wheels turn on the tracks, watching the scenery as the train moved along, and sleeping in a Pullman car.  Ing. Magdalena talked with great nostalgia about the simple games she played with her brothers and her friends: kickball in the street, avión (in English, hopscotch), and other games and lamented that, "Children don't play these games anymore.  Now, everything is video games and computers.  Even our son (Salvador Godoy Ojeda, age eleven) has to have his video games!  He played so much with the ones his older cousins have that even though we didn't want to do it, we finally broke down and bought one for him."

    Recolecta de Resina near Pichátaro, Michoacán
    Collecting pine resin near Pichátaro, Michoacán.  The container holds about ten ounces; click to enlarge the photo for a better view of the small metal trough that channels the resin into the cup.  Pine forests in the state of Michoacán supply about 90% of the resin for Mexico's industrial use–an average of seven tons of resin per year.  Nearly 5,000 rural Michoacán families make their living collecting and selling pine resin.

    Ing. Magdalena studied at the Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo.  She flashed her lovely smile when she talked about her course of study: Ingeniería en la Tecnología de Madera (Technology of Wood Engineering), a post-bachelor degree offered only at the UMSNH.  "I wanted to do something a little different, not study medicine or law.  This degree is important in Michoacán because even now our state is highly forested.  We need to know how to keep our forests strong, how to preserve our natural resources."  She explained to me that the degree includes both the chemistry and biology of wood technology–and patiently said that it didn't in any way involve being a forest ranger, my romantic vision of what she had studied.  Ing. Magdalena talked easily and knowledgeably about several technical aspects of her work, including age-dating a tree by its rings and about the process of making plywood.

    We talked a bit about her role as President of Michoacán's Sistema para el Desarrollo Integral de la Familia (Whole
    Family Development System), the state social services agency known
    informally as DIF.  As a preface to Ing. Magdalena's second annual informational report concerning that agency, given in May 2010, she said, "What started several decades ago as a nice, ladylike activity to keep the governor's wife busy has today become one of the most important functions of public administration.  The DIF system truly is in charge of direct contact with all of those people whom society ignores, mistreats, or discriminates against.  Girls and boys abandoned by poverty, elderly people, disabled people, pregnant or nursing women–or simply those people who live in a condition of inequality– those people constitute the focus of attention that, as government, we must care for while they gain access to better life circumstances."  As I quoted this section of her statement back to her, Ing. Magadalena nodded.

    Mexico Cooks! with MOA 2
    Mexico Cooks! with Ing. Magdalena Ojeda Arana.  Photo courtesy of Lorena Cruz Godoy, Enlace de Comunicación Social, DIF Michoacán.

    "That has to be the most important part of my role in government.  It's true, there have been times in the past when the governor's wife was just a decoration, someone with her hair done just so and her clothes in sync with the latest and most fashionable styles.  I like being a little more casual than that.   I prefer to dress in my jeans, unless the occasion is more formal.  My style lets me be a little more accessible to people.  When I can have close and genuine contact with the people of this state, they know that someone cares, someone who has the ability to offer some help.  Frankly, we can't go just everywhere we would like to go, to visit all the little towns in Michoacán, because people have come to expect that we will be able to offer them something.  Sometimes we simply don't have the state resources to offer what we would like to everyone who has needs, and we cannot go with empty hands.

    "It's very difficult for me to see so much need.  A few small towns in Michoacán are still impossibly marginalized, living on the very edge of terrible want.  My heart goes out to the people in those towns, and in fact to everyone who needs help–but as a government, we are also very limited in how far we can stretch our resources.

    "Fortunately, we have still been able to maintain and strengthen Michoacán's program to feed those who might otherwise go hungry.  We have provided basic food packages to more than 100,000 families.  During this year, we have provided more than 18 million school breakfasts to young children.  The program CRECER (to grow) provides milk to 75,000 Michoacán children ages six months to three years.  Other programs offer help and training in health education and services, nutritional information, education, and housing.

    "I don't want to leave out the importance of sex education and preparation for marriage.  So many teenagers are having babies in our state.  It's crucial to offer them a choice, an education about preventing pregnancies while their own lives are still in formation.  It's equally crucial for our young people to see that marriage isn't just about today; it's an important commitment that takes hard work and isn't to be casually thrown aside when the going gets tough.

    "All of these programs are very close to my heart.  It's extremely difficult to see that we in Michoacán live in so much abundance, and yet there are people here who do not have enough to eat, or do not have safe place to sleep at night."

    Magdalena Ojeda Arana de Godoy 2
    November 2008.

    Mexico Cooks! was eager to talk with Ing. Magdalena about her point of view of today's Mexico.  As a highly educated, politically knowledgeable woman, she shares our concerns about the state of the country.  Her demeanor became very serious as we discussed current events.  "President Calderón is a human being, just like the rest of us.  His party's political philosophy is different from that of my party, the PRD; the PAN (Partido Acción Nacional) is more conservative, more business oriented, than the PRD.  The PRD is more to the left of center, with different ideas of social equality and social justice. 

    "What President Calderón is trying to do for Mexico [the war against drugs] is very difficult, with so many ramifications.  I think that he's made some mistakes–but don't we all make mistakes?  Not one of us is perfect.

    "Right now, there are definitely problems of security in Mexico.  We cannot say otherwise.  It seems to me that in order for Mexico to come out of this crisis of security, we all need to do our part for change.  No single person can change a country–it takes all of us, working together, to bring about the changes we need for the good of society, for everyone's safety."

    MOA at FIMM 2008
    Ing. Magdalena Ojeda Arana and Ing. Miguel Bernal Macouzet applaud
    the
    opening of the Festival Internacional de Música de Morelia, 2008.

    And her personal security?

    "I like to shop in the tianguis (street markets).  I like to be able to compare the ripeness of this avocado with that one, to see which fruits are less expensive, which cost more, to see what's in season here in Michoacán.  Shopping that way isn't just a household chore, it's a social event, too.  I like to go here and there with my friends, go to our son's soccer games, live my life normally when I am not in my official capacity as state head of DIF or attending an event as the governor's wife.  When my husband was first in office as governor, wherever I went they sent a patrol car ahead of me, red and blue lights flashing.  How secure is that?  Those lights just announced, 'Here comes somebody who needs special security!'.  Now, they let me go out with an unmarked car and a plainclothes bodyguard, which I think is much safer.

