Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Mexico City's Original Villages-Coyoacán: Pueblo Candelaria Welcomes the Lord of Compassion

On the last Sunday morning in June, El Señor de la Misericordia, the Lord of Compassion, is traveling from Barrio Niño Jesús, where we left him last Sunday, to Pueblo Candelaria, (pueblo indicates a neighborhood larger than a barrio). Having learned that delivery of el Señor from one pueblo or barrio to the next, during his summer tour of visitas across Delegación Coyoacán, happen a tiempo, on time, we make sure to arrive before the scheduled hour of 11 AM at the corner of Avenidas Pacífico and Candelaria, in the virtual center of the borough.

Getting out of our taxi, we see people gathered on the northeast corner of Pacífico, the direction from which El Señor will arrive. Crossing the wide street, with its camellón, median strip of trees, we first notice un tapete de aserrín, a sawdust carpet in the southbound lanes, which have been closed to traffic. These colorful decorations are one of many medieval European Catholic traditions brought by Spanish friars to Nueva España.


The tapete is a relatively simple one of floral designs, but their large size means they were drawn by hand, without the use of pre-cut stencils. 

Then we notice, at the far end of the carpet, a gathering of small statues of saints, each on its equally small palanquin. We haven't seen this at el Señor's other encuentros, encounters, so we wonder what is happening. Approaching the compañeros, companions, of one of the saints, we ask. 

Santiago Matamoros,
St. James the Moor-slayer
Saint of unknown name
(We need to take better journalistic notes)
                   
Saint Isidoro, the farmer
(note mazorca, ear of corn)
brought from a pueblo in Michoacán

Señor de la Columna
Christ in his Passion

Gathering of Saints

In customary amable, kind/considerate, Mexican manner, they explain that this weekend (June 25) is the feast day of San Juan Bautista, St. John the Baptist, an especially important one in the year. So they have brought their saints from their various barrios, not only others in Coyoacán, but elsewhere in Mexico City and even from the state of Michoacán, some two hundred miles to the west (where we lived for three years) to join in this celebration. 

St. John the Baptist


San Juan Bautista, St. John the Baptist, is the patron saint of Villa Coyoacán, the upscale center of the delegación, and its large church where he is also being celebrated today. But this is something else, a celebration of el pueblo, the common people. We recall that he is also the patron saint assigned by the Franciscans to all of the original indigenous quarters of the Mexica city of Tenochtitlán, renamed San Juan Tenochtitlán, as well as to its lead parcialidad, quarter, San Juan Moyotla

We suspect that the importance of St. John the Baptist in relation to the indigenous communities of Nueva España is due to his role as the first one to baptise people into what would become the new faith of Christianity. Hence, he represents the conversion of the "heathen" indios from their old gods to the new one.

St. James the Moor Slayer


St. James is the patron saint of Spain. A disciple of Jesus, James, the brother of John, is believed to have come to the Roman province of Iberia (now Spain and Portugal) to proselytize and establish the Christian faith. He then returned to Judea, where he was martyred. His remains were subsequently returned to Spain and are buried in the church at Compostela. He thus represents the foundation of Christianity in Spain independently of St. Peter and Rome.

During the Reconquest of Spain from the Muslim Moors, it is believed that St. James appeared during the Battle of Clavijo, in 844 C.E., bringing victory to the Christian forces. He then became known as Santiago Matamoros, St. James the Moor Slayer. He is always represented astride his white horse, a Moorish soldier trampled beneath its stamping feet.

Santiago Matamoros, St. James the Moor Slayer
Statue in Church of los Tres Santos Reyes,
Three Saintly Kings, Coyoacán

He is a popular saint in Mexico. In an indigenous Purépecha church dedicated to him in Michoacán, he is dressed as a vaquero, Mexican cowboy, in sarape and sombrero. As with St. John the Baptist, we think his popularity is related to his symbolizing the victory of Christianity over heathen faiths, a task accomplished once again in the Spirtual Conquest of Mexico.

Virgin of Candelaria


As we are contemplating the significance of the hagiography represented at this street corner, we hear the familiar sound of cohetes, the rocket-style firecrackers that announce the arrival of another saint.

La Virgen de Candelaria arrives.
To the left, cohetes are shot off;
the banda wears blue T-shirts

Proceeded by dancers in charro dress, elaborate gentleman/lady cowboy/-girl costumes typical of the western state of Jalisco, a brass banda and coheteros (shooting the cohetes), a large palanquin approaches up Pacífico from the south. It bears a grand queen, dressed in white, holding a child, also in white, and other smaller saints.

Virgin of Candelaria, holding the infant Jesus.
St. John the Baptist is in front.
Other two saints, including a black friar, are unidentified.

