What do Mexicans celebrate on the "Day of the Dead?"
Ricardo J. Salvador


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To cite this article in print please use the following: Salvador, R. J. (2003). 
What Do Mexicans Celebrate On The Day Of The Dead? Pp. 75-76, IN Death And 
Bereavement In The Americas. Death, Value And Meaning Series, Vol. II. Morgan, 
J. D. And P. Laungani (Eds.) Baywood Publishing Co., Amityville, New York. 
Available online at: 
http://www.public.iastate.edu/~rjsalvad/scmfaq/muertos.html.

This is an ancient festivity that has been much transformed through the years, 
but which was intended in prehispanic Mexico to celebrate children and the 
dead. Hence, the best way to describe this Mexican holiday is to say that it is 
a time when Mexican families remember their dead, and the continuity of life. 
Two important things to know about the Mexican Day of the Dead (Día de los 
Muertos) are:

It is a holiday with a complex history, and therefore its observance varies 
quite a bit by region and by degree of urbanization.

It is not a morbid occasion, but rather a festive time. 
The original celebration can be traced to many Mesoamerican native traditions, 
such as the festivities held during the Aztec month of Miccailhuitontli, 
ritually presided by the "Lady of the Dead" (Mictecacihuatl), and dedicated to 
children and the dead. In the Aztec calendar, this ritual fell roughly at the 
end of the Gregorian month of July and the beginning of August, but in the 
postconquest era it was moved by Spanish priests so that it coincided with the 
Christian holiday of All Hallows Eve (in Spanish: "Día de Todos Santos.") This 
was a vain effort to transform the observance from a profane to a Christian 
celebration. The result is that Mexicans now celebrate the day of the dead 
during the first two days of November, rather than at the beginning of summer. 
But remember the dead they still do, and the modern festivity is characterized 
by the traditional Mexican blend of ancient aboriginal and introduced Christian 
features.

Generalizing broadly, the holiday's activities consist of families (1) 
welcoming their dead back into their homes, and (2) visiting the graves of 
their close kin. At the cemetery, family members engage in sprucing up the 
gravesite, decorating it with flowers, setting out and enjoying a picnic, and 
interacting socially with other family and community members who gather there. 
In both cases, celebrants believe that the souls of the dead return and are all 
around them. Families remember the departed by telling stories about them. The 
meals prepared for these picnics are sumptuous, usually featuring meat dishes 
in spicy sauces, chocolate beverages, cookies, sugary confections in a variety 
of animal or skull shapes, and a special egg-batter bread ("pan de muerto," or 
bread of the dead). Gravesites and family altars are profusely decorated with 
flowers (primarily large, bright flowers such as marigolds and chrysanthemums), 
and adorned with religious amulets and with offerings of food, cigarettes and 
alcoholic beverages. Because of this warm social environment, the colorful 
setting, and the abundance of food, drink and good company, this commemoration 
of the dead has pleasant overtones for the observers, in spite of the open 
fatalism exhibited by all participants, whose festive interaction with both the 
living and the dead in an important social ritual is a way of recognizing the 
cycle of life and death that is human existence.

  
In homes observant families create an altar and decorate it with items that 
they believe are beautiful and attractive to the souls of their departed ones. 
Such items include offerings of flowers and food, but also things that will 
remind the living of the departed (such as their photographs, a diploma, or an 
article of clothing), and the things that the dead prized and enjoyed while 
they lived. This is done to entice the dead and assure that their souls 
actually return to take part in the remembrance. In very traditional settings, 
typically found only in native communities, the path from the street to the 
altar is actually strewn with petals to guide the returning soul to its altar 
and the bosom of the family.The traditional observance calls for departed 
children to be remembered during the first day of the festivity (the Day of the 
Little Angels, "Día de los Angelitos"), and for adults to be remembered on the 
second day. Traditionally, this is accompanied by a feast during the early 
morning hours of November the 2nd, the Day of the Dead proper, though modern 
urban Mexican families usually observe the Day of the Dead with only a special 
family supper featuring the bread of the dead. In southern Mexico, for example 
in the city of Puebla, it is good luck to be the one who bites into the plastic 
toy skeleton hidden by the baker in each rounded loaf. Friends and family 
members give one another gifts consisting of sugar skeletons or other items 
with a death motif, and the gift is more prized if the skull or skeleton is 
embossed with one's own name. Another variation found in the state of Oaxaca is 
for bread to be molded into the shape of a body or burial wrap, and for a face 
to be embedded on one end of the loaf. During the days leading up to and 
following the festivity, some bakeries in heavily aboriginal communities cease 
producing the wide range of breads that they typically sell so that they can 
focus on satisfying the demand for bread of the dead. 
  
The Day of the Dead can range from being a very important cultural event, with 
defined social and economic responsibilities for participants (exhibiting the 
socially equalizing behavior that social anthropologists would call 
redistributive feasting, e.g. on the island of Janitzio in Michoacan state), to 
being a religious observance featuring actual worship of the dead (e.g., as in 
Cuilapan, Oaxaca, an ancient capital of the Zapotec people, who venerated their 
ancestors and whose descendants do so to this day, an example of many 
traditional practices that Spanish priests pretend not to notice), to simply 
being a uniquely Mexican holiday characterized by special foods and confections 
(the case in all large Mexican cities.) 

In general, the more urban the setting within Mexico the less religious and 
cultural importance is retained by observants, while the more rural and Indian 
the locality the greater the religious and economic import of the holiday. 
Because of this, this observance is usually of greater social importance in 
southern Mexico than in the northern part of the country.  

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
lemotbanx
Sent: Wednesday, October 31, 2007 1:01 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [syiar-islam] Tentang Halloween Day

Asalamualaikum Wr. Wb. Saudara muslim dan muslimah yang dimuliyakan Allah SWT 
mohon bantuannya ane belum mengetahui mengenai sejarah asal muasal Halloween 
Day yang sekarang telah menjadi booming di siaran TV? 
apa kepentingan pihak barat menggembar-gemborkann Halloween Day ke seluruh 
penjuru bumi termasuk indonesia khususnya untuk umat muslim? 
bagaimanakah kita sebagai umat muslim menyikapi perayaan tersebut sebab 
pemerintah serasa tidak peduli akan masalah ini yang dapat berpengaruh terhadap 
akidah umat muslim dan apa yang harus dilakukan oleh umat muslim untuk 
menyadarkan saudara seimannya bila telah mengikuti perayaan kaum yahudi 
tersebut? 

Terimakasih atas ilmu dan infonya. semoga hal ini bermanfaat bagi semua muslim 
yang membacanya dan lebih menyadarkan kepada umat muslim untuk selalu menyikapi 
permasalah yang terjadi disekeliling umat yang dapat menghancurkan akidah umat.



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