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'Day Of The Dead' Expanding In U.S.

Day Of The Dead

By RUSSELL CONTRERAS   10/19/11 01:24 PM ET   AP

ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico -- Growing up in South Texas, Kiko Torres saw the Day of the Dead as an obscure holiday celebrated in southern Mexico. Few people dared to discuss it in his small but strong Catholic, Mexican-American community.

Still, Torres said he became fascinated by Day of the Dead folk art and ceremonies he saw during his father's research trips to Mexico. Those images of dancing skeleton figurines and the event's spiritual messages of honoring the dead, he said, were misunderstood in the United States.

"People here thought it was something to be scared of or evil," said Torres.

But that's changing. In the last decade or so, this traditional Latin American holiday with indigenous roots has spread throughout the U.S. along with migration from Mexico and other countries where it is observed. Not only are U.S.-born Latinos adopting the Day of the Dead, but various underground and artistic non-Latino groups have begun to mark the Nov. 1-2 holidays through colorful celebrations, parades, exhibits and even bike rides and mixed martial arts fights.

In Houston, artists hold a "Day of the Dead Rock Stars" where they pay homage to departed singers like Joey Ramone, Johnny Cash and even "El Marvin Gaye." Community centers in Los Angeles build altars for rapper Tupac Shakur and Mexican artist Frida Kahlo.

"It's everywhere now," said Carlos Hernandez, 49, a Houston-based artist who launched the "Day of the Dead Rock Stars" event. "You can even get Dia de los Muertos stuff at Wal-Mart."

The Day of the Dead, or Dia de los Muertos, honors departed souls of loved ones who are welcomed back for a few intimate hours. At burial sites or intricately built altars, photos of loved ones are centered on skeleton figurines, bright decorations, candles, candy and other offerings such as the favorite foods of the departed. Pre-Columbian in origin, many of the themes and rituals now are mixtures of indigenous practices and Roman Catholicism.

The holiday is celebrated in Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil and parts of Ecuador.

Leading up to the day, bakers make sugar skulls and sweet "bread of the dead," and artists create elaborate paper cut-out designs that can be hung on altars. Some families keep private night-long vigils at burial sites.

In North America, decorations often center on images of La Calavera Catrina – a skeleton of an upper-class woman whose image was made popular by the late-Mexican printmaker Jose Guadalupe Posada. She is typically seen on photos or through papier-mache statues alongside other skeletal figures in everyday situations like playing soccer, dancing or getting married. La Catrina is the most popular recreated figure related to the holiday.

"She is our best-selling item," said Torres, 35, who owns the Masks y Mas in Albuquerque, a shop that sells Day of the Dead art and clothing year-round. "I have artists sending me their Catrina pieces from all over."

Albuquerque's National Hispanic Cultural Center hosts an annual "Dia de los Muertos Community Gathering," featuring many of the artists from Masks y Mas. The community "ofrenda" – the term for a Day of the Dead offering or homemade altar – features blessings, live music and poetry, Oct. 17-Nov. 8. The center also is exhibiting an altar by Mexican-American novelist Sandra Cisneros dedicated to her mother.

The city also hosts an annual parade where marchers dress in Day of the Dead gear and makeup, and it organizes a "Day of the Tread" bike and marathon race.

The exhibits and events are not limited to the Southwest. Harvard University's Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology has a Day of the Dead altar on permanent display and offers Day of the Dead art classes to students in second to eighth grades. And in New York City, the Brooklyn Arts Council recently initiated a year-long Day of the Dead education project to heighten public awareness "on mourning and remembrance."

The growing Latin American population in the U.S. and the increased influence of Hispanic culture here in everything from food to TV programming are obviously major factors in the growth of Day of the Dead celebrations. But the holiday's increased popularity may also coincide with evolving attitudes toward death, including a move away from private mourning to more public ways of honoring departed loved ones, whether through online tributes or sidewalk memorials.

"I think it has to do with Sept. 11," said Albuquerque, N.M.-based artist Kenny Chavez. "We're all looking at death differently, and the Day of the Dead allows us to talk about it."

For some in the U.S., the Day of the Dead remains personal as they use the occasion to remember close loved ones. But for others, it's a chance to honor late celebrities or just an opportunity to dress up as a favorite Day of the Dead character.

Chavez said those unfamiliar with the event sometimes freeze when they first see Day of the Dead images. "We have people come into the shop and ask if this about the occult or devil worshipping," said Chavez, who works at Masks y Mas. "They get all weirded out until you explain what this is."

