Tuesday, July 15, 2025

YouTuber Doña Ángela, 69, awarded Gold Play Button

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Doña Ángela and her daughter with the YouTube buttons.
Doña Ángela and her daughter with the YouTube buttons.

The Michoacán grandmother whose cooking videos have become a viral YouTube sensation has been awarded the social media site’s Gold Play Button for reaching one million subscribers.

Doña Ángela, host of De mi rancho a tu cocina (From my farm to your kitchen), earned the gold — and the Silver Play Button for 100,000 subscribers — in less than two months after opening her channel.

At the time of this writing, Doña Ángela’s 22 videos had garnered 1.56 million subscribers and over 36 million total views.

With the help of her daughter, she explains in a friendly and simple way how to prepare classic Mexican recipes like chile rellenos (stuffed chiles), mole, red rice, chicken soup and picadillo (ground beef with potatoes).

She also has instructive videos on specialties from her home state of Michoacán and seasonal delicacies, such as candied pumpkin for Day of the Dead.

The YouTube star in her kitchen.
The YouTube star in her kitchen.

In addition to recipes, Doña Ángela also gives gardening tips and methods for using traditional Mexican cookware, such as clay pots, pewter casserole dishes, the comal (clay griddle) and the volcanic stone mortar and pestle called a molcajete.

In true social media culture fashion, Doña Ángela’s swift rise to popularity didn’t come without the attendant haters. A YouTube video posted in early October claimed that “the people behind the videos” were taking advantage of the woman.

Other channels jumped on the bandwagon and posted similar videos.

A few days later, Doña Ángela dispelled the rumors before beginning her homestyle recipe for stuffed chiles.

“Today I want to tell you to ignore the gossip . . . Pure gossip, because I’m here working quietly with my daughter . . . Don’t listen to them. I’m happy with you and I know you like the recipes I upload.”

Doña Ángela’s videos have become popular outside Mexico as well, especially in the United States. They have now been translated and feature English subtitles.

Source: Yo Soi Tú (sp)

Doctors: migrants are victims of abduction, rape, torture at southern border

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Migrants arrive at Mexico's southern border.
Migrants arrive at Mexico's southern border.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has warned of increased violence against migrants and refugees on Mexico’s southern border.

In a report published Wednesday, MSF said that teams working in Tenosique, Tabasco – which borders Guatemala – have reported an increase in kidnappings and an escalation of violence against people who have entered Mexico en route to the United States.

MSF staff providing medical and psychological care have heard accounts from migrants of abductions, torture, extreme violence, cruel treatment and sexual assault for extortion purposes, the report said. The violence begins as soon as migrants cross the border into Mexico from Guatemala, it added.

The organization said that in less than a month it has treated 11 migrants in Tenosique who were victims of kidnapping and torture, a figure that is the same as the total number of kidnapping cases treated by MSF in the same town in the first eight months of the year.

“What we are seeing is an exponential growth in the number of kidnappings in this area and an increase in the cruelty and the torture methods used by criminal groups . . .” said Gemma Pomares, MSF’s head of medical activities in Tenosique.

“MSF has provided medical support in Tenosique . . . for four years. While violence has always been a reality of the migration route north from Guatemala through Mexico, extortion and this level of extreme violence have been more pervasive in dangerous cities closer to the U.S. border, and has not been so prevalent, until now, in southern areas,” she added.

Migrants have been shot, stabbed and subjected to sexual abuse and torture including electric shocks to the genitals and anus, Pomares said. Several migrants told MSF that they were forced to watch as their companions were raped.

A number of migrants said they had been taken to abandoned houses where they were forced to remove their clothes before being tied up outside for hours in high temperatures.

They were left there until they provided phone numbers of family members, presumably so that criminal groups could demand extortion payments.

MSF warned that the federal government’s policies of “criminalization, persecution, detention and deportation, in order to contain migratory flows to the U.S., have forced migrants to go underground and take increasingly dangerous routes.”

As a result, more migrants are exposed to criminal groups that “operate with impunity throughout the region and in particular on the route from Guatemala to Tenosique,” the organization said.

To stave off a tariff threat from United States President Donald Trump, the government agreed in June to deploy the National Guard to increase enforcement against illegal migrants. Migrant advocates have previously warned that the move would cause migrants to take more dangerous routes to the northern border.

