Celestial Music reported to have been coded in the tilma of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Today is the Feast of
Our Lady of Guadalupe, Queen of Mexico and Empress of the Americas, Patroness
of the Americas, and most recently Patroness
of the Unborn. An image of her preserved on cloth in a Mexico City Basilica is the object of
almost universal adoration in Mexico
and among the large Mexican diaspora in
the United States. She has been called the “rubber band
which binds this disparate nation into a whole.” Mexican literary
icons have attested to her importance.
Carlos Fuentes said that “you
cannot truly be considered a Mexican unless you believe in the Virgin of
Guadalupe” and Nobel Literature laureate
Octavio Paz that “the Mexican people, after more than two centuries of
experiments, have faith only in the Virgin of Guadalupe and the National Lottery.”
The origin story goes like this.
On December 9, 1531, just ten years
after the conquest of Mexico by Hernando Cortez, Juan Diego,
an Indian peasant and particularly
pious convert to Catholicism, was walking by the Hill of Tepeyac then outside of the
capital city. A temple to Tonantzin, the
Aztec goddess of love and fertility, had surmounted the hill but been razed in the Church’s
campaign to obliterate traditional worship.
When he glanced up the hill he beheld a maiden who bade him in his native Nahuatl language to
build a church on the site in her name.
He surmised that she must be that she must be the Virgin Mary although she did not identify herself.
A reproduction of Our Lady of Guadalupe as she appears today.
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Juan Diego hurried to Fray Juan de Zumárraga, the Archbishop of Mexico with his
tale. The Franciscan was impressed with his piety but skeptical of the
story. He instructed Juan Diego to
return to the hill and ask the apparition
for proof of her identity. The peon returned
three more times to the hill over the next two days and the Virgin spoke to him
each time.
He first asked for a miraculous sign. When he returned home he found that his
uncle, who had been dying, was healed.
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The Indio peon Juan Diego presents his tilma with the image of the Virgin to Fray Juan de Zumarraga, Archbishop of Mexico.
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On his final trip to the Hill the
virgin commanded him to gather flowers at
the summit. These were not native
flower, but red Castilian roses blooming
out of season. Juan Diego gathered them
in his tilma or cloak and
took the bundle to the Archbishop Zumárraga.
When he opened his cloak December 12, the flowers fell to the floor, and
on the fabric was the image of the Virgin.
This was enough to convince
Archbishop who ordered a chapel be built at the base of the hill where the
cloak would be displayed. Juan Diego,
his wife, and his uncle were given leave to build a hovel next to the hermitage of Franciscan fathers sent to
attend the shrine and to act as
their servant. He reportedly died there in 1548.
The revered image has been altered
over the years, although not the central image of the Virgin on the tilma. The figure of a dark skinned virgin is four foot eight inches high. Her gown is a tawny rose tinted color said to
recall the Mexican landscape. She is girded by a thin black sash which is taken
as a sign of pregnancy. She wears a blue mantle traditionally associated
with Mary. Sharp beams radiate from her
suggesting that she is “brighter than the Sun.”
One foot rests on the Moon
and the other on a snake’s head. This has been interpreted as her victory over
darkness and triumph over the pagan Aztec
feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl and/or the serpent of temptation from the Garden
of Eden.
She may have originally had a crown on her head or that might have
been added later. Still later the crown
was decorated with gold which deteriorated over the years. In 1899 the crown was erased either because
of the deterioration or to bring the image more into line with the republican sentiments of the
people. The tilma was reframed with the
top being brought down just above the Virgin’s head to disguise damage in the
process of the erasure. Other additions
over time included stars painted on the inside of her mantle representing the constellations of the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, a supporting angel below her, and silver
decoration which has also deteriorated.
Despite being centuries old on an unstable medium, however that central image
remains remarkably bright.
The peasant army called to arms by Father Miguel Hidalgo and El Grito de
Delores marched behind this banner depicting Our Lady of Guadalupe.
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Aside from its singular religious
significance the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe has become a rallying point for
the national aspirations of the Mexican people, particularly for the Indios and mestizos. The peon army of Father Miguel Hidalgo after El
Grito de Delores marched behind a banner painted with a representation of
Our Lady and many soldiers of the Mexican
War of Independence in 1810 fought with printed cards of her image stuck in their sombreros.
Although anti-clericism ran deep among many in the 20th Century Mexican Revolution, Emilio Zapata’s army of southern presents and Indians entered
Mexico City in triumph behind a Guadeloupian banner. More recently, the contemporary Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) also in the south named their mobile city Guadalupe Tepeyac in honor of the Virgin.
In the United States banners of Our Lady appeared in the marches and
during the strikes of the United Farm
Workers, whose leader Cesar Chavez
was deeply religious. More recently it
has been carried in demonstrations in support
of immigration reform.
Veneration at the National Shine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Des Plaines, Illinois.
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As I type these final sentences in
the wee small hours of the morning an all-night vigil continues in Des Plaines at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe. More than 200,000 are expected to visit the
Shrine over two days for the largest such veneration in the U. S.
Transcribed notation of the "Celestial Music" said to be encoded on the tilma.
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Today’s selection is from the reportedly
celestial music found coded in the tilma forming musical notes with the stars and flowers of her dress reputedly discovered by researcher Fernando Ojeda who interpreted the positions through comparisons
using geography, geometry, astronomy.
Using his discoveries “musical
experts” were able to reconstruct the music in standard notation. Needless
to say these claims are highly controversial
but are treasured and spread by traditionalist
devotees.
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