As we have done in previous years, we returned to San Antonino Castillo Velasco on November 1 to watch families begin the preparation of the graves of their loved ones for Día de los Muertos. In a process unique to this pueblo known for the cultivation of flowers, family members mix the area’s very fine dirt with water; spread it on the top and sides of the grave; smooth it with a trowel, as if they were getting ready to lay tile; using a nail, they outline designs and religious imagery into the mud coating; and then use flowers (fresh and dried), to “paint” the scene.
This year’s late rainy season brought torrential rains on November 2 and it must have interrupted the decorating, because when we returned on November 3, at the same time as usual, there was still much work to be done. However, no one seemed the least perturbed; peace, tranquility, and quiet joy prevailed and, as always, it enveloped us.
(Music: Marimba band performing, “Díos Nunca Muere,” written by Oaxaqueño composer and violinist Macedonio Alcalá.)
As do so many of your entries, this made me cry…..the beauty of the Oaxacenos and the cemetery and the decorations and the music….all of it, and my memories of my visits to cemeteries in Oaxaca and Michoacan……
Mil gracias, Kay. Your comments made me cry…
[…] flowers, decorating graves with designs created with flor inmortal (immortal flowers) during Día de los Muertos, and floral designs executed in exquisite […]