KHOU 11 by Elena Arteaga 11/2/2019
Two days in November, many in the Hispanic community celebrate loved ones who’ve passed. But the celebration isn’t Mexican Halloween—it’s a tradition that should be DÃa de los Muertos is not your Mexican Halloween.
“It has a connection, with All Saints Eve, but DÃa de los Muertos is specifically a celebration that goes back to ancient Mexico,†said Xochitezca Tapia, with Danza Chikawa. “DÃa de los Muertos is a day of celebration where we honor and remember our deceased.â€
It’s a tradition that originated with the Aztecs, who took two months to remember their deceased loved ones. But the tradition nowadays is becoming marred by some who seem unaware about why some in the Hispanic community continue the tradition.
“The Mexica people celebrated DÃa de los Muertos,†said Tapia. “They had, actually, in the Aztec calendar, two months of 20 days each, dedicated to our deceased. The first month was dedicated to the children, and the second month to the adults. When the Spanish arrived, we had this mixing of the two cultures. DÃa de los Muertos, I would say, kind of mixed with the religious All Saints Day, and it became the present-day DÃa de los Muertos.â€
In the Hispanic culture, DÃa de los Muertos is not a somber occasion. It’s bright, colorful, mixed with foods, dancing, and music.
“If you think about the Day of the Dead, it’s sort of a festival of the senses,†said Luis Gavito, a curator of the altars for Multicultural Education and Counseling through the Arts-Houston, also known as MECA-Houston. “It’s very colorful, the smells and the marigolds. The food. So, it speaks to the senses. This is a festival. It’s a fiesta. It speaks about the relationship Mexicans have with death.â€
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