    "The truth is, in many places where I go, people don't know that I am the governor's wife.  Some people don't even recognize that he is the governor.  When they do expect us at an event, it takes a while for some people to realize that I am not just another woman following along with the pack of reporters or string of government representatives.  I really like that; I don't need or want to be set apart from or above someone else just because of my temporary position as first lady. 

    "We'll only be in this house for two more years and then someone else will be in charge, just like before us, there were other governors and other first ladies.  My husband will go back to his political life–right now, a substitute senator is working in his place, but he wants to go back to that.  He's been active in politics since long before I met him, 25 years ago; that's what he has chosen for his life's path.  I'll go back to my chosen career, our son will continue in school, and our lives will go on as usual.  Meanwhile, the new governor–whoever he or she might be–will, we hope, carry on the work that we have done during our time in office."

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  • Ana Pellicer Forty Year Retrospective at Palacio Clavijero, Morelia

    Ana La Tehuana 3
    La Tehuana (1996).  Silver-plated copper, resin, and electroformed lace fabric.  Click on all of the photographs for a larger view of each sculpture.

    In September 2009, Mexico Cooks! met and interviewed James Metcalf and Ana Pellicer, internationally acclaimed artists who are long-time residents of Santa Clara del Cobre, Michoacán.  Privileged to photograph a number of their sculptures at their home in September, I was nevertheless unprepared for the visual and emotional impact of Poemas Forjados (Hand-wrought Poems), a lifetime retrospective of Ana Pellicer's work that opened on March 27, 2010 at the Palacio Clavijero in Morelia. 

    Ana Libertad Purhépecha
    La Libertad Purépecha (1987).  Mixed media: fiberglass, wood, plaster of Paris, textiles, copper, and brass.  In honor of Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, the French sculptor who created the original Statue of Liberty, the pleated skirt which represents the traditional guari (Purhépecha woman) garment is the colors of the French flag.  I asked Ana Pellicer why she chose to create the body of the sculpture in purple.  The simple answer: "She is in mourning."

    The 75-sculpture exhibit, which fills several huge rooms at the Clavijero, is divided into themes: Secretos, Mujer, Luz, Poder, Libertad, and Juego (Secrets, Woman, Light, Power, and Sport).

    Ana Caja Los Secretos
    Caja, Jugadores de Pelota (Box, Ball Players), Serie Secretos 2003.  Hammered copper, repoussé and silver plate, approximately 20cm long, 12cm wide, and 3cm deep.  The sculptured box top represents the pre-Hispanic Purhépecha ball game that may have been the forerunner of both baseball and basketball.  The 'Secrets' portion of the exhibit includes boxes, books, clouds, and other sculptures.

    Ana Pellicer sculpts predominately in copper, hand-forging and
    hammering every piece.  She works directly on the metal in the
    traditional pre-Hispanic "technique of fire" that is still practiced by
    Santa Clara del Cobre's artisans.  She begins her labor directly on the tejo (round ingot) of copper.  Her sculptures also may include bronce (bronze), hule
    (hand-harvested rubber), chuspata (lake reed), resina (resin), latón (brass),
    and plata (silver).

    Ana Libro 1
    Libro 1 (Book 1), 1970.  Hammered repoussé brass, plastic, and paper, approximately 20cm square.  Ana Pellicer produced this and other mixed-media sculptured books to record her creative process.

    Ana Medusa
    La Medusa, Serie Mujeres, 2010.  Cast bronze, repoussé copper, marble and wood.  Ana Pellicer points out details of the sculpture; the Medusa's head opens on a hinge, revealing her brain.

    For more than two years, Ana Pellicer worked to gather the pieces in this current exhibit.  Dispersed in public and private collections around the world, the owners have loaned the sculptures to Michoacán, where they were originally made.  "It gives me so much pride to exhibit my sculptures in the enormous rooms of the Palacio Clavijero, where the proportions of the building suit the proportions of the work," said Pellicer.

    Ana Querubines
    Querubines, Serie Luz, 1998. Repoussé copper, resin, and iron.  Many of the pieces in the series Light include resin, which collects and concentrates the light in each of the sculptures.

    The recurrent themes of Pellicer's work–light, power, women, secrets, sport–develop in strength and beauty as the viewer passes from gallery room to gallery room in the Palacio Clavijero.  Quotations from philosophers as diverse as Greece's 700 BC poet Sappho and Mexico's 15th century AD poet Netzahuacóyotl dot the exhibit's walls, both taking from and giving depth and comprehension to the works.  From Netzahuacóyotl, for example:

        "Percibo lo secreto, lo oculto:
        Así somos,
        somos mortales.
        de cuatro en cuatro nosotros los hombres,
        Todos habremos de irnos,
        todos habremos de morir en la tierra…"

        "I perceive the secret, this hidden thing:
        we are this way,
        we are mortals. 
        Four at a time we men,
        All of us must leave,
        All of us must die to this earth…"

    Ana Arete Purhepecha Monumental Libertad
    Arracada Monumental de la Libertad (Monumental Earring for the Statue of Liberty), 1986.  The hand-forged hollow copper earring weighs approximately  45 pounds.  Ana Pellicer sculpted the single earring and several other pieces of jewelry to fit the Statue of Liberty on the occasion of her 100th birthday.

    Ana Anillo
    Anillo de la Libertad (Ring for the Statue of Liberty), 1986.  The repoussé copper and resin ring, made to the same scale as the earring above, fits the ring finger of the Statue of Liberty.  The statue measures 305 feet from its base to the tip of her torch.

    Ana El Hacha Santificada
    Objeto Encontrado en la Tumba de una Reina (Object Found in the Tomb of a Queen), Serie Poder, 1996.  Hammered copper, glass, and tempered mica.  The axe is the pre-Hispanic Purhépecha power symbol.  Ana Pellicer described this piece as el hacha santificada (the sanctified ax) because of its halo.

    Ana Beisbol
    Beisbol (Baseball), Serie Juego 1999.  The baseball sculpture measures approximately 70cm in diameter.  Pellicer laughingly said, "I signed this huge baseball as if I were a sports star!"

    Ana Pellicer herself embodies the five themes of this magnificent retrospective exhibit.  A strong, intelligent woman, filled with light, with power, with humor, and with her own creative secrets, Pellicer's life work offers us a penetrating look into her world and our own.  Do not miss this opportunity to share her vision.

