Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Original Villages | Xochimilco: Santa María Tepepan, Part I - Drama of the Christians vs. the Pagans

The Mother of the Son of God Replaces the Mother Goddess 


More than a year ago, when we began our exploration of Mexico City's original villages—and their churches and related religious fiestas as the remaining visible signs of what has become known as the Spiritual Conquest, i.e., the transformation of indigenous culture into a Spanish Catholic one—we knew that our first visit had to be to Tepeyac, the site of the Basilica of the Virgin of Guadalupe.

Situated a few miles north of Centro Histórico—hence of the former city of Tenochtitlán—the Basilica, with its related churches and chapels, embodies the synthesis of indigenous and European Catholic beliefs and rituals. This synthesis is most vividly expressed in the vision of the indigenous peasant, Juan Diego. The peasant's vision of Our Lady of Guadalupe took place on the hill of Tepeyac, the site of a Mexica temple to the mother goddess, Tonantzin. The morena, brown-skinned lady spoke in Nahuatl, the region's main indigenous tongue, giving Juan Diego—now the beatified San Juan Diego—the task of convincing the Catholic Bishop to have a chapel built for her on the place where the indigenous temple had stood before the Spanish destroyed it. Her appearance and request represented the Virgin's special choice of Mexico as her people and thus, of the bonding of Catholicism and the indigenous peoples of the land.

The association of the Virgin Mary with indigenous sites related to the ancient mother goddess is not restricted to Tepeyac and the Basilica. One of many others is a similar hill in the south of what is now Mexico City, in the Delegación [Borough] Xochimilco, which incorporates the indigenous altepetl, city-state of Xochimilco and its surrounding pueblos on what was the south shore of Lake Xochimilco. There, on a hill called Tepepan, "the place at the top of the hill" in Nahuatl, there once stood another temple to Tonantzin. Shortly after the Spanish Conquest, the Franciscans built a chapel there to the Virgin.

Santa María Tepepan


Santa María de la Visitación, Tepepan, Xochimilco

In 1526, Friar Peter of Ghent, the first Franciscan to come to Nueva España, erected the chapel. Later in that century, Friar Francisco Millán built the church on the same site.  Although the church is dedicated to St. Mary of the Visitation (commemorating Mary's visit to Elizabeth, pregnant with John the Baptist, after the Annunciation of Mary's own pregnancy), its primary commemoration is of Her Assumption into Heaven, which is celebrated on August 15.

Mural of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary into Heaven,
on the interior of the church dome.
The central triangle contains the all-seeing Eye of God

Welcome to St. Mary of Tepepan


So on the Sunday morning following August 15, we engage Andrés, our favorite taxi driver, to take us to Tepepan. Turning off the main road that leads into the center of Xochimilco, we climb a narrow cobblestone street up to "the place at the top of the hill".

A portada, a decorative arch at the top of a ramp, tells us we have arrived. Bidding Andrés hasta luego, until the next time, we leave the cab and head up the ramp.

    
Portadas 
lead to the church atrio, atrium.

"Love and Faith in You, Mary"
"St. Mary of Tepepan, worthy one of God, pray for your pueblo (people/village)"

The church, truly "at the top of the hill", is
approached by a ramp on the east side
and a stairway on the south side. 

As we enter the atrio,
a banda is about to enter the church

"Mary, you are my light."

The sanctuary reverberates with the sound of the brass banda
honoring a representation of the Virgin.

Back outside, a procession forms
to carry an image of the Virgin through the streets of Tepepan.

Chinelos, "disguised ones" whose dance consists of jumping and spinning,
are ready to accompany the procession.
We have seen them at many fiestas and love their colorful costumes and liveliness. 

The main events of the day of a fiesta usually begins with a procession of the saint being honored. Recently, we participated in a procession that lasted two and a half hours in Colonia Santo Domingo in Coyoacán, so we think twice about joining this one, especially through a pueblo on the side of a hill crisscrossed with cobblestone streets!

At that moment, our eye is caught by a small group of men dressed as Spanish caballeros, knights or gentlemen of the Renaissance period, and another group dressed as Moors—i.e., the North African Muslims who ruled much of the Iberian Peninsula from 711 C.E to 1492. From the beginning, Iberian Christians fought to expel them. This Reconquista, Reconquest, was finally completed under Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, who celebrated by sponsoring Christopher Columbus' voyages west across the Atlantic.