Sergio Martín, MSF’s general coordinator in Mexico, said “it was a just matter of time before the high levels of violence against migrants and refugees that our teams have seen on the northern border, moved to the south of the country.”

He added, “. . . what we are seeing are the humanitarian consequences of the tightening of immigration policies, designed to inflict greater suffering on the thousands of people desperately escaping for their lives.”

Jan Jarab, the Mexico representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, also criticized the government’s immigration policy this week, stating that it was a backward step from earlier efforts to protect migrants’ rights.

When the federal government first took office it made an “attempt” to treat migrants humanely and respect their rights, Jarab said at a regional immigration forum in Mexico City.

“. . . But given the international circumstances [Trump’s tariff threat] it only survived a few months and today we have migrants locked up again,” he added.

The UN official said that he has concerns about the conditions in Mexico’s migrant detention centers, many of which are overcrowded, and said there have been cases in which children’s rights have been abused.

Ana Saiz, president of the migrant advocacy organization Sin Fronteras, said there are an estimated 150,000 migrants in 53 immigration stations across the country and an additional 50,000 people who are waiting in Mexico for their asylum claims in the United States to be decided.

To appease the United States, the government also agreed to an expansion of the so-called “Remain in Mexico” policy that forces migrants who entered the U.S. via Mexico to return to this country until immigration courts rule on the validity of their asylum claims.

A number of organizations, including MSF and Human Rights First, have warned that the policy subjects migrants to a number of dangers in Mexico’s border cities.

The latter group said 343 cases had been identified in which asylum seekers returned to Mexico had been “violently attacked or threatened.”

Some migrants reported they had been kidnapped or raped.

Acting U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan said that President Trump was “using every tool available to address the humanitarian crisis at the border” and that “Remain in Mexico” was “an essential part of these efforts.”

He insisted that he was “confident in the program’s integrity.”

Some observers have concluded that Mexico’s concessions to the United States on immigration policy have turned Mexico into Trump’s long-promised border wall.

Saiz, the migrants’ advocate, claimed that never before has Mexico had “such a violent policy towards migrants.”

Source: Newsweek (en), Europa Press (sp), La Jornada (sp) 

Attack on Chalco mayor linked to dispute among three cartels

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Mayor Tenorio was fighting crime and corruption 'head on.'
Mayor Tenorio was fighting crime and corruption 'head on.'

An attack on the mayor of Valle de Chalco, México state, may have been perpetrated by one of three criminal organizations engaged in a turf war in the municipality.

Morena party Mayor Francisco Tenorio Contreras was shot on Tuesday while visiting a residential development in Chalco, which borders the southeast of Mexico City. The mayor suffered brain injuries and is in serious condition in hospital.

One line of investigation being pursued by the México state Attorney General’s Office (FGJEM) is that the Tláhuac Cartel was involved in the attack.

Originating from the Mexico City borough of the same name, the criminal group is vying for control of Chalco along with La Unión de Tepito and La Familia Michoacana.

La Unión and the Tláhuac Cartel have diversified their criminal activities in the municipality in recent months, according to federal sources.

All three groups are involved in drug dealing and have committed crimes in Chalco including violent car robberies and extortion.

The Tláhuac Cartel is believed to have beefed up its presence in Chalco during the administration of former Democratic Revolution Party mayor Ramón Montalvo Hernández, who was in office between 2016 and 2018.

The ex-mayor denied that his government made a pact with the criminal group to allow it to operate in the municipality although he acknowledged that he received threats that urged him to authorize its presence.

After several murders in Chalco following the 2017 death of former Tláhuac Cartel leader Felipe de Jesús “El Ojos” Pérez Luna in a confrontation with marines and police, Montalvo asked the FGJEM to investigate him and his close associates in order to rule out any suspicion of their involvement with organized crime.

The former mayor has not faced any formal accusations that he has links to criminal groups.

La Unión de Tepito, based in the infamous Mexico City neighborhood of the same name, has moved into Chalco and neighboring Tláhuac more recently.

Municipal police commanders told the newspaper El Universal that its members, and those of the Tláhuac Cartel, are responsible for carjackings in Chalco in recent months. Some people who have been arrested have admitted to belonging to the criminal groups, they said.

