Despite sharing some key common
imagery—skulls and skeletons—and
some cultural and religious DNA, Día
de los Muertos, the two day festival from Mexico, is not just a Latino Halloween. The two observations reflect two
entirely different views of death—one reflecting terror
and horror and the other welcoming acceptance. That’s the shorthand for it
anyway. In reality it is, of course,
more complicated. The Mexican holiday
owes its unique vitality to the merging and mutual corruption
of two cultures so alien to each other that at first the seemed totally incompatible.
The Aztecs were the new kids on the block. Just the most recent in a chain of high
civilizations that had risen and fallen in Mesoamerica over a period of 4,000 years—the Olmec, Maya, and Toltec to name a few. There was serious ethnic, cultural, and
religious differences between these groups, but archeological evidence
shows that they shared a view of the afterlife—a
cyclical pattern of life and death that was continuous and in
which the spirits of the dead were a protective presence to the living.
Under the right circumstances
the living and the dead could communicate. Death was not seen as something grim,
but as a natural step in continuing existence.
This belief manifested itself in
many ways, including some that to European
eyes seemed barbaric and brutal beyond imagination, especially
the mass human sacrifices as practiced
by the Aztec. But, at least theoretically,
those sacrificed were expected to undergo the knife in a state of
religious ecstasy as they transitioned to the next life for the
good of their people. Of course, in practice,
the Aztecs often used hundreds of their captured enemies for the rituals
and they may not have been so sanguine to their fates.
But beyond the sacrifices, these
beliefs meant that ordinary people could commune, even celebrate,
with their lost loved ones. The
Aztecs expressed it in a month long festival honoring the goddess Mictecacihuatl, Queen of the Underworld, or Lady
of the Dead. During the festival they first honored los angelitos, the deceased children and then those who
passed away as adults. The Mictecacihuatl festival was held during the late
summer period of the corn harvests, a natural time of bounty and
celebration.
Enter the Spanish, their soldiers and priests who conquered the mighty
Aztec—with the significant assistance of other civilized vassal
peoples who were tired of giving up their corn and sacrifants to the
mighty rulers of Tenochtitlan—who
had very different ideas. The
first order of the day, going hand-in-hand in making the conquered
people slaves, was destroying all vestiges of the old
religion and imposing Catholicism on
them. After all, saving souls of
the savages whether they liked it or not was a central mission of
the Conquest.
The Church, of course, had a lot of experience in this sort of
thing. Hundreds of years earlier it had encountered,
squelched, and absorbed the pagan
Celtic and Germanic
peoples. The Church had learned to adapt
local customs that could not be obliterated and cloak them as
Christian traditions by turning old gods
into venerated saints.
The transformation of the popular
Celtic festival of Samhain, for instance, had been transformed into All Saints and All Souls Days. Similarly in
Mexico they re-purposed the Mictecacihuatl festival and squeezed it down
from a month to the same two days coinciding with the end of the European
harvest season on November 1 and 2.
Indio
peons were expected to attend masses
to honor their dead—a least those who had died as good Catholics. And this the people dutifully
did. Indeed, at first they had no
choice, but eventually they internalized the changes and accepted
them. While the people accepted the masses,
they brought their own interpretations to them, and they continued to
hold onto folk traditions that stretched back to Pre-Columbian times.
A home ofrenda with images of the Dead and gifts of things they enjoyed in life.
Over generations those
traditions blossomed into Día de los Muertos as we know it today—spilled out of
the churches and into homes where ofrendas,
welcoming altars to the dead, are gaily decorated with skeletons,
skulls, Flor de Muerto—orange marigolds, candles, religious
icons, photos and memorabilia of the dead and groan with
gifts of sweets, favorite foods, and alcohol. These altars welcome the spirits of the
visiting dead.
Then in many places families return
the favor by visiting the cemeteries and picnicking on the
graves of loved ones. In some
areas of Northern Mexico, the family might camp out there from
the evening of All Saints Day, November 1.
There are many regional variations involving parades and
special celebrations in the homes where someone has died within the year which
are opened to all visitors who are fed with homemade tamales and other
treats.
The frequent use of skeletons and
skulls is meant as a reminder that we are all mortal and will someday
join the dead. The popular 19th
Century artist José Guadalupe Posada
who depicted calacas—skeletons—cavorting gaily is credited with popularizing
that sort of imagery which is continually re-interpreted by folk and
fine artists. Particularly popular is the image of Catrina, the lanky, skeletal female figure bedecked in sumptuous
clothing and giant ornate hats, who serves as a reminder that death
is a fate that even the rich can’t avoid. Catrina is also seen as an embodiment
of old Aztec goddess Mictecacihuatl. Other countries of Latin heritage have
significant All Saints and All Souls celebrations, but outside of Mexico and
adjacent countries with significant Mexican populations or cultural influence,
none celebrate Día de los Muertos in this unique way.
The images were recently popularized
in the United States by the 2017 Disney
animated film Coco which unlike
some previous productions from the Mouse
House was sensitive and respectful of the culture it depicted.
The U. S. with a large and growing
population of Mexican descent or origin is one place where the festival is
widely celebrated, particularly in the Southwest
and border regions. But with large population moving north into
the old industrial cities of the Midwest
and Northeast and into rural and small town communities,
the custom has spread, adapting to new circumstances.
San Diego hosts one of the larges Day of the Dead celebrations in the U.S. featuring a colorful parade with many Anglos decked out as Catrina and other skeletons.
Anglo children are introduced to the Festival, stripped of
religious significance, as part of their cultural awareness
curriculum now in many schools.
Street festivals featuring revelers
painted to look like skeletons are popular in cities like San Diego
and draw many non-Mexicans.
The spirituality of Día de
los Muertos and its unique view of death and the relationships between the
living and the dead appeals to many in this country looking for new religious
experiences. Many non-Catholic
churches now have Day of the Dead services or host family gatherings. It is commonly observed in many Unitarian Universalist congregations
which strive to navigate he tricky ground between respect
and cultural misappropriation. My
church, the Tree of Life Unitarian
Universalist Congregation in McHenry,
Illinois had regular Day of the Dead services for well over a decade.
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