Miami Herald

Mexico celebrates Day of the Dead after pandemic forced closures last year

- BY MARCO UGARTE AND LISSETTE ROMERO Associated Press

MEXICO CITY

Mexico returned Sunday to mass commemorat­ions of the Day of the Dead, after traditiona­l visits to graveyards were prohibited last year because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But the one-year hiatus showed how the tradition itself refuses to die: Most families still celebrated with home altars to deceased loved ones, and some snuck into cemeteries anyway.

Gerardo Tapia Guadarrama on Sunday joined many others at the cemetery as he visited the grave of his father Juan Ignacio Tapia, who died in May 2020 of a thrombosis.

Even though cemeteries in Mexico were closed to visitors last year to avoid spreading the virus, so strong is the tradition that his son still slipped into the cemetery in the eastern Mexico City suburb of Valle de Chalco to visit him.

‘Lat year it was prohibited, but we found a way,” Tapia Guadarrama said slyly. Much of graveyard has low walls that can be jumped.

“To live is to remember,” he said. “What they [the dead] most want want is a visit from those they were close to in life.”

The holiday begins Oct. 31, rememberin­g those who died in accidents; it continues Nov. 1 to mark those died in childhood, and then those who died as adults on Nov. 2.

Observance­s include entire families cleaning and decorating graves, which are covered with orange marigolds. At both cemeteries and at home altars, relatives light candles, put out offerings of the favorite foods and beverages of their deceased relatives.

There was a special altar in downtown Mexico City dedicated to those who died of COVID-19. Relatives were allowed into a fenced-off plaza and offered equipment to print out photos of their loved ones, which they could then pin, along with handwritte­n, messages on a black wall.

It was a quiet, solemn remembranc­e in a country where coronaviru­s deaths touched almost all extended families.

Mexico has over 288,000 test-confirmed deaths, but probable coronaviru­s mortalitie­s as listed on death certificat­es suggest a toll closer to 440,000, by some counts the fourth-highest in the world.

For a country where people usually die surrounded by relatives, COVID-19 was particular­ly cruel, as loved ones were taken off alone in plastic tents, to die alone in isolation.

“The only thing I could say to him was, ‘Do everything the doctors tell you,’ ” Gina Olvera said of her father, who died of coronaviru­s.

“That was the last thing I was able to say to him.” Olvera said she told her father, as she taped his photo to the memorial, “Well, you didn’t make it, but you are here with us.”

One woman wept as she pinned up a photo of a female relative. Another, Dulce Moreno, was calm but sad as she pinned up a photo of her uncle and her grandfathe­r, Pedro Acosta Nunez, both of whom died of complicati­ons of COVID-19.

“The house feels empty now without him [the grandfathe­r], we feel lost,” Moreno said.

For most, it was a joyful return, above all, to public activities like public altars and the Hollywood-style Day of the Dead parade that Mexico City adopted to mimic a fictitious march in the 2015 James Bond movie “Spectre.”

“These days are not sad here; they are a way to remember our dead with great happiness,” said Otilia Ochoa, a homemaker who came along with dozens of others to take pictures of the flower-decked offerings near the coronaviru­s memorial.

 ?? RICHARD VOGEL AP ?? A family from Oaxaca, Mexico, stands by the grave site of a relative during the festivitie­s for the Day of the Dead at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles on Saturday.
RICHARD VOGEL AP A family from Oaxaca, Mexico, stands by the grave site of a relative during the festivitie­s for the Day of the Dead at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles on Saturday.

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