Although three groups are engaged in a dispute to control Chalco, violent clashes and crime generally have fallen since Tenorio was sworn in as mayor 10 months ago.

Municipal secretary Eliseo Gómez López said that at the start of the year, Chalco had the 17th highest crime rate out of 125 México state municipalities. Now it ranks 49th, he said.

“. . . We’re opting to attack [crime] firmly and decisively and we weren’t doing badly . . . one of the mayor’s public policies was a head-on fight against crime and corruption,” Gómez said.

Source: El Universal (sp), Milenio (sp) 

Court rules against dismissed employee over swastika tattoo

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A symbol that represents hate speech: Supreme Court.
A symbol that represents hate speech: Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court has refused to grant constitutional protection to a man who demanded compensation from a former employer who fired him for displaying a swastika tattoo.

The court voted unanimously on Wednesday to uphold the ruling of presiding judge Norma Piña Hernández, who determined that in today’s cultural environment, the swastika “represents [anti-Semitic] hate speech.”

Court documents state that the man’s coworkers, the majority of them Jewish, “felt offended, attacked or abused” from his first day on the job.

Also Jewish, the man’s boss stated he had “clearly defined convictions on the issue.”

The company had asked the man to cover or remove the tattoo in order to keep his job as invoice manager, but he refused.

“His contract was terminated, with severance, for which the complainant signed the respective resignation and settlement,” court documents indicated.

The man immediately filed a lawsuit against the company for moral damages, with the argument that he had been the victim of discrimination.

He claimed it had affected “legal assets of his personality,” having caused “inconvenience, confusion, annoyance and generally hurt his feelings.”

The company maintained that the Nazi symbol “represented anti-Semitic expression that signified hate and defeat for the Jewish community, and that such an image affected the dignity of the company’s employees and managers who belong to that community.”

Judge Piña ruled in favor of the company, rejecting the discrimination argument, calling the swastika an “apologia of hate.”

“The measures taken by the company in the name of human dignity and the security of its employees and managers were valid, reasonable and proportional,” read her ruling. “As such, they cannot constitute an act of discrimination against the complainant. Therefore, they do not define a legal right to compensation for moral damages.”

Source: Milenio (sp)

Industry association urges government to share its airport plans with airlines

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Mexico City airport, where any improvement will only be a 'patch' job.
Mexico City airport, where any improvements will only be a 'patch' job.

A senior airline association official has urged the federal government to share its plans for the launch of a three-pronged airport system in the Valley of Mexico, declaring that building the Santa Lucía airport without seeking the opinion of airlines would be a mistake.

Peter Cerdá, vice president in the Americas for the International Air Transport Association (IATA), said that airlines have no knowledge of the government’s plans for the simultaneous operation of the existing Mexico City airport (AICM), the Toluca airport and the Santa Lucía airport, which is expected to open in early 2022.

Speaking in Brasilia, Brazil, at the Latin American and Caribbean Air Transport Association Leaders Forum, Cerdá said it was particularly important for the government to provide airlines with information about how the three airports will share airspace.

“It’s something that is almost not spoken about because it’s not tangible but the industry needs to know how air space will be reorganized once the three airports of the system enter into coordinated operation . . .” he said.

Cerdá said that airlines don’t have any information about planned flight paths to and from the three airports or how they will be connected to each other.

IATA director general Alexandre de Juniac said in February that operating three airports within close proximity to each other will be “complex” and “challenging” and some aviation experts have said that AICM and Santa Lucía are too close to each other to operate safely at the same time.

The government has maintained that the three airports can operate simultaneously but Cerdá said authorities still need to provide information to confirm that.

He also said that airlines need to know when the three-pronged airport system will be operating at full capacity and who will be based at each facility.

The CEOs of four major Latin American airlines – Aeroméxico, Copa, Avianca and LATAM – said in Brasilia that operating at both the AICM and Santa Lucía, as the government has proposed they do, will be complicated.

“Operating at two [airports] so close to each other doesn’t make sense,” said Aeroméxico chief Andrés Conesa, explaining that splitting operations would increase costs.

Aeroméxico will continue to operate only at the existing Mexico City airport, he said.