La Virgen de Candelaria is the Virgin Mary at the moment when she presents her infant son at the Temple in Jerusalem, traditionally celebrated on February 2, the mid-point of winter and forty days after his nacimiento, birth at Christmas. She is the patron saint of today's host pueblo. With her arrival, all is ready for the reception of el Señor de la Misericordia.

Charros

While we are waiting, with our inveterate curiosity, we approach the charro dancers whom we have not previously encountered at fiestas, to inquire about their participation and their origins.

Lead charro
                                  


The lead charro tells me they are Comparsa San Francisco, a dance troup that accompaines fiestas from San Francisco Culhuacán, a large, originally indigenous pueblo at the eastern edge of Coyoacán. We tell him we plan to visit their pueblo at a later time. The charro dress is an expression of mexicanidad, Mexicanness. It is a very colorful, ornate, dare we say Baroque, Mexican variation on a Spanish theme. The Mexican charro tradition derived from Spanish horsemen who came from Salamanca and settled in Jalisco.

Aztec god of death
     
          Aztec warrior and maiden,
            with eagle of the Mexica



























Charros of Comparsa San Francisco Culhuacán,
In customary Mexican style, they ask us to take their picture, posing formally.

La Virgen and El Señor 

At this point, the sounds of cohetes coming from further up Pacífico tell us that el Señor is approaching.


The Lord of Compassion arrives, accompanied by el Niño Jesús, the Child Jesus, his host for the past week, who also represents the events of Candelaria, but for his own barrio.  Their flower-bedecked palanquin is as elaborate as that of the Virgin's. Perhaps the meeting of Mother and Son, in his two representations as Child and in His Passion, increase the importance of this particular encounter. Pueblo Candelaria is also right next door to Pueblo Tres Santos Reyes, el Señor's home base.

Accompanied by cries of "¡Viva!", "Long live!", el Señor is removed from his palanquin and carried to that of la Virgen, where he is carefully placed among the group of saints.


Flowery Procession of Saints


With el Señor firmly in place, the confradía, brotherhood of the parish of Pueblo Candelaria, starts the procession of saints down Avenida Pacífico, toward their neighborhood. As we watch the palanquins go by, bedecked in hundreds of roses, chrysanthemums and other flowers, with the charro dancers and two bandas accompanying them, we can't but think of the Rose Parade of Pasadena, California. We opine (Mexican writers use this verb a lot) that that commercial affair has nothing on this delightful home-made version, which is also certainly older.

We note that the bearers include many adolescent boys

The other visiting saints follow behind. 

El Niño Jesús, now alone 

Crucifed Christ, who arrived just in time, is followed by Santiago Matamoros.
(In November 2017, we discovered his home, the Church of the Lord of Miracles,
from Colonia Ajusco, just southwest of Candelaria.)

St. Isidoro, the Farmer, followed by the Lord of the Column

A few blocks south, we reach the arch marking the entrance to el Pueblo Candelaria.


The pueblo, like virtually all the original settlements in Mexico City, is distinguished by its narrow callejas, side-streets, which were created long before invention of the automobile.

Calleja of Pueblo Candelaria.
Blue and white papel picado, cut paper, are colors of the Virgin.

The Reception


A few short blocks along, the procession arrives at the church. A traditional portada of flowers surrounds the entrance to the simple, modern edifice.


"He will baptize you in the Holy Spirit"
The words of St. John the Baptist regarding the coming of Jesus the Christ.
The portada is made totally of chrysanthemums.

The original iglesia was built early in the 16th century. Records of it go back to 1577. In the 1950s, the building was razed to make way for construction of the current church. 

El Señor is lowered from the palanquin, followed by his host, la Virgen, and the other attending saints. This time, a new touch is added to the reception.

Two wind machines shoot silver confetti into the air.
The tower at the right of the gate is the only remaining part of the original 16th century church.

St. John the Baptist, the Virgin of Candelaria and the Lord of Compassion are received

Las charras dance


El Pueblo, the People, Watch








Or at least some of them do.


Conclusion


The saints are carried into the church for celebration of Mass.


A group of rondalla musicians accompany the ceremony.

Rondalla is a "folk-style" of guitar-playing singers.
It is one of our favorite styles of Mexican music.

Outside, the clean-up begins.

A joven, youth, wearing a T-shirt marking the day's fiesta, 
uses a traditional broom of twigs to clean up
the tapete de aserrín that greeted the saints.
The type of broom goes back to pre-Hispanic times.
It was a sacred duty of householders
to sweep their house and patio every day.
So one sees Mexicans daily sweeping the entrances
to their homes and shops.

Despedida, Farewell

So ends another passage of el Señor de la Misericordia from one pueblo of Coyoacán to the next. This one is especially memorable for its elaborate, colorful, flower-bedecked parade of multiple saints and its charro dancers.