We have seen these Spanish caballeros at two other fiestas, where we learned they are called Santiagueros, Warriors or Knights of St. James. At those fiestas, they only enacted a brief dance and "sword fight". Here, with the Moors present, something else appears to be in the offing.

Dance of the Moors and Christians


Islamic "Moor" Caliph
Warrior of St. James

Santiago, St. James, is the patron saint of Spain. One of the twelve disciples of Jesus, he is believed to have come to Spain from Roman Judea to preach the Gospel and found the Christian Church, separate from St. Peter and Rome. He returned to Judea and was subsequently martyred.

Centuries later, when Christians were driving the Islamic Moors from the Iberian Peninsula, St. James showed up riding a white horse and enabled them to win a major battle. He then became Santiago Matamoros, St. James the Moor Slayer. Centuries later, he is believed to have shown up in what is now Mexico to help Cortés defeat one of the indigenous tribes that opposed him.

Squad of Warriors of St. James
(The standard image of Santiago:
a Moor lying trampled
beneath the hooves
of his horse)

The Parra Rodríguez family,
 (from) Santa Cruz Atoyac.
(an original pueblo in Delegación Benito Juárez)

The religous orders that were called to Nueva España by Cortés brought with them the Dance of the Moors and the Christians as a dramatic way to repeat the message that Cortés had first announced to the indigenous tribes he met:
either submit to the Spanish crown, the true King of the World, and accept the true God of the Catholic Church, and His Son, the Savior Jesus Christ, or be slaughtered.
So Cortés presented the original peoples with a stark choice: life or death.

We have read about the Dance of the Moors and Christians, but never seen it performed. When we lived in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán, we witnessed the Purépecha Dance of the Moors, but there was no representation of a confrontation with Christians. So our choice of whether or not to follow the procession is clinched. We stay in the atrio, excited that we will now see a version of this old drama.

A simple fife and drum
provide a musical rhythm
throughout the drama
.

      
Captain of the Christian forces commissions his "ambassador"
to go to the Moors and negotiate their surrender.
                 


The Moors, curiously, are led by a general in 18th or 19th century Spanish Army uniform.

The negotiation alternates between formal declarations of positions
and tests of sword fighting.

Three Moorish warriors prepare to engage in the confrontation.

A second round of negotiation/confrontation.

And yet another.

Finally, the caliph, himself, comes forward.
He declaims all the accomplishments the Moors have made in developing al Andalus,
the Arabic name for the Iberian Peninsula. They will not cede to the Christians.

The Moors hold a council to determine their action. They decide to fight.

The Christians mobilize for battle.

The Moors attack the Christians,
curiously, one at a time.


Even the littlest Moor confronts the enemy.

Finally, the caliph, himself, does battle.

In the end, the Moors submit to the Christians,
accepting the Christian faith.

The message of the drama is clear:
Christianity is the True Faith and the Spanish Crown is its True Protector. To this, all "pagan" faiths and political realms must submit, be they Islamic Moors from North Africa in 1492 or the Aztecs and other peoples of "New Spain" a short thirty years later.
This is the Conquest, both military and spiritual. 

Second Act


The Dance (or Drama) of the Moors and the Christians is immediately followed by the return of the procession from the streets of Tepepan. Mass begins and is celebrated underneath a huge tarp covering much of the atrio. It is the current, living demonstration of the fulfillment of the Spiritual Conquest. 

The banners or standards are from several other pueblos in Xochimilco
and neighboring delegaciones, whose faithful have come to Tepepan's fiesta.

Los feligreses, the faithful

The tranquility of the Mass gives us the opportunity to take retratos, portraits,
of la gente, the people.



Delegación Xochimilco
is large pink area in southeast of the City.

Pueblos and Colonias of Xochimilco

Santa Maria Tepepan (green/yellow star)
is in the northwest corner

Gray-green area to the northeast are the chinampa gardens of Lake Xochmilco.

Gray-green area to the south are the mountains that rise to form the southern boundary of Mexico City.

