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Monthly Archives: December 2016

Lady of Guadalupe

13 Tuesday Dec 2016

Posted by Victor H. Garza 高山 in Culture

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Our-Lady-of-Guadalupe

ENGLISH

December 12th is probably Mexico’s most sacred day. Millions of Mexicans travel to Mexico City to honor the “tanned” Virgin at her home: The Basilica of Guadalupe. This temple is located at the base of Tepeyac Hill where ancient Mexicans used to worship Tonatzin, Mother Earth.  Many foreigners also travel to Mexico to pay a visit to our Lady of Guadalupe. Her image is a very holy one as well as a strong national symbol of Mexico.

Basilica-of-Guadalupe-MexicoESPAÑOL

Probablemente el día más sagrado en México es el 12 de diciembre. En esa fecha millones de mexicanos visitan la Basílica de Guadalupe en la Ciudad de México aunque también no es raro encontrar extranjeros entre los fieles que veneran a la morenita del Tepeyac. En el Cerro del Tepeyac los antiguos mexicanos veneraban a Tonantzin, la Madre Tierra. Además de sagrada, hoy en día la Virgen de Guadalupe es un símbolo muy mexicano.

misa-virgen-guadalupe-en-vivo-internet-12-diciembre

 

Mexican Posadas: 12 Days of Christmas?

01 Thursday Dec 2016

Posted by Victor H. Garza 高山 in Culture

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posadas_en_mexico

ENGLISH

Getting ready for Christmas in Mexico means to celebrate “Posadas” 9 days before December 24th (each day represents Virgin Mary’s 9 month pregnancy). Technically speaking, these happy evening parties should be starting on the 16th of December. It is a time to get together with loved ones to catch up, drink hot chocolate, eat “churros” (a type of fritter), sing Christmas carols and break piñatas. Piñatas came to Mexico from China via Italy but neither of those countries has kept the tradition as Mexico has. The traditional piñata has the shape of a 7 point star. Each point represents a capital sin: Envy, Gluttony, Greed, Lust, Pride, Sloth & Wrath. By breaking the piñatas, Mexicans get rid of evil expecting to bring good things instead (represented by the fruit and candy that comes out of the broken piñata). pi-ata_1

ESPAÑOL

En teoría, nueve noches antes de la Noche Buena inician las celebraciones navideñas con las tradicionales posadas mexicanas (cada noche representa cada uno de los 9 meses de embarazo de la Virgen María). Los amigos y las familias se reúnen para ponerse al corriente, tomar ponche o chocolate con churros, cantar villancicos (pidiendo posada) y romper las coloridas piñatas. Las piñatas tradicionales tienen forma de estrella con 7 picos y cada pico representa uno de los pecados capital: Avaricia, Gula, Ira, Lujuria, Orgullo, Pereza y Tristeza. Romper la piñata simboliza deshacerse de lo malo y las frutas y dulces contenidos en el interior de la piñata que caen al suelo representan las cosas buenas. ¡Así que demos la bienvenida a estas tradicionales fiestas!las-posadas

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CONTÁCTANOS:

Monterrey, N.L.
MEXICO
multiculturalmexico@yahoo.com

Recent Posts

  • 2026 Earthquake in Mexico City
  • Light, light, light! Feliz Yalda, Janucá y Navidad 2025!
  • Miss Universe 2025: Mexico’s Fatima Bosch
  • Claudia Sheinbaum’s first year as president of Mexico coincides with Yom Kippur
  • Julieta Fierro, an outstanding Mexican scientist!

Recent Comments

Victor H. Garza 高山's avatarVictor H. Garza 高山 on Queen Elizabeth II visited Mex…
Cody G's avatarCody G on Multicultural Mexico: Indigeno…
Mel Rivera's avatarMel Rivera on September 15-16: Independence…
Joran Honig's avatarJoran Honig on Miss Mexico wins Miss Universe…
SoundEagle 🦅ೋღஜஇ's avatarSoundEagle 🦅ೋღஜஇ on Queen Elizabeth II visited Mex…

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