    Poemas Forjados de Ana Pellicer
    Palacio Clavijero
    Nigromante No. 79, between Av. Madero
    Poniente y Santiago Tapia

    Colonia Centro
    Morelia, Michoacán
    March 27-June 30, 2010
    Hours: 10AM to 6PM, Tuesday through Sunday (closed Mondays)

    Clavijero Map 

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  • Comida Mexicana para La Cuaresma: Special Mexican Food for Lent

    Torta de Papa con Frijolitos Negros
    Tortitas de papa
    (potato croquettes, left) and frijoles negros (black beans, right) from the south of Mexico are ideal for a Lenten meal.

    Catholic Mexicans observe la Cuaresma (Lent), the 40-day (excluding Sundays) penitential season that precedes Easter, with special prayers, vigils, and with extraordinary meatless meals cooked only on Ash Wednesday and during Lent.  Many Mexican dishes–seafood, vegetable, and egg–are normally prepared without meat, but some other meatless dishes are particular to Lent. Known as comida cuaresmeña, many of these delicious Lenten foods are little-known outside Mexico and some other parts of Latin America.

    Many observant Catholics believe that the personal reflection and meditation demanded by Lenten practices are more fruitful if the individual refrains from heavy food indulgence and makes a promise to abstain from other common habits such as eating candy, smoking cigarettes, and drinking alcohol. 

    Atole de Grano
    Atole de grano, a Michoacán specialty made of tender corn and licorice-scented anís, is a perfect cena (supper) for Lenten Fridays.

    Lent began this year on Ash Wednesday, February 25.  Shortly before, certain food specialties began to appear in local markets. Vendors are currently offering very large dried shrimp for caldos (broths) and tortitas (croquettes), perfect heads of cauliflower for tortitas de coliflor (cauliflower croquettes), seasonal romeritos, and thick, dried slices of bolillo (small loaves of white bread) for capirotada (a kind of bread pudding).

    Romeritos en Mole
    This common Lenten preparation is romeritos en moleRomeritos, an acidic green vegetable, is in season at this time of year.  Although it looks a little like rosemary, its taste is relatively sour, more like verdolagas (purslane).

    Tortas de Camarón
    You'll usually see tortitas de camarón (dried shrimp croquettes) paired for a Friday comida (midday meal) with romeritos en mole, although they are sometimes bathed in a caldillo de jitomate (tomato broth) and served with sliced nopalitos (cactus paddles).

    Huachinango Mercado del Mar
    During Lent, the price of fish and seafood in Mexico goes through the roof due to the huge seasonal demand for meatless meals.  These beautiful huachinango (red snapper) come from Mexico's Pacific coast.

    Trucha Zitácuaro
    Chef Martín Rafael Mendizabal of La Trucha Alegre in Zitacuaro, Michoacán, prepared trucha deshuesada con agridulce de guayaba (boned trout with guava sweet and sour sauce) for the V Encuentro de Cocina Tradicional de Michoacán held in Morelia in December 2008.  The dish would be ideal for an elegant Lenten dinner.

    Plato Capirotada
    Capirotada (Lenten bread pudding) is almost unknown outside Mexico.  Simple to prepare and absolutely delicious, it's hard to eat it sparingly if you're trying to keep a Lenten abstinence! 

    Every family makes a slightly different version of capirotada: a pinch more of this, leave out that, add such-and-such.  Mexico Cooks! prefers to leave out the apricots and add dried pineapple.  Make it once and then tweak the recipe to your preference–but please do stick with traditional ingredients.

    CAPIROTADA

    Ingredients
    *4 bollilos, in 1" slices (small loaves of dense white bread)
    5 stale tortillas
    150 grams pecans
    50 grams prunes
    100 grams raisins
    200 grams peanuts
    100 grams dried apricots
    1 large apple, peeled and sliced thin
    100 grams grated Cotija cheese
    Peel of one orange, two uses
    *3 cones piloncillo (Mexican brown sugar)
    Four 3" pieces of Mexican stick cinnamon
    2 cloves
    Butter
    Salt

    *If you don't have bolillo, substitute slices of very dense French bread.  If you don't have piloncillo, substitute 1/2 cup tightly packed brown sugar.

    A large metal or clay baking dish.

    Preparation

    Preheat the oven to 300°F.

    Toast the bread and spread with butter.  Slightly overlap the tortillas in the bottom and along the sides of the baking dish to make a base for the capirotada.  Prepare a thin syrup by boiling the piloncillo in 2 1/2 cups of water with a few shreds of cinnamon sticks, 2/3 of the orange peel, the cloves, and a pinch of salt.

    Place the layers of bread rounds in the baking dish so as to allow for their expansion as the capirotada cooks.  Lay down a layer of bread, then a layer of nuts, prunes, raisins, peanuts and apricots.  Continue until all the bread is layered with the rest.  For the final layer, sprinkle the capirotada with the grated Cotija cheese and the remaining third of the orange peel (grated).  Add the syrup, moistening all the layers  little by little.  Reserve a portion of the syrup to add to the capirotada in case it becomes dry during baking.

    Bake uncovered until the capirotada is golden brown and the syrup is absorbed.  The bread will expand as it absorbs the syrup.  Remember to add the rest of the syrup if the top of the capirotada looks dry.

    Cool the capirotada at room temperature.  Do not cover until it is cool; even then, leave the top ajar.

    Platos Servidos Capirotada
    Try very hard not to eat the entire pan of capirotada at one sitting!

    A positive thought for the remainder of Lent: give up discouragement, be an optimist.

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  • Storm on the Mountain: Mariposas Monarcas (Monarch Butterflies), Michoacán 2010

    Monarch Closeup
    A gorgeous monarch butterfly rests in the sun at El Rosario, Michoacán butterfly reserve.  Unless otherwise noted, all photos are courtesy of Mexico Cooks!' very generous friend (and superb photographer) Steven Miller.  Steve's photos from El Rosario are dated February 2008.

    One of nature's great mysteries continues to confound scientists the world over.  Millions upon millions of fragile monarch butterflies, which live their lives primarily in the United States and Canada, trek nearly 2,000 miles a year to spend their winters in the isolated oyamel (fir) forests of Michoacán and the neighboring State of Mexico.  A tiny area in Mexico, a 65 square mile patch of tall mountains, hosts these miraculous migrating lepidoptera. Four mountaintop butterfly sanctuaries– El Rosario, Sierra
    Chincua, El Campanario, and Cerro Pelon–are public.

