Our intimate and well-known tradition of commemorating the
dead is of an imminently religious character, which is not onlyfundamentally Christian taken from the custom of "honoring
the faithful deceased", but also one that conserves many
of thecharacteristics of the funerary ritual practiced by our
pre-Hispanic ancestors.The rituals of the vigil, including the placement of altars
offering in homes and cemeteries in order to pay homage to the
dead, are the result of a complex weaving of various cultural
traditions: on the hand, the indigenous of pre-Colombian origin,
and on the other hand, that of theSpanish Christians who arrived
with the Conquest; and, in addition, the properties of other
groups from Africa, Asia and Europe that migrated to Mexico
during the Colonial period or later( 19th and 20th centuries).The commemoration of the Day of the Dead in Michoacán
is a solemn tradition that preserves a genuine outpouring of
profound respect and veneration for beings who, in a material
form, no longer exist and to whom, trough the offering, are
given tribute.The ritual of the wake that takes place in many of our indigenous
communities in the area around Lake Pátzcuaro is deeply
rooted. Today people maintain characteristics and rites
very similar to those observed in earlier times, with only minor
variants according to their own beliefs and customs.
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Gob. Michoacán |