IATA vice president Peter Cerdá.
IATA vice president Peter Cerdá.

“If a system like this worked, Toluca would be currently attracting close to eight million passengers a year but it isn’t. It’s an airport that’s losing money every year because it doesn’t have flights,” Conesa added.

The Aeroméxico chief also said that he has seen “absolutely nothing” about how the use of airspace will be redesigned to allow the three airports to operate simultaneously.

Copa CEO Pedro Heilbron said the Panamanian carrier will also only operate at one airport and that it has to be where Aeroméxico is located because the airlines have a codeshare agreement.

“Not all passengers that arrive in Mexico City are going to Mexico City, some go to other small and large cities. If Aeroméxico is in one airport and we’re in another, [the agreement] won’t work,” he said.

Enrique Cueto of LATAM expressed doubt about the viability of the plan, observing that a similar system in the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires, Argentina, has been a “disaster” for airlines and passengers.

In response to the CEOs’ remarks, President López Obrador said on Tuesday that airlines will change their minds about operating at Santa Lucía once the government provides them with more details about the project and the three-pronged aviation plan.

“They’re within their rights [to express doubts] but they’ll change their mind when they have more information,” he said.

But Cerdá raised several questions about the viability of the government’s strategy to meet increasing demand for airline services in the greater Mexico City area.

He said the government hasn’t sought input from airlines about construction of the Santa Lucía airport and that building it without seeking their opinion “would be a mistake.”

Preparation for the construction of two new runways at the air force base site has already begun after the last of seven suspension orders against the project was revoked on October 16. The National Defense Secretariat is in charge of the project.

Cerdá also expressed doubt about the viability of the government’s plan to continue using Santa Lucía as an air force base when it opens as a commercial airport.

“We understand the importance of military operations. They have a specific mission, the defense of the country, that’s their role. The role of commercial aviation is completely different and we have to make sure that we’ll be able to carry it out with the infrastructure that we’re given,” he said.

There is no precedent of a mixed commercial and military airport in a major world city, Cerdá said.

The IATA vice president also said that 4-billion-peso (US $208.1-million) plans to modernize the AICMa third terminal is planned – will merely put a “patch” on saturation problems.

The airport’s capacity “will always be limited,” Cerdá said, because its two runways are too close together to operate simultaneously.

Source: A21 (sp), El Financiero (sp), Milenio (sp), El Universal (sp) 

7 places to consider visiting to celebrate Day of the Dead

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Cleaning up the family bones in Pomuch, Campeche.
Cleaning up the family bones in Pomuch, Campeche.

It’s almost November, which means the eye-catching color of marigolds and the smell of copal and pan de muertos (bread of the dead) are here to herald the coming of the Day of the Dead.

This Mexican tradition, with its roots in pre-Hispanic indigenous cultures and mixed with the syncretic imagery of Catholicism, has become more popular in recent years, both with tourists looking for authentic experiences and Mexicans attempting to preserve a custom seen as being threatened by Halloween.

If you’re looking for a place to celebrate the festivities this year, here are seven recommendations.

Yucatán

The influence of Mayan culture in Yucatán is so profound that the people here have their own name for the Day of the Dead: Hanal Pixán, which means “food of the souls” in Mayan.

Celebrating Hanal Pixan in Yucatán.
Celebrating Hanal Pixan in Yucatán.

The first day of the festival, celebrated on October 31, is called Hanal Palal and is dedicated to children who have passed. The second day, Hanal Nucuch Unicoob, is dedicated to adults who have died. And the third, called Hanal Pixanoob or the Pixán Mass, is dedicated to all the saints. It is on this night that people gather in the cemetery.

Like Day of the Dead elsewhere in Mexico, people here set up elaborate altars on their patios and family tombs. They decorate them with flowers, tree branches, candles and pictures of their lost loved ones.

Pomuch, Campeche

The inhabitants of Pomuch have one of the most unique Day of the Dead rituals in the country. In the first days of November, they clean and prepare the bones of their dead family members while they pray, sing or simply talk to them.

Although the ritual may seem extremely personal, hundreds of visitors make their way to the cemetery in Pomuch each year to observe the cleaning of the bones.