    Mountains, Michoacán
    Heaven on Earth in the mountains of eastern Michoacán, land of the monarchs.  Photo courtesy Google Images.

    In 2003, National Geographic writer John Roach published, "Researchers have believed for a long time that the butterflies use the
    sun to navigate, but they were not certain as to how the butterflies
    adjust their direction throughout the course of the day as the sun
    moves across the sky."  His article continues, "Four to five generations separate the monarch populations that make the
    migration, so the butterflies that make the trek to Mexico are the
    great, great grandchildren of the previous generation to have made it.
    The ones that fly south have never been to Mexico before, they get
    there by pure instinct, lay
    their eggs on milkweed and then die."  The butterflies that overwinter in Michoacán are called the Methuselah generation. 

    Monarchs Thick in the Trees
    Butterflies hang thick on every tree, every branch, every surface at El
    Rosario.  They rest during the chilly Michoacán winter nights,
    fluttering awake at daybreak and flying high as the sun warms their
    wings.

    It was only 35 years ago that the first scientific investigators, guided by a local resident, visited the then-isolated mountain region of Michoacán and were dumbstruck to see the monarchs in their winter habitat.  "It was as if we had discovered the eighth wonder of the world," said Dr. Lincoln Brower.  Dr. Brower is currently a research biologist at Sweet Briar College, specializing in the overwintering, conservation, and biology of the monarch butterfly.  Dr. Brower serves on the board of directors of the Monarch Butterfly Fund.**

    Monarch on White Hair
    Every
    available surface–including the top of your head–can be a landing strip!

    In the town of Contepec, Michoacán, a small boy, Homero Aridjis, born in 1940 as the youngest of five Greek/Mexican brothers–used to climb Cerro Altamirano near his home to look at
    the monarch butterflies that flooded the forests for almost four months
    in the winter before they left again, heading north. No one living in his area
    knew where the butterflies came from or where they went. "When I
    began to write poems," Aridjis said, "I used to climb the hill
    that dominated the memory of my childhood. Its slopes, gullies, and
    streams were full of animal voices–owls, hummingbirds, mocking birds,
    coyotes, deer, armadillo. The natural world stimulated my poetry."
    But of all of these animals, he says the monarch butterflies were his
    "first love." Aridjis won Mexico's very prestigious
    Xavier Villarrutia Award at age 24 and years later, monarchs were still
    making their appearance in his writing. His 1971 book, El poeta niño,
    includes a beautiful poem that goes like this: "You travel/by day/ like a winged tiger/ burning yourself/ in
    your flight/ Tell me/ what supernatural/ life is/painted on your
    wings….
    "**

    In 1985 Aridjis formed a group
    called the Grupo de Cien (Group of One Hundred) intellectuals, which issued
    a statement about the environmental deterioration of the area and
    convinced the government to provide official protection to the forests
    sheltering the butterflies. The formation of this group led to an award
    for Aridjis, already the recipient of several literary awards. This time
    it was the Global 500 Award given to him by the United Nations
    Environmental Program.**

    Monarchs in the Trees, Betsy
    The warmth of midday sees the Michoacán sky thick with monarchs.  This photo, dated March 2009, is courtesy of the wonderfully knowledgeable and completely charming Betsy McNair of My Mexico Tours.

    In 1986, after realizing that only the core area of each sanctuary
    would be protected but not the buffer zone, Aridjis was able to get Cerro
    Altamirano included in the decree, along with El Rosario, Sierra
    Chincua, El Campanario, and Cerro Pelón. The government designated them as
    protected areas. The sanctuaries were established to ensure the
    continuation of the migration and of the genetic bank of the numerous
    species that lived there. In spite of on-going deforestation and a severe plague of bark-destroying insects in the remaining oyameles, the butterflies continue to arrive.**

    Monarch Stained Glass
    Natural stained glass: sunlight filtered through fir needles and a monarch's wings.

    Beginning at the end of January, 2010, a tremendous and terrible natural disaster hit the Michoacán mountain towns nearest the monarch butterfly sanctuaries.  Frente frío #28 (cold front #28) lashed the tiny area with heavy hail, followed by atypical out-of-season rains.  The violent storms lasted for nearly a week.  The Río de San Pedro (St. Peter River), which flows around Angangueo, had been deliberately re-routed several years ago from its natural pathway. During the intense rains of the days-long storm, the mountainside river sought its natural boundaries, causing enormous mudslides that devastated all of Angangueo.  More than 30,000 human inhabitants of Angangueo and surrounding towns were left homeless, fleeing the floods with only the clothes on their backs.  To date, 35 people are known dead, swept away or buried by the fierce currents of roiling water, boulders, rocks and mud.  Many more human residents of the area are still missing.

    Angangueo Devastation
    Devastation in the central plaza, Angangueo.  Click on the picture for a larger, clearer view.  To the right and left of center you can see ruined automobiles, washed away in the currents.  Photo courtesy of the newspaper Quadratín.

    Angangueo Devastation 2
    Homes crushed by raging mud and water, Angangueo.  Photo courtesy of Quadratín.

    Current information about the condition of the monarch butterfly reserves has been difficult to obtain.  Human rescue efforts and relief have been primary in the last ten days.  Little by little, news of the monarchs has filtered out of their mountain sanctuaries.  According to the February 11, 2010 edition of Morelia's daily newspaper La Voz de Michoacán:

    • Hundreds of trees in the reserves fell due to saturation and extreme softening of the earth at their roots.
    • Approximately 10% of the tens of millions of monarchs died due to blows from intense hail.  The butterflies could withstand the rain, but not the heavy hail.
    • Mexico's Fondo de Desastres Naturales (Natural Disasters Fund) will designate six million pesos to investigate all damage to the sanctuaries' forests and institute approximately 1500 temporary jobs to repair what can be repaired in the reserves.
    • Mexico's Comisión Nacional Forestal (Conafor) said that ProÁrbol, its national reforestation organization, will have 100 million pesos specifically designated for  replanting the devastated areas, plus another 200 million pesos which were originally allotted for other uses that will now be given to urgent reforestation efforts.

    According to La Voz de Michoacán, access to the butterfly sanctuaries is prohibited until authorities further assess the on-going risks at the reserves.  Rosendo Caro, director of the Mariposa Monarca Biosphere Reserve, said that although this measure is difficult for those who depend on butterfly tourism for their income, risk to tourists, damage to the reserves and access highways, and the possibility of harm to the butterflies themselves make this temporary closing necessary.

