History500 years ago, when the Spanish conquistadors landed in the place that is now called Mexico, they found natives practicing a ritual for the dead.
It was ritual that the indigenous people had been practicing for 3,000 years. It was a ritual that the Spanish tried to erase without success.
Today this ritual is called Dia de los Muertos or Day Of The Dead.
History• The majority of Hispanics are Catholics, a part of Christendom.
•Mexicans celebrate Day Of The Dead. It is NOT the same as Halloween.
• Halloween is about scaring away the evil spirits. Day Of The Dead is a religious day very similar to All Saint’s Day& All Soul’s Day. It is about remembering and honoring loved ones who have passed away.
•They don’t fear death; they accept it as part of the cycle of life. They believe that the spirits don’t die. Life on Earth is the dream; life after death is eternal.
Special Days
November 1st: The Little Angels. (children that have died)
November 2nd: The Dead. (adults that have died)
The OfferingThey set a table with a tablecloth decorated with various things. Some of them may include:
decorative cut paper flowers skeletons
skulls candles bread of the dead
incense food candy
A photo water towel
soap salt atole
mole (a thick seasoned drink)
La OfrendaThey set a table with a white tablecloth decorated with various things. Some of them may include:
papel picado cempasúchil esqueletos/calacas
calaveras velas pan de muertos
copal comida favorita dulces
fotos agua toalla
jabón sal atole
(a thick seasoned drink)
The Offering
The offering is made up of four components and two, three, or seven steps:
Earth Heaven Heaven 7 levels
Wind Earth Earth the spirit
Water Underworld must cross
Fire to reach
eternal peace
The Cemetary Gravesite
People go to the gravesites of family members or dead friends to clean and decorate their gravesite.
They put a lot of flowers, skeletons, skulls made of sugar, candles, food, candy, etc.
Then, they have a candle-light vigil to remember the spirits of the departed, especially their loved ones.
Preparation for Day Of The Dead begins up to 2 weeks before the celebration.
The Gravesites at The Gravesites at the Cemeterythe Cemetery
(Las tumbas en el (Las tumbas en el Cementerio/PanteónCementerio/Panteón
))
Calacas = Skeletons• Depicted as joyous not mournful figures • They wear festive clothing • They dance and play musical instruments to
indicate a happy afterlife • Demonstrates Mexican belief that no dead
soul likes to be thought of sadly, and that death should be a joyous occasion.
• Goes back to Aztec beliefs, one of the few traditions to remain after the Spanish conquest.
Music and Dance
The dancers carry calacas (artistic skeletons), pretending that the souls are visiting and doing a dance.
The drums are the most important part of the music associated with the supernatural to cause vitality and rhythm.
CatrinaCatrina is the most recognizable symbol for Day of the Dead. She is now a calacas and was painted by José Guadalupe Posada, a famous artist from Mexico.