Friday, August 18, 2017

Original Villages | Coyoacán: Santo Domingo Welcomes the Lord of Compassion

The Savior Who Goes Visiting His People


A little over a year ago, on a sunny Sunday morning in the spring, we were drawn onto our apartment's balcony by the sound of exploding cohetes, rocket-style firecrackers. They were announcing a nearby fiesta, so we decided to investigate their source, a pueblo not far to the south of us in Delegación Coyoacán, Following the sound of the explosions led us to the pueblo originario, the original village, of los Tres Santos Reyes, the Pueblo of the Three Sacred Kings, aka Los Reyes. It's full name is Tres Santos Reyes HueytlilacHueytlilac (place of the swampy waters) is its original Nahua name, now rarely mentioned. It was first inhabited some 3,000 years ago.

When we arrived at the parish church, we wondered what saint was being honored, as the Three Kings of the Christmas Story are the formal patron saints of the pueblo and are celebrated on January 6. But on this Sunday in April, shortly after Easter, it was honoring el Señor de la Misericoridia, the Lord of Compassion, a figure representing Christ in His Passion—His suffering during Semanta Santa, Holy Week. He, in fact, had become the pueblo's main protector because he was seen as the source of a miracle a few centuries ago, after the Spanish Conquest, in which prayers to him had saved el pueblo, the people, of the various indigenous villages in what is now the borough of Coyoacán, from an epidemic,

Versions of such miracles against plagues are common throughout Mexico. The Spanish brought many diseases, such as smallpox, to which the indigenous had no immunity. Each miraculous salvation has its own representation of the Christ that performed the miracle. We recall that in Tzintzuntzan, a Purépecha pueblo in Michoacán, near where we initially lived in Pátzcuaro, he is el Señor de la Rescate, the Lord of the Rescue.

Intertwining Communal Roots


That day at Tres Reyes, we also learned that every summer, El Señor is carried forth from el pueblo to visit several of these other pueblos and barrios, where he is received by their respective saints, gives his blessing on the people and receives their adoration and thanks. He spends one to two weeks asentado, seated, in the church of each pueblo before moving on to the next. Hence, a series of bienvenidas and despedidas, welcomes and farewells, to El Señor are festejados, celebrated, across Coyoacán from late May to early September.

El Señor de la Misericordia, the Lord of Compassion,
ready for his departure from Los Reyes in late May, 2016.

We spent many Sundays last summer meeting up with El Señor as he was transferred, with much communal animo, spirit, from one pueblo to the next. The climax came on the first Sunday in September, when el Señor was returned with much ceremony to Tres Reyes. Through these encounters, it became very clear to us that the function of this ritual journey is to link together the borough's original villages in a manifestation of common belief, custom and history which maintains the bonds of a shared identity that is muy arraigo, very rooted, in their pre-hispanic past.

However, for various reasons, including our energy level, we did not attend every transfer. So this summer, when we learned that one Sunday in August the Lord of Compassion was moving between two pueblos in southern Coyoacán that we had not visited last year, we were excited to have the opportunity to renew and add to our experience of them.


Colonia Pedregal Santo Domingo and the Church of the Holy Founders


We learned that a procession going to meet and receive el Señor was scheduled to leave la Parroquia de los Santos Fundadores, the Parochial Church of the Holy Founders, in la Colonia Pedregal Santo Domingo, at 10 AM. Last year, we had learned the hard way, when we arrived late at one such transfer, that these events occur pretty much on time, as two pueblos are coordinating the meeting and transfer of El Señor. Pedregal Santo Domingo is just southeast of Pueblo Tres Reyes, and not far from our base in Parque San Andrés, so we call for a taxi at 9:30 and arrive at the church just before 10. 

Portada of fresh flowers at entrance to the church atrio
 honors two priestly saints and the Lord of Compassion,
who will be received here today.
"First, contemplate, then teach, and preach, always."
Motto of the Dominican order

Clearly, the procession is about to begin. The statues of two saintly friars and the Virgin Mary are in place on an anda, movable platform, covered with fresh flowers, waiting below the floral portada at the entrance to the church atrio, atrium. A priest is moving among the crowd, checking that all is ready. He is wearing the green robes of the Season of Trinity, the summertime period between Pentecost, the day of the descent of the Holy Spirit onto the disciples after Christ's Ascension to Heaven, forty days after His Resurrection on Easter, and Advent, in the fall, preparing for Christmas.