    Others report that the Sierra Chincua reserve is currently open, but only if you drive in from the east (Maravatio) side through Santa María.  The entry to Chincua via Angangueo is closed.  Cerro Pelón may also be open, but only through Zitácuaro. 

    Dr. Brower, writing for the MBF (Monarch Butterfly Fund), has just posted more information about the situation in the area of the reserves.  After telling the history of the disastrous storm, he writes that the first priority in the devastated region is human life and safety, but that the MBF is also vitally concerned about the mortality of the butterflies and the conditions at the reserves.  For the latest information, read his excellent article here.

    If you or someone you know has scheduled a tour of the monarch reserves in the near future, please verify with your tour provider that he or she knows for certain that the reserve you plan to visit has in fact re-opened.

    Monarch in the Green
    Brushed by sunlight, 2008-generation monarchs rest in oyamel (fir) boughs at El Rosario reserve.

    Links to monarch butterfly conservation and preservation sites:
    Monarch Butterfly Fund
    Monarch Watch
    World Wildlife Foundation

    Journey North

    Links to monarch butterfly tourism and informational websites:
    My Mexico Tours
    Planeta Ecotravel
    Monarchs Across Georgia

    To donate to the Monarch Butterfly Fund, click MBF Donations to go directly to their donations page.  You can donate by check or with a credit or debit card.  The MBF will use your monetary assistance, no matter the amount, to its fullest potential.  Your help is urgently needed.
    ___________________________________________________

    **Thanks to the OAS (Organization of American States) for portions of the article Masters of Migration by Adriana Herrera Téllez, which originally appeared on July 1, 2009, in the English-language edition of AMERICAS.

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  • Lo Que Se Ve en el Crucero: What You See at the Intersection

    Crucero Payaso y Conejo
    Click to enlarge the photo and see the bunny in the box at the clown's feet.  While the clown works the street, the bunny hops from lane to lane and back to the safety of its box.  It's very well trained–but just for this one trick.

    Mexico calls its under-the-radar businesses 'informal commerce'.  These very individualized businesses include a lot of ambulatory salespeople, service people, and curbside entertainment.  You'll see them working in every city: windshield cleaners, fire eaters, balloon vendors, candy and fruit sellers, jugglers, and people doing anything that someone else might pay to buy or see.  In these difficult times of la crisis económica (no translation needed, right?), more people than ever are squeezing a living out of tips from drivers and passengers in cars stopped at any traffic light.

    Crucero Mesitas
    "Don't take my picture, take a picture of these folding lap tables I'm selling.  Don't you want to buy one for yourself?"  Click any photo on Mexico Cooks! to enlarge it for a better view.

    Organ Grinder (Cilindrero)
    Cilindrero (organ grinder) in the Centro Histórico (historic center).  Mexico Cooks! has seen three or four of these late 19th Century delightful hand organs here in Morelia, plus another dozen or more in Mexico City.  The guys who play the cilindros in Morelia are part of the Mexico City group.

    Crucero Plomero
    Got a leak?  Although this pickup is parked every day at a nearby busy corner, Mexico Cooks! has never seen the driver.  Just call the number!

    Crucero Edecán con Avisos
    Young women who work distributing advertising, handing out free samples, or simply acting as living decor for any event are called edecanes.  The word comes from the French aide-de-camp.  The lovely Señorita Promo Tip's passed a free promotional newspaper through the window of my car.

    Crucero Banderas
    During September's Fiestas Patrias (Independence Day celebrations), flag sellers rolled their colorful carts to hundreds of local intersections.  Due to la crisis económica, sales of flags and other Independence Day souvenirs were very slow this year.  Right now, few people have enough money for small luxuries like these.

    Crucero Malabarista Pintada
    Every visible surface of his body is painted silver and he juggles flaming batons on a 12-foot ladder while you wait for the light to change.  Just before the green light, he passes through the lanes of traffic to collect a propina (tip) from those who care to give him one. 

    Crucero Helato Bonice
    This young man is selling BonIce brand frozen fruit pops, not far from the street in Morelia where Mexico Cooks! lives.

    Crucero Rosas
    Take home roses for your sweetie, 40 pesos the dozen–about $3.00USD, at the current exchange rate.

    Crucero Payaso
    Mexico Cooks!
    ' favorite Morelia payaso de semáforo (street clown)!

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  • The Heart of Mexico: Our Lady of Guadalupe

    Originally published on December 8, 2007, this story of Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (Our Lady of Guadlupe) has been one of the most-read articles on Mexico Cooks!. 

    The new Basílica de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (Our Lady of Guadalupe), built between 1974 and 1976, is one of the most-visited religious sites in the world.

    My head was whirling with excitement at 7 AM last New Year's Day. I was
    in a taxi going to the Guadalajara airport, ready to catch a flight to
    Mexico City. Although I had lived in the Distrito Federal
    (Mexico's capitol city) in the early 1980s, it had been too many years
    since I'd been back. Now I was going to spend five days with my friends
    Clara and Fabiola in their apartment in the southern section of the city.
    We had drafted a long agenda of things we wanted to do and places we
    wanted to visit together.

    Old_basilica
    The old Basílica was finished in 1709.  It's slowly sinking into the ground.  You can easily see that it is not level.

    First on our list, first on every list of everyone going to Mexico
    City, is the Basílica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the heart of the heart
    of Mexico. When I chatted with my neighbors in Ajijic about my upcoming
    trip, every single person's first question was, "Van a la Villa?" ("Are you going to the Basílica)" 

    To each inquirer I grinned and answered, "Of course!  Vamos primero a echarle una visita a la virgencita." (The first thing we'll do is pay a visit to the little virgin!)

    Basílica Interior
    The interior of the new Basílica holds 50,000 people.

    Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe is Mexico's patron saint, and her
    image adorns churches and altars, house fronts and interiors, taxis and
    buses, bull rings and gambling dens, restaurants and houses of ill
    repute. The shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, La Villa, is a
    place of extraordinary vitality and celebration. On major festival days
    such as the anniversary of the apparition on December 12th, the
    atmosphere of devotion created by the hundreds of thousands of pilgrims
    is truly electrifying.

    Click here to see: List of Pilgrimages, December 2006
    There are often 30 Masses offered during the course of a single day,
    each Mass for a different group of pilgrims as well as the general
    public. 