Oaxaca

Oaxaca is a state so rooted in tradition that there is no way it could be left off of this list. This year, authorities have announced some 300 events in the state, mostly in Oaxaca City and the surrounding villages.

This year’s flagship event is the altar at the State Folk Art Museum in San Bartolo Coyotepec. There will also be fairs to celebrate artisanal bread, chocolate and other foods, and an extra-large Oaxacan parade called a comparsa in the streets of Oaxaca City.

Pátzcuaro, Michoacán

Pátzcuaro and the nearby Isla de Janitzio are two of the most popular places in Mexico to experience the Day of the Dead. Hotels are booked months in advance, and even those who book early sometimes find their reservations cancelled a week before the festivities because hotels can charge such high rates.

The cemeteries here were the inspiration for the Disney Pixar film Coco. Even the fishermen who take visitors across Lake Pátzcuaro to the island decorate their boats with altars to the dead.

Day of the Dead in Pátzcuaro.
Day of the Dead in Pátzcuaro.

Aguascalientes

Aguascalientes has celebrated the Day of the Dead with its Cultural Festival of Skeletons since 1994. The festival runs from October 25 to November 3 and features concerts, food fairs and folk art exhibits and sales. The main event is the skeleton parade, which clatters through the streets on November 1.

Veracruz

Called “Xantolo” in Veracruz, Day of the Dead is one of the most important festivals in communities in the north of the state like Pánuco, Tempoal, Tantoyuca, Platón Sánchez and El Higo, a region known as La Huasteca.

The inhabitants march through the streets in costumes representing old people, with wooden artisanal masks and cowboy outfits or their heads covered with large colorful scarves.

Chinahuapan, Puebla

Located in Puebla’s northern sierra, Chinahuapan is where people gather around a mythical lagoon in the middle of town. Here they hold the Festival of Light and Life, an event featuring fluorescent lights, actors, rafts, fireworks and a floating pyramid guarded by skeletons.

Source: Milenio (sp)

With 40 pesos, Don Roberto launched his now-famous Salsa Huichol

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Nayarit salsa maker Don Roberto.
Nayarit salsa maker Don Roberto.

Don Roberto, a Nayarit native who started a now-famous salsa business 70 years ago with just 40 pesos in his pocket, died last weekend at the age of 86.

The history of Salsa Huichol can be traced back to 1949 when a 16-year-old Roberto López Flores was laid off from his bricklaying job and received 40 pesos in severance pay.

The teenager decided to take a gamble on a family recipe, using the money to buy five kilos of chiles and a manual grinder that he would use to make a salsa that he originally called Salsa Cora.

From an inauspicious beginning, López gradually grew the business, incorporated the use of machinery and changed the name of his brand to Salsa Huichol.

In recent years, production increased to 4,000 boxes per day of hot sauces that are shipped across Mexico and to the United States, Canada and Europe. The company uses about 800 tonnes of chiles a year.

Roberto López in his salsa factory.
Roberto López in his salsa factory.

Despite the growth, Don Roberto told the newspaper El Universal a few years ago that he still liked to do things in the old-fashioned way that he learned from his father and grandfather.

For many years, López would personally deliver Salsa Huichol to retailers in Nayarit and nearby states. Initially small stores were the only retailers that would stock the salsa but major supermarket chains such as Walmart and Comercial Mexicana later recognized the demand for the product and placed it on their shelves.

López’s death marks the end of an era but his legacy will live on, Salsa Huichol said in a Facebook post on Sunday that announced the passing of its founder.

“Seventy years ago, Don Roberto López began writing a story that redefined the flavors of his native Nayarit and all of Mexico. Today we honor his memory, we bid him farewell as the great man he was and celebrate the immense legacy that he leaves us with Salsa Huichol. Rest in peace, Don Roberto,” the post said.

News of his death triggered an outpouring of emotion on social media.

“The residents of Nayarit lament the death of Don Roberto López, a businessman of this land that created my favorite salsa: the Salsa Huichol,” state lawmaker Geraldine Ponce wrote on Twitter.

Salsa Huichol was founded 70 years ago.
Salsa Huichol was founded 70 years ago.

“Nayarit is in mourning,” said Nayarit Senator Cora Cecilia Pinedo.

