Judith Mendiolea Special to The Guardian Inés Pérez would stir a bubbling pot of milk, breaking chunks of cocoa into the ...
El Día de los Muertos, or the Day of the Dead, is a day of celebration that began in Mexico and Central America and eventually made its way to the U.S. as well. “The tradition of the Day of the ...
Credit: Reuters Photo People gather around the graves of their deceased loved ones during the annual Day of the Dead celebrations, in Romerillo, Mexico. Credit: Reuters Photo Isaias Martinez ...
Day of the Dead may be Mexico’s most famous festival, but it’s just one of 5,000 that take place in the country each year.
Long observed in the more rural, Indigenous areas of Mexico, during the 1980s Day of the Dead celebrations began to become popular in cities in both Mexico and the United States. In 2008 ...
Día de los Muertos is a two-day celebration reuniting the living an the dead, which originated in Mexico and is now practiced worldwide, according to the Day of the Dead website. The holiday ...
Celebrations of death from around the world The school worked with the Consulate General of Mexico to host ... “Mexicans believe the dead return to the living world on the Day of the Dead ...
This was the scene of the altar exhibition at El Dia de los Muertos, or the Day of the Dead, celebration at Harvest Middle School on Saturday.