As we walk out of Pueblo Candelaria, we note some explicit statements of its indigenous roots.

"Cande", portrayed as an Aztec lord, is evidently short for Candelaria.
To the right is a portrayal of the facade of the church.

The battle between the Spanish and the Mexica/Aztecas.
The symbol, upper right, is Ollin, the primal energy of the Universe.
"That it may be infinite while it lasts!"

The Virgin of Guadalupe,
who unites indigenous and Spanish peoples with her love.

"Forum in Defense of Water and Our Territory"
"Water is life and life is defended"

The presenters are all faculty of UNAM,
the National Autonomous University of Mexico,
also located in Coyoacán.

So one has the sense that Candelaria is a pueblo active in defense of its ancient territory, resources and identity.

It is also, clearly, a traditonal working-class neighborhood where one can always find in its callejas something to eat.



And the beauty and vitality of flowers.


Pueblo Candelaria - starred, yellow pueblo.
Pueblo los Tres Santos Reyes, home of el Señor de la Misericordia, is green puebño just west of Candelaria
See also:

Friday, August 5, 2016

Mexico City's Original Villages-Coyoacán: The Lord of Compassion Visits Barrios San Lucas and Niño Jesús, the Child Jesus

Barrio San Lucas, St. Luke's: Where tradition and modernity rub against one another.

Sunday is not a day on which we hurry to get up. It is, after all, supposed to be the Day of Rest. So on the second Sunday in June, we arrive late at the Barrio San Lucas, St. Luke, to meet el Señor de la Misericordia, the Lord of Compassion, on his continuing series of visitas to the pueblos originarios in la Delegación Coyoacán. San Lucas, which is walking distance from our apartment, just across División del Norte boulevard, is a small barrio of winding, one-lane callejas or callejuelas, side streets.

Sadly, when we arrive, el Señor de la Misericordia is already there.


How we wish we had seen his llegada, arrival, from Barrio San Francisco, on this wonderful canoe, covered with mums! We hadn't attended his arrival, a week ago, in Barrio San Francisco, just south of Villa Coyoacán, as we had friends visiting.

El Señor is already in his place inside the church. Mass is being celebrated. 

The Lord of Compassion, seated in St. Luke's Church,
this time in a sky-blue robe,
again surrounded by hundreds of flowers: roses and lilies.

Outside, la fiesta, the party, has already begun.

The community gathers.
Original chapel is at the rear.

The current church of San Lucas was built in the mid-20th century. However, the original, small chapel, constructed some time in the 16th century, still stands to one side of the new church, at the rear of a small atrio.  I ask a member of the fiesta organizing committee, identifiable by his pink polo shirt, if the chapel is ever open. He says it is open on St. Luke's feast day, in mid-October, and for special occasions such as weddings and baptisms. So we know we will have to mark the autumn date for a return visit.

Fiesta committee member, Alfonso Reyes, his daughter and wife.
Note image of el Señor de la Misericordia on his shirt.

Compañeros, buddies


Some other caballeros, gentlemen, offer us a libation of tequila. The Franciscan friar, Bernardino de Sahagún describes in his Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva España, 'The General History of the Things of New Spain', how an alcoholic drink, pulque, a beer of fermented agave juice, which is now distilled into mescal and tequila, was a part of indigenous fiestas. We decline, politely making the excuse that at this time of day it would put us to sleep. They laugh in a manner muy amable, very kind.

When I ask if they are from San Lucas, one says he is from Barrio San Francisco, which brought el Señor here today. Another is from Barrio San Mateo, St. Matthew, which is right next door to us in Parque San Andrés. We tell him we are neighbors and will be sure to attend the barrio's fiesta in September.

Señor from Barrio San Mateo
                                                     
                                         


Y las señoras, the ladies


Muchas señoras, many ladys, at least those not attending mass, are sitting, awaiting the serving of la comida, the afternoon meal, another tradition of fiestas. 

                                

                                

We note that there don't seem to be many children and few young adults, and we wonder why. San Lucas nonetheless appears to be a barrio with many modern, more upscale Mexican homes, although their gated street facades are so simple that they blend in with older houses,

One joven, young man, in the gathering

Two Cultures 


As we leave, we notice a sign hanging on a house directly across from the church. It advises "anyone interested in buying or renting in San Lucas" to first acquaint themselves "with the barrio's customs," in order to respect them. It is a sign of an encounter, if not a clash, between two Mexican cultures: traditional pueblo-based and globalized modern.

It reminds us of articles we have read in the Mexico City press about el pueblo, the people of traditional barrios, resenting the arrival of high-rise apartments and their residents, with their mascotas consentidas, pampered pet dogs, big cars and lack of respect for traditonal ways. In turn, the apartment dwellers resenting the noise of cohetes, the rocket-like firecrackers that announce fiestas and frighten their dogs.