“Roberto López Flores, creator of Salsa Huichol, which has given us [Nayarit natives] . . . recognition in all of Mexico and abroad is no longer with us.”

Source: El Universal (sp), Uno TV (sp) 

IMSS health service turns its attention to staging theater productions

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The 324-seat Juan Moisés Calleja Theater in Mexico City, owned by the IMSS health service.
The 324-seat Juan Moisés Calleja Theater in Mexico City, owned by IMSS.

The Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS), best known for providing healthcare services, is pouring money into its network of theaters and plans to stage at least two major productions a year.

IMSS owns 38 theaters across the country and has invested 37 million pesos (US $1.9 million) this year to renovate 12 of them.

Next year, it plans to restore the Monterrey Theater in Nuevo León and the Linterna Mágica cinema in Mexico City at a combined cost of 80 million pesos (US $4.2 million), while an additional 27 million pesos will go to theater maintenance.

One of the recently restored venues is the 324-seat Juan Moisés Calleja Theater on Reforma avenue in Mexico City, where a play by Elena Garro about the life of revolutionary general Felipe Ángeles will be staged.

IMSS social wellbeing coordinator Olga Georgina Martínez Montañez told the newspaper El Universal that the idea to stage the play came from a presidential commission tasked with organizing events that commemorate the events and figures of Mexican history. IMSS director Zoé Robledo and other high-ranking government officials are members of the commission.

“The idea is to recognize figures of Mexican history that have been forgotten or unfairly remembered as is the case with Felipe Ángeles,” Martínez said, claiming that the staging of the production will mark the commencement of a “new era” for IMSS theaters.

The play about Ángeles, after whom the new Santa Lucía airport will be named, will cost just under 3.2 million pesos for 100 shows, she said.

However, Martínez stressed that the staging of the play and the restoration of theaters are not funded by resources that would otherwise go to IMSS healthcare facilities, which have suffered shortages of medicine and personnel this year.

“There is a special allowance that finances all these activities; we’re not taking anything from healthcare. We operate with our own resources and we’re not competing with healthcare or with Social Security’s other obligations. What we’re doing is reinforcing [IMSS’ services] because everything related to leisure, entertainment and culture benefits human beings, families and society as a whole,” Martínez said.

However, El Universal noted that she didn’t clarify the source of the “special allowance” funds.

Martínez revealed that another play by a “very well-known Mexican playwright” is also in the works. IMSS is seeking an agreement with the Secretariat of Culture to stage the production, she said.

Martínez explained that the aim of the federal government is to reactivate all the activities that IMSS has undertaken in the past. The network of theaters was created to improve the quality of life of all Mexicans whether they are IMSS beneficiaries or not, she said.

Fourteen of the 38 IMSS theaters have “a very active agenda,” the official said, while most of the others only stage productions sparingly.

Three theaters that are currently not in use – located in Tabasco, Tamaulipas and Nuevo León – will be completely restored in 2020, Martínez said.

Source: El Universal (sp) 

Keep the dead alive by remembering them on their special day

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An altar keeps the memories of loved ones alive.
An altar keeps the memories of loved ones alive.

Day of the Dead is by far my favorite holiday in Mexico. My first experience with it was in 2002, when I was here as a university student.

The director of my study abroad program here in Xalapa piled a few of us into his pickup truck and we drove to Naolinco, a picturesque mountain town known for its leather products.

I was immediately enchanted. Altars were all over the place — in people’s homes, in public spaces, in restaurants and stores. As we walked along the street, people invited us into their homes for tamales, bread and homemade wine.

There were carolers at the cemetery. Carolers! With guitars! The brightly colored petals and exquisite smell of cempasúchil (marigolds) were everywhere.

Since then, Day of the Dead has caught on north of the border as well. Even before the popular movie Coco came out, the southern Texas city I return home to was starting to embrace its Mexican heritage in more expansive ways than it ever had before, with altars, decorated skulls and papel picado (colorful tissue paper with intricately cut designs) suddenly appearing alongside Halloween decorations.

Who knew that the dead could bring us together?

Each year in my home we set up our altar with the same enthusiasm with which we decorate the Christmas tree. As the years pass and more people we know and love die, we’ve had to switch to a bigger table, as our collection of dead has grown.

