Tlaxcala is celebrating its annual carnival this week

With rich traditions, brilliantly colored costumes and masked revelers parading through the streets, carnival is in full swing in Tlaxcala this week.

The celebration began on Thursday with an inaugural parade in Tlaxcala city in which 80 troupes of costumed dancers romped down the streets on a route that included various government buildings, public plazas, the Tlaxcala Art Museum and the bullfighting ring.

The party continues through the weekend until Tuesday, the day before Ash Wednesday, which begins the Catholic observance of Lent.

A signature feature of such festivities in Tlaxcala are the capering huehues (“old men” in Náhuatl), dancers who don colorful costumes and masks representing old people. In total, the carnival celebrations will include 387 troupes of huehues from 40 municipalities across the state.

The biggest party is in the capital, Tlaxcala, but visitors can join in the festivities in nearly every town and city in the state.

Pantola is a good place in which to observe the fiestas. Here troupes perform the dance around la garrocha, or maypole, as well as that of La Jota, a traditional dance from Spain.

The charros, or cowboys, in Tlaxcala don costumes totally distinct from others called by the same name elsewhere in the country. Instead of the traditional cowboy outfit most recognize as the uniform of the mariachi band, these charros wear frilled capes, huehue masks and hats adorned with huge, colorful feathers. Their dance is a must-see at Tlaxcala’s carnival.

The fun may have already begun, but there are still lots of parades, workshops, photography competitions, drawing classes for children and other events to celebrate carnival in Tlaxcala before it’s all over on Wednesday.

But if you can’t make it to Tlaxcala, there are carnival festivities going on in Veracruz and Mazatlán as well.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

Mexico’s week in review: A surprise rate cut, a sliding peso and an oil spill that’s becoming a political problem

0
The week of March 23–27 in Mexico delivered economic and political friction that touched on everything from the cost of borrowing to the cost of governing.

Xcaret theme park banned from using Maya culture for marketing, for now.

3
The ruling will stay in effect only until the Supreme Court makes a final decision on what could be a landmark case for Mexico's cultural future

FIFA president Infantino attends Guadalajara qualifier, signaling confidence in Mexico as World Cup host

1
The World Cup qualifiers marked Guadalajara's first major sporting event since El Mencho's death. All went off without a hitch as Jamaica beat New Caledonia before a packed Akron Stadium.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity