Ultimately, there are individuals who are trying to celebrate Dia de Los Muertos but have zero knowledge behind this holiday. They are painting their faces like sugar skulls and have do not fully understand the culture. So therefore, I believe that non-Mexicans can not celebrate Dia de Los Muertos without engaging in cultural appropriation.…
Dia de los Muertos is a Mexican Celebration where the people come together to cook and celebrate those who have departed, it is believed that the people who have departed, visit their families on this special holiday. During Dia de los Muertos Altars are decorated with flowers, candles, skulls, and pan de los muertos (Also known as Dead Bread in America)…
The holiday Dia de los Muertos celebrates life of the dead. In Mexico, the celebration is held from October 31 to November 2. The origins are a combination of inherited beliefs and Catholic teachings. The days are a lasting and enduring ritual when the living converse with the dead. The roots of this tradition go back to pre-Hispanic cultures of Meso-Americans. When the Spaniards invaded the country this celebration was rooted so deeply that even after 5 centuries it is still celebrated like its first days. When the Aztecs arrived in Mexico they were wearing long shawl like things that were brightly colored. These are called sarapes which are now worn by men.On Día de los muertos tradition holds that the dead come back to earth to visit the living.…
Cinco de Mayo is almost here. It is on Friday, May 5,2017. It is a day to celebrate the culture, achievements and experiences of people with a Mexican background, who live in the United States. This is a day where businesses promote Mexican services and goods, particularly food, drinks and music.…
The Day of the dead festival is a very colorful and traditional festival. Every Spanish speaking country has different ways of organizing their festivals. Mexico’s festival has the most sophisticated and spectacular festivals from all the other Spanish speaking countries. Mexico’s Festival of the dead is very spectacular, and oddly very traditional. The festival includes massive stands that include artwork and a quantity of decorative and extremely colorful skulls. Throughout the whole festival, the theme of…
Cinco de Mayo is a widely celebrated holiday that some don’t understand. This holiday is translated as “the Fifth of May”, which is celebrated for the Battle of Puebla. This battle, against the French, took place on May 5, 1862. The French sent a huge (undefeated) army of 8,000 to invade Mexico because they hadn’t paid back their war debts. The French army had been well trained and better equipped than the Mexicans. As the French came to Puebla, the 4,000 Mexicans refused to back down which led to the victory. This victory although was short lived, but this victory showed that they were strong and powerful. This unlikely victory against overwhelming odds is remembered every May fifth. Cinco de Mayo represented a great symbolic victory for the Mexican government and bolstered the resistance movement. This holiday is often confused with Mexico’s Independence Day, which is on September 16.…
Dia de los Muertos or Day of the Dead is a celebration of life rather then death throughout the Hispanic community. On November first and second, All Saints day and All Souls day, Hispanics gather to celebrate in their own customs and intrigues according to their specific cultural region. However different these regional cultures may be they all share in a similar celebration of life through remembrance. Many times these festivities are held at the grave site of their loved ones and also throughout the streets. Decorations range from skeletons, toys, elaborate costumes, paper cutouts, elaborate wreaths and crosses, flowers (commonly Marigolds), and candles. Many of these decorations are used to make altars in honor of the deceased. These…
Every year on September 16th, Mexicans come together to celebrate their independence. On this day Mexicans come together to rejoice in their freedom from Spanish rule. In the morning hours of September 16, 1810, Miguel Hidalgo rang his church bell which began the Independence War. This war would last up to ten years! Now every September 16th Mexicans come together and celebrate. Mexican flags wave from every house, building, cars, etc. the flags represent their national colors. Their national colors include green, white, and red. Food is a main priority when it comes to this celebration. Hundreds of food stands are filled with a variety of finger foods, Mexican candies, and Punch. Mariachi Music bands play live music to the gathering crowds.…
This is also a big celebration where they will show respect to their deceased love ones. One of the things that is done is making of huge kites. These kites are made from rice paper and bamboo and can be up to 20 meters in diameter. This is the way they communicate with their loved ones. After flying them the people will burn them, because this allows the spirits of their loved ones to return from the earth. The people will decorate the graves with colorful lots of colorful flowers and they will actually celebrate in the graveyard where they can pray and show respect to their loved ones. Also through out the day their will be music playing and fire works will be set off through the night. Also involved in the celebration is food. One famous dish is the salad called el fiambre. This salad is made from many different ingredients. The ingredients used depends on the family. Some of them put in food that their loved ones liked. Things like eggs, meat, and vegetables are put into it. It can have more then 50 ingredients. Some of them even have 100. This salad takes around two days to prepare and everyone works together to get it ready. It then will be eaten on this day either in the grave yard or at home. At the people's homes they will set up an alter to their loved ones which they will decorate and also have food on it. Saints Day is truly a big…
Gnojewski, Carol . Day of the Dead: A Latino Celebration of Family and Life. Enslow Publishers, Inc, 2005.…
October 31st, Day of the Dead, is celebrated in Mexico and other countries by families who have dealt with the grief and pain of loved ones that have passed away. Day of the Dead is a time focused on gatherings of friends and family to pray and remember others who have died (Villalba).…
“The One Day of The Year” was set in Australia, in the 1960’s. It explores the universal theme of Father- Son conflict against the background of the beery haze and the heady, nostalgic sentimentality of Anzac Day. It is a play to make us question a standard institution, but it is the likeability and genuineness of the characters that give the play its memorable qualities: Alf, the nobody who becomes a somebody on this day of days; Mum, the anchor of the family; Hughie, their Son, with all the uncertainties and rebelliousness of youth; and Wacka, the Anzac, with his simple, healing wisdom.…
Day of the Dead is celebrated in the beginning of November by mainly Latin American countries. In Mexico, it is a major holiday and taken very seriously. It is a celebration in which the dead are joined with the living. Those from the afterlife come in contact with life on earth and partake in both scared and joyous festivities. The dead come as spirits from their afterlife to rejoin their families and visit their homes. It is a time when the deceased are able to enjoy once again the pleasures of life. This holiday is unlike any other. This holiday gives believers the ability to somewhat under stand the afterlife or at least connect with it. It functions as a "ritualistic elaborate celebration of life, rather than a sober mourning of its passing." By rejoicing in bright colors, extravagant outfits and giving gifts of food and spices Mexicans as well as other cultures are able to cope with mortality.…
As many Australians know Australia day is celebrated on the 26th of January. Australia day celebrates the British flag at the head of Sydney cove by Governor Arthur Philip in 1788, This day was also known as the day of mourning by the 21st century.…
Day of the Dead is a holiday which is celebrated in Mexico and begins on October 31st; the day of Halloween in the United States, and ends on November 2nd. On the Day of the Dead, families and friends come together to remember and pray for their relatives who have died. This holiday is much like Memorial Day which is celebrated in the United States.…