When we first learned that the name of the church was the Holy Founders, we were puzzled, as a single saint is usually the patron of a parish. So we approach one of the men attending the anda and ask about the two saints: "This is St. Francis (in the front) and that is St. Dominic." 

               
St. Francis of Assisi and St. Dominic,
with the Virgin Mary

Parish priest
in Trinity's green robes

Tapete de asserín, sawdust carpet.
crosses the atrio to the church entrance.

Sanctuary
The church is obviously 20th century modern,
a replacement of  the original
but filled will flowers, as is traditional.

As has happened so many times with us in our ambles into an original pueblo of Mexico City, the light dawns on us. Of course, St. Francis was the founder of the Franciscans, the first religious order to come to Nueva España to evangelize, i.e., convert, the indigenous people into Spanish Catholics. St. Dominic was the founder of the Dominicans in the early 13th century. His order was the second to arrive in the New World. So the Holy Founders are the founders of the first two orders to come to save souls in Nueva España, the initiators of that massive socio-cultural transformation now called the Spiritual Conquest. We are here today to witness yet another still living manifestation of that process.

St. Dominic's feast day is August 8; hence this fiesta in mid-August in this, his Colonia Pedegral Santo Domingo. (Pedregal is the name of the stony area in southwestern Coyoacán, consisting of volcanic rock that resulted from the eruption of the volcano Xitle about 100 CE. which buried the nearby first city in the Valley, Cuicuilco.)

Los Indios


Just outside the atrio are a group of women and girls dressed in long red skirts edged with rows of wooden tubes, a form of ceremonial dress we haven't seen before in our adventures. Inveterate questioner that we are, we ask one young woman about her attire. She shyly directs us to speak to a middle-aged woman wearing the attire and a grey shirt, instead of a white one which all the others wear.

Los Indios Danzantes
In addition to the wooden tubes on their skirts that sound as they dance,
they carry rattles and miniature bows and arrows.

The leader is front and center.

The lady politely tells us they are "Los Indios Danzantes¨, the Indian Dancers. Knowing that such groups participating in processions often come from other pueblos, I ask where they are from. "We are of Santo Domingo", she says with that quiet but firm Mexican pride. I ask about the traje tradicional, the traditional dress, as it is new to me. She tells me that it originates from the state of Zacatecas, far to the north of Mexico City. She then excuses herself to begin the dance. Los Indios (yes, the masculine form of the noun) have the major responsibility of leading the procession. 

As I watch them begin their obviously well practiced moves, I recall having learned from seeing many other traditional indigenous dances at such fiestas, that they arrived in a more Europeanized Mexico City from las provincias, the provinces, i.e. the outlying, more traditional states, only after the Mexican Revolution, which opened up of the issue of Mexican identity rooted in the complex of indigenous civilizations now known as Mesoamerican. So here is yet another such dance, apparently brought to the city from Zacatecas, another indigenous element in the mixture that is Mexican Catholic ritual.

The Procession 


The priest blesses all the participants with holy water (including this observer and our camera) and the procession starts off, led by Los Indios, with the tempo set by a drummer. There is no usual brass banda.

Drummer sets the tempo for the dancers and the procession.
His rhythms vary and at times are complex.

The men of the parish cofradia, brotherhood, lift and carry the anda forward.
The empty space below the circular canopy is reserved for 
the Lord of Compassion.

"Family that prays is united."
(Carnival rides for the fiesta's evening fun can be seen to the rear.)

Two representations of the Christ in his Passion, follow:

"The (crucifed) Lord of Chalma"
Chalma is a shrine several miles west of Mexico City, in the State of Mexico,
to which peregrinaciones, walking pilgrimages, are made.
Pueblos from Coyoacán participate in them.

To the rear is the Lord of the Column,
Jesus, tied to a post, where he was beaten before being crucified.

The red shirts worn by the bearers of the Lord of Chalma
indicate, on the back, that they have participated in this year's pilgrimage to the shrine,
thus earning the right to bear his image in this prosession.

At one street corner in the colonia,
another saint, el Niño Jesús,
the Child Jesus,
joins the procession.

This young man,
who is supervising
el Niño, tells us, with pride,
that his group is from
a town in the state of Puebla,
miles to the east.