It's also become a business outside of the holiday period. Torres said part of his business out of Masks y Mas was embroidering muerta images on the shorts and gloves of mixed martial arts fighters. "They can't get enough of it," he said.

Torres said white and Native American artists are also now creating artwork around Day of the Dead themes. "It all about understanding the meaning of the day," he said. "They can take chances with the art."

But as Day of the Dead grows in presence, some fear that the spiritual aspects of the holiday are being lost. Already in Oaxaca, Mexico, where Day of the Dead is one of the most important holidays of the year, the area is annually overrun by U.S. and European tourists who crowd cemeteries to take photos of villagers praying at burial sites. Art dealers also buy cheap crafts, then resell them at much higher prices at chic shops in the U.S.

Oscar Lozoya, 57, an Albuquerque-based photographer who shoots fine art photographs of La Catrina, said some newcomers to the holiday are merely using it as an excuse to party and dress up in skeleton costumes. He hopes that they eventually do their research.

"I know what it means and its importance," said Lozoya, who hosts an annual Day of the Dead art show. "So I think the more people look beyond the art and learn about it, the more people will understand its real significance."

___

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ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico -- Growing up in South Texas, Kiko Torres saw the Day of the Dead as an obscure holiday celebrated in southern Mexico. Few people dared to discuss it in his small but strong Ca...
ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico -- Growing up in South Texas, Kiko Torres saw the Day of the Dead as an obscure holiday celebrated in southern Mexico. Few people dared to discuss it in his small but strong Ca...
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
01:36 AM on 10/21/2011
"You can even get Dia de los Muertos stuff at Wal-Mart."

That stuff's not to be trusted.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bbertaud
Je ne regrette rien, rien de rien
10:18 PM on 10/20/2011
So what´s the problem...Halloween is expanding all over the world
12:46 AM on 10/20/2011
This holiday seems to be more popular here in the US than it is in Mexico. Maybe it has to do with there being more people from all over Mexico in places like California, or the Southwest. I know I never celebrated it until I got to high school.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fran Jaime
Yo Soy 132!
10:46 PM on 10/20/2011
I honestly don't think it is more popular in the states. The thing is that is more a celebration of central Mexico, not so much the north.
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sdterp
Queer, Vegetarian Atheist -- Livin' Large
08:15 PM on 10/19/2011
I live in San Diego, CA about 20 miles mouth of the Mexican boarder and Dia de los Muertos is celebrated all over the area. I've seen ofrendas in the homes of friends and I've Even put up a makeshift one myself (thought it wasn't impressive); Our UU church sets up an amazing one each year. Dia de los Muertos adds such a positive perspective to death. US culture avoids any discussion or acknowledgment of death. We hide it, use euphemisms to discuss it. This tradition brings death back into the picture and reminds us and demonstrates how we live on in the lives of those we had influenced even after we're gone. It's quite beautiful.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fran Jaime
Yo Soy 132!
08:47 PM on 10/19/2011
It is a beautiful tradition! If you want to make a more traditional ofrenda, it must have a cross of yellow flowers (Tzempazuchitl is used here but may be hard to get in the states), a glass of water (to refresh them from their journey), incense (copal is traditional, but any incense will do. It's used to call the Muertitos home), candles (to light the way), a plate with a little salt (to remind them that they are no longer of this world), photos of those you wish to remember, pan de muerto and whatever they liked to eat and drink. It can be very modest. Good luck with your ofrenda!
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sdterp
Queer, Vegetarian Atheist -- Livin' Large
01:40 AM on 10/20/2011
I did have the flowers (golden marigolds here), water and copal. I had a candle but also electric lights because I didn't leave the candle lit much. Pan de muerto, photos and things that represented foods and identity of those remembered (like naval medals for my grandfather, etc.) were all included. I didn't do the salt. I don't think I knew about that part of the tradition then. Mine was very plain. I want to try to make one that's more ornate. They are usually (when not made by me) quite beautiful. :)
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Yvetter
11:44 AM on 10/20/2011
Also UU in San Diego. What I love about this tradition becoming more mainstream here is that it is very similar to our own beliefs in some of our US Native Tribes. Putting food or tobacco out for the deceased. But those traditions have been suppressed by Dominating Religions in this country. They saw it as evil. It amazes me how similar the Indigenous practice is to our own here in the north x 10 because they have added such open celebration to it. Instead of it being something to keep quiet and pass down between Indigenous family members only.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fran Jaime
Yo Soy 132!
10:44 PM on 10/20/2011
The Catholic church did its best to supress it but it was just too strong, so ended up accepting it.