    The enormous Basílica of Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe in
    Mexico City is the most visited pilgrimage site in the Western
    Hemisphere. Its location, on the hill of Tepeyac, was a place of great
    sanctity long before the arrival of Christianity in the New World. In
    pre-Hispanic times, Tepeyac had been crowned with a temple dedicated to
    an earth and fertility goddess called Tonantzin, the Mother of the
    Gods. Tonantzin was a virgin goddess associated with the moon, like Our
    Lady of Guadalupe who usurped her shrine.

    The Tepeyac hill and shrine were important pilgrimage places
    for the nearby Mexica (later Aztec) capital city of Tenochtitlán. Following the
    conquest of Tenochtitlán by Hernan Cortez in 1521, the shrine was
    demolished, and the native people were forbidden to continue their
    pilgrimages to the sacred hill. The pagan practices had been considered
    to be devil worship for more than a thousand years in Christian Europe.

    Some of you may not know the story of Our Lady of Guadalupe.  For all
    of us of whatever faith who love Mexico, it's
    important to understand the origins of the one who is the Queen, the
    Mother, the beloved guardian of the Republic and of all the Americas.
    She is the key to understanding the character of Mexico.  Without
    knowing her story, it's simply not possible to know Mexico.  Indulge me
    while I tell you.

    Tilma

    On Saturday, December 9, 1531, a baptized Aztec Indian named
    Juan Diego set out for church in a nearby town. Passing the pagan
    sacred hill of Tepeyac, he heard a voice calling to him. Climbing the
    hill, he saw on the summit a young woman who seemed to be no more than
    fourteen years old, standing in a golden mist.

    Revealing herself as the "ever-virgin Holy Mary, Mother of God" (so the
    Christian telling of the story goes), she told Juan Diego not to be
    afraid.  Her words?  "Am I not here, who is your mother?"  She
    instructed him to go to the
    local bishop and tell him that she wished a church for her son to be
    built on the
    hill. Juan did as he was instructed, but the bishop did not believe
    him.

    On his way home, Juan climbed the sacred hill and again saw the
    apparition, who told him to return to the bishop the next day. This
    time the bishop listened more attentively to Juan's message from Mary.
    He was still skeptical, however, and so asked for a sign from Mary.

    Two days later Juan went again to Tepeyac and, when he again
    met Mary, she told him to climb the hill and pick the roses that were
    growing there. Juan climbed the hill with misgivings. It was the dead
    of winter, and flowers could not possibly be growing on the cold and
    frosty mountain. At the summit, Juan found a profusion of roses, an
    armful of which he gathered and wrapped in his tilma (a garment similar to a poncho). Arranging the roses, Mary instructed Juan to take the tilma-encased bundle to the bishop, for this would be her sign.

    When the bishop unrolled the tilma, he was astounded by the presence of
    the flowers. They were roses that grew only in Spain.  But more truly miraculous was the image that had mysteriously
    appeared on Juan Diego's tilma.
    The image showed the young woman, her head lowered demurely. Wearing a
    crown and flowing gown, she stood upon a half moon. The bishop was
    convinced that Mary had indeed appeared to Juan Diego and soon
    thereafter the bishop began construction of the original church devoted to her honor.

    News of the miraculous apparition of the Virgin's image on a peasant's tilma spread
    rapidly throughout Mexico. Indians by the thousands came from hundreds
    of miles away to see the image, now hanging above the altar in the new
    church.  They learned that the mother of the Christian God had
    appeared to one of their own kind and spoken to him in his native
    language. The miraculous image was to have a powerful influence on the
    advancement of the Church's mission in Mexico. In only seven years,
    from 1532 to 1538, more than eight million Indians were converted to
    Christianity.

    The shrine, rebuilt several times over the centuries, is today a great Basílica with a capacity for 50,000 pilgrims.

    Juan Diego's tilma is preserved behind bulletproof
    glass and hangs twenty-five feet above the main altar in the basilica.
    For more than 475 years the colors of the image have remained as bright
    as if they were painted yesterday, despite being exposed for more than
    100 years following the apparition to humidity, smoke from church
    candles, and airborne salts.

    The coarsely-woven cactus cloth of the tilma, a cloth considered to have a life expectancy of about 40 years, still
    shows no evidence of decay. The 46 stars on her gown coincide with the
    position of the constellations in the heavens at the time of the winter
    solstice in 1531. Scientists have investigated the nature of the image
    and have been left with nothing more than evidence of the mystery of a
    miracle. The dyes forming her portrait have no base in the elements
    known to science.

    The origin of the name Guadalupe has always been a matter of
    controversy. It is believed that the name came about because of the
    translation from Nahuatl to Spanish of the words used by the Virgin
    during the apparition. It is believed that she used the Nahuatl word coatlaxopeuh which is pronounced "koh-ah-tlah-SUH-peh" and sounds remarkably like the Spanish word Guadalupe.
    'Coa' means serpent, 'tla' can be interpreted as "the", while 'xopeuh'
    means to crush or stamp out. This version of the origin would indicate
    that Mary must have called herself "she who crushes the serpent," a
    Christian New Testament reference as well as a
    a reference to the Aztec's mythical god, The Plumed Serpent.

    OLG Statues
    Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe statues of all sizes are for sale at the Basílica.

    Clara, Fabiola, and I took the Metro and a microbus to La Villa, a
    journey of about an hour from their apartment in the south to the far northern part
    of the city. We left the bus at the two-block-long bridge that leads to
    the Basílica and decided to take a shopping tour before entering the
    shrine. The street and the bridge are filled chock-a-block with booths
    selling souvenirs of La Villa. Everything that you can think of (and
    plenty you would never think of) is available: piles of t-shirts with
    the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe and that of Juan Diego, CDs of
    songs devoted to her, bandanna-like scarves with her portrait, eerie
    green glow-in-the-dark figurines of her, key chains shaped like the
    Basílica, statues of her in every size and quality, holy water
    containers that look like her in pink, blue, silver, and pearly white
    plastic, religious-theme jewelry and rosaries that smell of rose
    petals, snow globes with tiny statues of La Guadalupana and the kneeling Juan Diego that are dusted with stars when the globes are shaken.

    Photo Recuerdo Visita a la Basílica
    You can have your picture taken as a memento of your visit to the Virgin.

