Monday, July 7, 2025

Festival of Jesus of Nazareth [] Atotonilco

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Festival of Jesus of Nazareth [] Atotonilco

Festival of Jesus of Nazareth [] Atotonilco

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Friday July 18th through Monday July 21st Patronal feast of Jesus the Nazarene Atotonilco If you want to experience an authentic San Miguel de Allende tradition, the festival honoring Jesús Nazareno is waiting for you. From Friday, July 18 to Monday, July 21, the charming village of Atotonilco — located just 12.2 km from downtown San Miguel — comes alive with live music, Mexican food stalls, dancing, performances, fireworks, traditional dancers, and plenty of fun. It’s also a fantastic opportunity to visit the famous “Sistine Chapel of the Americas,” the Sanctuary of Jesús Nazareno de Atotonilco. Every year, locals from San Miguel embark on a 12-km pilgrimage to reach the Sanctuary. Don’t miss this deeply Mexican celebration that blends faith, culture, and community spirit. The Feast of Jesus of Nazareth de Atotonilco (also known in Nahuatl as the God of the Hot Water) is celebrated at its namesake church in the small village of Atotonilco seven miles from San Miguel.  The church attracts about 5,000 visitors every week. The complex was built in the mid 1700’s by San Miguel’s Father Luis Felipe Neri de Alfaro who, according to tradition, rested beneath a mesquite tree here and had a vision of Jesus instructing Fr. Neri to convert the area to a shrine for prayer and penance.  (Self-flagellation whips are still purchased in front of the church.) Another possibility is that Father Neri was vexed that the indigenous were not completely converted to Catholicism and they considered the thermal springs in the area sacred and medicinal. It was also a favored place for pagan rites that included fornication. Fr. Neri may have built the church to counter this practice by covering up the hot springs. Fr. Neri liked to sleep in a casket on the altar as a form of penance and he is buried beside the altar.  There have been attempts to have Fr. Neri beatified, promoting him as San Miguel de Allende’s first saint, but they have not been successful. Virtually every inch of the walls and ceiling of the church and chapels are covered with fresco paintings, giving it the nickname “Sistine Chapel of the Americas.” Scenes from the life and resurrection of Jesus mingle with saints and martyrs, angels, demons, flowers and fruits. One visual curiosity is the stations of the cross, telling the story of the death of Jesus, features not Roman guards, but Spanish conquistadors (a subtle poke at the Spanish rulers). To celebrate pilgrims walk to the church from all over the San Miguel area and beyond, many wearing colorful traditional costumes. Native dancers in their huge plumed headdresses perform, and the fiestas include food, music and, of course, fireworks Friday through Monday. Historically, the Jesus of Nazareth de Atotonilco church is also relevant because in 1810 Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla took the church’s banner of the Virgin of Guadalupe to serve as the flag of the Independence Army with Ignacio Allende (for whom San Miguel is named).  The conservation of this church is of national pride to Mexicans as where the Independence from Spain officially started. Also, Ignacio Allende married his only spouse, Agustina de las Fuentes, here though she died shortly thereafter.  

Joseph Toone Tours: Discover the Secrets of San Miguel de Allende
San Miguel de Allende
Guanajuato
Mexico

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Date And Time

2025-07-18 @ 12:00 AM

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