Nos preguntamos. We wonder. In San Lucas, there are no high-rise apartment buildings like the one we live in in Parque San Andrés, only two-story houses. High-rises are evidently not allowed. But there is a tension between old and new. The fiesta says that the traditional is still alive, but the sign says there is a lucha, a struggle going on in el barrio, even if it is a virtually invisible one.

Barrio Niño Jesús: More Co-habitation of Tradition and Modernity

Because we missed El Señor's colorful arrival and animated reception in Barrio San Lucas the previous Sunday, we make sure to get to the meeting place for his arrival in Barrio Niño Jesús, Child Jesus, plenty early. We have passed its picturesque entrance arch many times while riding by on Avenida Miguel Ángel de Quevedo, but have never entered the neighborhood.


When we arrive at the arch, some residents of the barrio are waiting. 

The lady in bright pink shirt tells me she looks forward to the visit of el Señor every year.

Encuentro de los santos, Meeting of the Saints


En un rato, in a little while, we hear the explosions of cohetes, announcing the arrival of a procession. 

 


From within the barrio, the procession emerges, bearing its patron saint, el Niño Jesús, the Child Jesus.

"Welcome, Lord"

Different from San Lucas, youth are among those accompanying the saint. Young women are the bearers of the palanquin.


Soon, we hear other cohetes coming from the north. ¡El Señor llega!, the Lord arrives!


El Señor arrives, accompanied by members of San Lucas. The members of el Niño Jesús parish carry their saint across the wide avenue, stopping traffic, in order to welcome their sacred guest.

Papier maché figures of chinelos,
Moorish-like dancers, accompany el Señor,
once again, with hundreds of fresh roses and lillies.

Long Live el pueblo


El mayordomo, the head of the committee from Niño Jesús, calls out greetings:

"¡Viva el Señor de la Misericordia!
¡Viva San Lucas!
¡Viva el Niño Jesús!

Los feligreses, the faithful, from both parishes echo each "¡Viva!", "Long live...!" As saints are, by definition, eternal, we wonder why the wish for long life. Then we realize, the cheer is for each barrio, each pueblo, itself, for the long life of its people and its traditions, for the continuation of its identity.


¡Bienvenida! - Welcome!



With el Señor leading the way, the two saints and their followers enter el Barrio del Niño Jesús.

Iglesia del Niño Jesús

A couple of short blocks down a narrow calleja, we all arrive at the church. The priest comes out to receive the saints and el pueblo, the people

The priest is a friar, member of an order, either Franciscan or Dominican.

To applause, el Señor is carried into his new hospedaje, lodgings, for the week

And, after mass, la comida comunal, the communal meal.

Among the diners, at right,
we recognize the man in the yellow and purple shirt and red cap and his son with the dinosaur,
from Pueblo Tres Reyes.

Afterwards, we amble around the barrio to get a better sense of it. 

Narrow callejas
characterize the barrio
Virgin of Guadalupe
watches over another approach
to the church. 
      
                                                




















Modern, upper-middle class homes and new, multi-story construction

At the end of one calleja, we even ecounter a guard house, protecting the entrance to a gated community of homes. Later, in a newspaper, we see ads for rentals and purchases of apartments, condominiums and houses in what is obviously presented as an ideally private, tranquil neighborhood near the center of historic, de moda, fashionable Villa Coyoacán.

So, like San Lucas, Niño Jesús, is a combination of traditional pueblo and contemporary upper-middle class urban Mexican life. And the Lord of Compassion is still welcomed and honored. 

We think of the priest, receiving El Señor at the door of the church. The Franciscans, then the Dominicans and other Catholic religious orders, arrived in Mexico in the early 16th century to undertake the Spiritual Conquest. It looks like they were successful.

Barrio San Lucas: Upper-right star
Barrio Niño Jesús: Lower-left star
Villa Coyoacán: Purple colonia west of San Lucas
Parque San Andrés: gold "arrowhead"-shaped colonia just east of San Lucas

See also:
Mexico City's Original Villages: Introduction - Landmarks of the Spiritual Conquest
The Spiritual Conquest: The Franciscans - Where It All Began
Mexico City's Original Villages: Coyoacán's Many Pueblos
Coyoacán: Pueblo of Tres Santos Reyes and the Lord of Compassion
Coyoacán: The Lord of Compassion Goes Visiting
Coyoacán: Pueblo Candelaria Welcomes the Lord of Compassion
Coyoacán: The Lord of Compassion Travels from San Pablo Tepetlapa to Santa Úrsula Coapa  
Coyoacán: The Lord of Compassion Returns Home to Pueblo Tres Santos Reyes    
Coyoacán: San Mateo Churubusco - Identity Via Church and Market