    There are booths selling freshly arranged flowers for pilgrims to carry
    to the shrine. There are booths selling soft drinks, tacos, and candy.
    Ice cream vendors hawk paletas (popsicles). Hordes of children offer chicles (chewing gum) for sale. We were jostled and pushed as the crowd grew denser near the Basílica.

    Tattoo
    The virgin's image is everywhere.

    Is it tacky? Yes, without a doubt. Is it wonderful? Yes, without a
    doubt. It's the very juxtaposition of the tourist tchotchkes with the
    sublime message of the heavens that explains so much about Mexico. I
    wanted to buy several recuerdos
    (mementos) for my neighbors in Ajijic and I was hard-pressed to decide
    what to choose. Some pilgrims buy before going into the Basílica so
    that their recuerdos can be blessed by a priest, but we decided to wait until after visiting the Virgin to do my shopping.

    John_paul_ii_celebrates_mass
    Pope
    John Paul II loved Mexico, loved Our Lady of Guadalupe, and visited the
    country five times during his tenure as pope.  Here he celebrates Mass
    at the new Basílica.

    The present church was constructed on the site of the 16th-century Old
    Basílica, the one that was finished in 1709. When the Old Basílica
    became dangerous due to the sinking of its foundations, a modern
    structure called the new Basílica was built nearby. The original image
    of the Virgin of Guadalupe is now housed above the altar in this new
    Basílica.

    Built between 1974 and 1976, the new Basílica was designed by
    architect Pedro Ramírez Vásquez. Its seven front doors are an allusion
    to the seven gates of Celestial Jerusalem referred to by Christ. It has
    a circular floor plan so that the image of the Virgin can be seen from
    any point within the building. An empty crucifix symbolizes Christ's
    resurrection. The choir is located between the altar and the
    churchgoers to indicate that it, too, is part of the group of the
    faithful. To the sides are the chapels of the Santísimo Sacramento (the Blessed Sacrament) and of Saint Joseph.

    Procession_into_basilica_2
    One of the many processions that constantly arrive from cities and towns all over Mexico and the Americas.

    We entered the tall iron gates to the Basílica atrium. It was still
    early enough in the day that the crowds weren't crushing, although
    people were streaming in. Clara turned to me, asking, "How do you feel,
    now that you're back here?"

    I thought about it for a moment, reflecting on what I was experiencing.
    "The first time I came here, I didn't believe the story about the
    Virgin's appearance to Juan Diego. I thought, 'Yeah, right'.  But the minute I saw the tilma
    that day, I knew—I mean I really knew—that it was all true, that she
    really had come here and that really is her portrait." We were walking
    closer and closer to the entrance we'd picked to go in and my heart was
    beating faster. "I feel the same excitement coming here today that I
    have felt every time since that first time I came, the same sense of
    awe and wonder." Clara nodded and then lifted her head slightly to
    indicate that I look at what she was seeing.

    Family_on_knees
    Faith.

    I watched briefly while a family moved painfully toward its goal. The
    father, on his knees and carrying the baby, was accompanied by his wife
    and young son, who walked next to him with his hand on his shoulder.
    Their older
    son moved ahead of them on his knees toward an entrance of the
    Basílica. Their faith was evident in their faces. The purpose of their
    pilgrimage was not. Had the wife's pregnancy been difficult and was
    their journey one of gratitude for a safe birth? Had the baby been born
    ill? Was the father recently given a job to support the family, or did
    he desperately need one? Whatever the reason for their pilgrimage, the
    united family was going to see their Mother, either to ask for or to
    give thanks for her help.

    Clara, Fabiola, and I entered the Basílica as one Mass was
    ending and another was beginning. Pilgrims were pouring in to place
    baskets of flowers on the rail around the altar. The pews were filled
    and people were standing 10-deep at the back of the church. There were
    lines of people waiting to be heard in the many confessionals.

    We stood for a bit and listened to what the priest was saying. "La
    misa de once ya se terminó. Decidimos celebrar otra misa ahora a las
    doce por tanta gente que ha llegado, por tanta fe que se demuestra"

    ("The Mass at eleven o'clock is over. We decided to celebrate another
    Mass now at 12 o'clock because so many people have arrived, because of
    so much faith being demonstrated.")

    Indeed, this day was no special feast day on the Catholic calendar.
    There was no celebration of a special saint's day. However, many people in
    Mexico have time off from their work during the Christmas and New Year
    holidays and make a pilgrimage to visit la Virgencita.

    Tilma 2-08
    The framed tilma hangs above the main altar in the new Basílica.

    Making our way through the crowd, we walked down a ramp into the area
    below and behind the altar. Three moving sidewalks bore crowds of
    pilgrims past the gold-framed tilma.
    Tears flowed down the cheeks of some; others made the sign of the cross
    as they passed, and one woman held her year-old baby up high toward the
    Virgin. Most, including the three of us, moved from one of the moving
    sidewalks to another in order to be able to have a longer visit with
    the Mother of Mexico.

    When I visited several years ago, there were only two moving
    sidewalks. Behind them was space for the faithful to stand and reflect
    or pray for a few minutes. Today's crush of visitors has required that
    the space be devoted to movement rather than reflection and rest.

    Bent_crucifix_1921
    We walked to the back of the Basílica to look at a large bronze
    crucifix exhibited in a glass case. The crucifix, approximately 3 feet
    high, is bent backward in a deep arch and lies across a large cushion.
    According to the placard and the photos from the era, in 1921 a bouquet
    of flowers was placed directly on the altar of the Old Basílica beneath
    the framed tilma.
    It was later discovered that the floral arrangement was left at the
    altar by an anarchist who had placed a powerful dynamite bomb among the
    flowers. When the bomb detonated, the altar crucifix was bent nearly
    double and large portions of the marble altar were destroyed.
    Nevertheless, no harm came to the tilma and legend has it that the crucified Son protected his Mother.

    After a while, we reluctantly left the Basílica. With a long backward glance at the tilma,
    Clara, Fabiola, and I stepped out into the brilliantly sunny Mexico
    City afternoon. The throngs in the Basílica atrium still pressed
    forward to visit the shrine.

    Rose
    Jackson and Perkins created the Our Lady of Guadalupe hybrid floribunda rose.

    We stopped in some of the enclosed shops at sidewalk level and then
    continued over the bridge through the booths of mementos. After I
    bought the gifts, we moved away to hail a taxi. My mind was still in
    the Basílica, with our Mother.