The network of indigenous pueblos
spreads far and wide.

As the procession winds through the callejas, narrow streets of the colonia,
Los Indios keep up their disciplined dance.

When they stop, while the bearers of the heavy andas are resting,
they shoot their miniature (cross) bows and arrows.

The words on the bow say,
"Long live Santo Domingo"
We are sure this refers not just to the eternal saint,
but also to his pueblo, this community of the faithful.

If you have any doubts about
the strength of tradition and belief,
this leader's face should end them.


       

 

Bearers of the anda of St. Francis and St. Dominic
show their pride during a rest stop.


Some of el pueblo, the people, attending the procession.

More signs of pride in indigenous tradition


As we follow the procession winding through the colonia's steets, at one point, we happen to look away from the march to the buildings around us. There, painted on walls are murals of ancient images.

We think this is either
the Nahua "Old" god,
or the god of fire.

The harvesting of maiz, corn, the basis of indigenous and contemporary Mexican life.

The modern version of grinding corn
to produce masa, corn dough, to then press into tortillas.
Maiceria is a corn grinding mill.

"Without corn there is no country!
(This is a basic Mexican declaration.)

It is our sacred food
gift of the Mother Earth,
root of our culture;
We are men and women of corn!

...it arrives at the mill,
green white, red and various colors.

From early in the morning until the nightime,
the torillería (tortilla-making shop) of Migueil "The Paleface"
supplies the population of Santo Domingo.
Fernando Díaz Enciso

Catty-cornered across the street from the torillería stands the likely source of the murals:
The Center of Arts and Trades, Union of the Residents of Santo Domingo.

The man portrayed to the right, holding a rifle, is Emiliano Zapata, who led the Mexican Revolution
in the state of Morelos, just south of Mexico City, seeking return of land from Spanish hacienda owners to his indigenous people.  

The Center of Arts and Trades, Union of the Residents of Santo Domingo.
The red banner, adds: "The Little School of Emiliano Zapata"

The mural on the interior wall intrigues us, as it represents a continuation of the
post-revolutionary Mural Movement, which we explored in depth earlier in our Ambles.
Apparently, vestiges of the Revolution and the Mural Movement still live here in
Santo Domingo. We will have to return someday to explore it further.

Meeting the Lord of Compassion


After about an hour and a half of walking through the streets of Santo Domingo, with many stops for the anda bearers and the dancers to rest, we finally come out onto a wide avenue filled with a crowd of people, a long tapete de asserín running some distance up the middle and the usual temporary puestos, stalls, selling food that come with a fiesta. This is where the pueblo of Santo Domingo will meet the adjoining pueblo of Ajusco, who will deliver the Lord of Compassion into their caring hands.

Calle Mixquic, part of the boundary between Colonias Santo Domingo and Ajusco.
Ready and waiting the Lord's arrival.

Tapete de asserín
The Lord of Compassion awaits under the canopy
at the far end. 

The people of Ajusco protectively await the transfer of el Señor.

El Señor is brought forward.
Ajusco's patron saint, The Lord of the Miracles,
another crucified Christ, stands to the rear left.


He is carefully set in His place of honor, beneath the circular canopy,
on the Santo Domingo anda.

The Lord of Compassion,
together with St. Francis.

The Saints begin their return to the Church of the Holy Founders in Santo Domingo.

The anda from Ajusco,
now without the Lord of Compassion,
follows behind.

The procession from the Colonia of Ajusco is led by a brass banda.

And a comparsa, dance troupe of concheros,
Aztec-style dancers we have seen at other fiestas.

Concheros del Señor del Chalma

It's All About el Pueblo, the Community of People Sharing and Passing on Their Traditions


Rostros, faces of el pueblo.


Delegaciones of Mexico City
Coyoacan is dark purple area in the middle.

Colonias, Pueblos and Barrios of Coyoacán

Colonia Pedregal Santo Domingo (green star)
is just southwest of Pueblo Tres Santos Reyes (dark green area), home of the Lord of Compassion;
Colonia Ajusco is light reddish area to southeast of Santo Domingo.

The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM)
is just west of Santo Domingo.

Colonia Parque San Andrés (upper right) is Mexico City Ambles' homebase.