My husband’s grandparents are there, as are my grandmother and my mother. Traditionally, the flower petals are to be sprinkled from the altar to the front door so that the dead can find their way back home from the other side to enjoy the offerings laid out for them.

My grandmother, in life, would not have appreciated her place on the altar. Like many protestants of a certain age, she was suspicious of the “magical” elements mixed in with modern Catholicism.

Day of the Dead is of course a mixture of Catholic and indigenous tradition, one that the Spaniards were only partially successful at co-opting; at least they got to move the dates to the ones they wanted. (I like to think that my grandmother, now on the other side, would be totally cool with it.)

Death is a universal reality, and all cultures have different ways of dealing with it. When I was growing up in central Texas, death was taboo, something no one wanted to talk about; it was sad at best and terrifying at worst.

Halloween was a time not to think about the dead we knew, but to have fun dressing up and getting candy (and subsequent cavities). When I learned later of the history of Halloween from pagan tradition to Catholicism’s version, All Saint’s Day, I felt decidedly more creeped out. Why should we spend any time at all thinking about death? How uncomfortable!

My attitude since has evolved considerably. Now that I’m an adult, death has moved closer and closer to me in the form of the passing of actual people I’ve known and loved, and in the reality and certainty of my own mortality as the years go by.

I’m hopefully still a long way from it, but none of us really knows, do we? For something that’s such a firm fact of life, we sure do avoid thinking about it a lot.

Mexicans don’t (as much), and I think there’s something to be learned from that. We can accept that we’re going to die. We can paint skulls on our faces to remind all of us that life is for the living — that we won’t be around forever, so we’d better get to it!

What does Day of the Dead do for us? It keeps the memories of our loved ones alive. It keeps this culture alive and reminds us of the people we came from. Feel guilty about not thinking enough of your loved ones that have already passed on? Don’t: remembering to do that is built into an annual holiday here.

I am not religious myself. I don’t pretend to know what happens after death, though as an agnostic I fully expect that we simply cease to exist in the way a flame from a candle goes out. As Richard Dawkins has said, we know that consciousness is wrapped up in the brain, and we know that the brain rots, so I have no illusions.

To me, this news is not too disappointing, as I’m fairly certain that, as a dead person, I would not have the consciousness to care. Disappointing would be getting to that point of not existing and not having done anything worthwhile.

That said, I do believe that there is a way to keep our dead alive, and Day of the Dead helps us to do that. Because while they might not still be around, they live on in us, and this holiday helps us remember that in an active way. The ways they shaped us, influenced us, taught us and loved us live on.

Death is sad. We don’t usually wish for it, but learning to accept it and not fear it (at least not too much) is a worthy exercise. Celebrate, remember and love your dead. Sit and chat with them a while.

Share some hot chocolate, some tamales, some pan de muerto, play their favorite music, decorate your face the way their faces look now.

Welcome them back, at least for a couple of days, and celebrate your own beating heart.

Sarah DeVries writes from her home in Xalapa, Veracruz.

Truckers end national strike after talks with government

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Striking truckers park their rigs at the roadside on Tuesday.
Striking truckers park their rigs at the roadside on Tuesday.

A national strike by the truckers’ organization Amotac has come to an end after talks with the government.

The Mexican Alliance of Transportation Organizations declared the strike on Tuesday, threatening to block highways in 32 states.

Interior Secretariat undersecretary Ricardo Peralta, who led the talks with Amotac president Rafael Ortiz, said a permanent table for dialogue was created to allow for the government to work with the truckers.

“All strike actions that could cause roadblocks have been deactivated by the strikers themselves,” Peralta said.

He added that representatives of the truckers and the secretariats of the Interior and Communications and Transportation would begin the first talks on Wednesday.

In order to create a national agenda to attend to the demands that the truckers have had for over 10 years and deal with issues that concern all transportation operators, the country’s six other federal transportation organizations will also be involved in the talks.

Among the truckers’ demands are the prohibition of double-trailer rigs, lower tolls and gasoline prices, more security on the country’s highways and lower tow truck rates.

Tuesday’s protests took place in some 22 states. Some highways were blocked but in many cases the striking drivers parked their trucks and buses at the side of the road.

Sources: Posta (sp), Excélsior (sp)