    Sanctuario_de_guadalupe_morelia
    Today, December 12, the tiny and gloriously beautiful Santuario de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe in Morelia, Michoacán, will be in full fiesta.
    Her feast day falls on December 12 each year.  Think about her just
    for a moment as you go about your day.  After all, she's the Queen of
    Mexico and the Empress of the Americas.

    Glossary of Loving Terms for Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe
    La Morenita The Little Dark-Skinned Woman
    La Guadalupana The Guadalupan Woman
    La Reina de México The Queen of Mexico
    La Paloma Blanca The White Dove
    La Emperatriz de las Américas The Empress of the Americas

    How to get there once you're in Mexico City:

    • From
      the Centro Histórico (Historic Downtown) take Metro Line 3 at Hidalgo
      and transfer to Line 6 at Deportivo 18 de Marzo. Go to the next
      station, La Villa Basílica. Then walk north two busy blocks until
      reaching the square.
    • From the Hidalgo Metro station take a microbus to La Villa.
    • From Zona Rosa take a pesero (microbus) along Reforma Avenue, north to the stop nearest the Basílica.
    • Or take a taxi from your hotel, wherever it is in the city. Tell the driver, "A La Villa, por favor. Vamos a echarle una visita a la Virgencita." ("To the Basílica, please. We're going to make a visit to the little Virgin.") 

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  • Rigoberta Menchú y La Ceremonia por La Paz, Morelia, September 15, 2009

    Playera por La Paz
    Actúa por la Paz: Take Action for Peace, on the back of a T-shirt, Morelia, September 15, 2009.

    On the night of September 15, 2008–just a bit over a year ago–all of Mexico celebrated its annual re-enactment of the Grito de Dolores (1810 call for independence from Spain).  Many of Morelia's citizens, filled with the joy of Fiestas Patrias (Independence Day) festivities, gathered in the two downtown plazas facing the balconies of the Palacio del Gobierno (state capitol building) to await the appearance of Michoacán's governor.  Traditionally, the governor waves the Mexican flag, rings a bell, and calls out a string of VIVAs:  Viva México!  Viva Hidalgo!  Viva Morelos!  Viva la Corregidora! Viva los Niños Héroes!  Viva México! 

    In Morelia, those historic VIVAs are always followed by glorious patriotic fireworks in front of the Cathedral.  At the 2008 celebration, the governor's actions were aborted by a loud explosion: instead of fireworks, the sound was from two live grenades thrown into crowded Plaza Melchor Ocampo.  The balance: hundreds injured, eight killed, and scores of lives changed forever.  Recovery of confidence has been slow in Morelia; we who live in Morelia lost our innocence that night.

    Rigoberta Menchú
    Rigoberta Menchú Tum from Guatemala, 1992 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, moved hearts and minds with her Ceremonia por la Paz (Peace Ceremony) speech on September 15, 2009, in Morelia.

    The event didn't look much like a ceremony for peace, but rather resembled a locked-down security risk.  Morelia's Centro Histórico, an area that encompasses most of our colonial-era buildings, was cordoned off by Federal, State, and local police.  No private vehicles, taxis, or buses were allowed to circulate within a several-square-block area of the Cathedral.  Pedestrians who wanted to enter the area passed first through metal detector security arches.  Federal police checked all handbags, camera bags, and backpacks for suspicious objects.

    Just across the street from Plaza Melchor Ocampo, sharpshooters and special security forces lined the roof of Hotel Los Juaninos.  In order to enter the plaza, we had to pass under yet another security arch.  Friends who work for the government called out to us to sit with them for the event.

    Fausto Vallejo Presidente Morelia 2
    Fausto Vallejo Figueroa, mayor of Morelia, greets supporters at the Ceremonia por la Paz.

    Once settled, we looked around at the crowd.  Government officials of all ranks, university officials, relatives of the 2008 victims, and a few selected schools were present, but no ordinary Morelia citizens were in the chairs.  The press was amply represented.  It became apparent that this Ceremonia por la Paz was more a photo opportunity and sound bite for government promotion than it was an event for the common person.

    La Rectora
    Dra. Silvia Figueroa Zamudio, distinguished rector of the Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo.  Dra. Figueroa, whose term began in 2007 and will end in 2011, is the first woman rector since the university was founded in 1540.

    Rigoberta Menchú con Godoy
    Leonel Godoy Rangel, governor of Michoacán, chats with Rigoberta Menchú prior to her Morelia speech.

    In spite of the militaristic aspects of the event, Sra. Menchú exhorted Morelia, "Don't be afraid.  Fear turns us into accomplices and prisoners of violence.  Today I stand before you to plead for your courage."

    Perdieron a Alguien en 2008
    Some survivors and relatives of those dead and injured in the September 15, 2008, grenade blasts attended the 2009 commemoration in Plaza Melchor Ocampo.

    She begged the relatives of last year's injured and deceased, "Hold out your dead like a flag of struggle for the well-being of all.  Forgive the attackers, involve yourselves in the search for liberty."

    Niñas por La Paz
    Children from a few specially selected schools attended the commemorati
    ve event.

    At the end of the ceremony–where seating was limited to 1000 people
    and standing room was at the very edge of the plaza, behind a security
    barricade–Rigoberta Menchú called out once again for peace.  "From
    Morelia, we celebrate peace, life, and dignity.  In the struggle for
    peace, we all have something to give.  The amount of material things we
    can offer isn't important.  What is important is our struggle for the
    common good."

    Soldados por la Paz
    A strong military presence at the event seemed to contradict Rigoberta Menchú's plea for peace.

    Morelia's Municipal Tourism Secretary Roberto Monroy noted that the government invited Rigoberta Menchú so that her presence in Morelia could be seen as a message of peace, of cordiality, and a sign that the capital and the state of Michoacán are still standing, working for the development of peace.

    Helicóptero Arriba del Centro
    Several of Mexico's Federal police helicopters circled and circled the Centro Histórico after the event.

    Despite the contradictions between Sra. Menchú's compelling speech and the military actions of the government, the event left Mexico Cooks! with the joy of seeing and hearing a woman struggling tirelessly on behalf of peace.  There are so few like her in today's world: committed, valiant, single-minded in the search for peace.  Qué viva Rigoberta!  Qué viva!

    Peace Dove

    Picasso's Dove of Peace is still a sign hope for the future of Mexico and the world.

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