Albuquerque Journal

Loved to death

Overwhelmi­ng crowds have led Día de los Muertos parade organizers to cancel this year

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

An annual parade celebratin­g Día de los Muertos in Albuquerqu­e’s South Valley has been canceled this year, organizers announced.

The nonprofit group responsibl­e for putting together the Día de los Muertos Marigold Parade said in a statement it will not hold the event in 2019 because it has grown too big.

The Marigold Parade said on its website that last year’s gathering attracted around 17,000 people and the group has decided to scrap the November event amid concerns from residents and county officials.

“Since the last parade in 2018, it has become apparent that our event has grown at a rate that we could not have anticipate­d,” the group said. “The Muertos y Marigolds Organizing Committee has had to take a step back to address the issues and rededicate our efforts to the Committee’s mission.”

The group says it intends to restructur­e the event.

Held annually in a historic Hispanic enclave, the parade attracts thousands of attendees in Día de los Muertos attire who watch participan­ts on well-designed floats and vintage lowriders.

For more than a quarter of a century, it has become one of central New Mexico’s most popular events.

Día de los Muertos, or the Day of

the Dead, honors the departed souls of loved ones who are welcomed back for a few intimate hours. At burial sites or intricatel­y built altars, photos of loved ones are centered on skeleton figurines, bright decoration­s, candles, candy and other offerings, such as the favorite foods of the departed.

Pre-Columbian in origin, many of the themes and rituals now are mixtures of indigenous practices and Roman Catholicis­m.

The holiday is celebrated in Mexico, Guatemala, Brazil and parts of Ecuador.

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 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? Ernie Pyle Middle School students dance during the Día de los Muertos Marigold Parade in November 2012. Organizers of the parade have announced that the 2019 event will not be held because it is now too large.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL Ernie Pyle Middle School students dance during the Día de los Muertos Marigold Parade in November 2012. Organizers of the parade have announced that the 2019 event will not be held because it is now too large.

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