Official and Religious Holidays
January 1: Año Nuevo (New Year's Day), is an official
Mexican holiday.
January 6: Día de los Santos Reyes is the day when
Mexicans exchange Christmas presents in accordance with the arrival of
the three gift-bearing wisemen to Jesus Christ. This day culminates the
Christmastime festivities.
January 17: Feast Day of de San Antonio de Abad is a religious
holiday during which the Catholic Church allows animals to enter the church
for blessing.
February 2: Día de la Candelaria is a religious holiday that is celebrated with processions, dancing, bullfights in certain cities, and the blessing of the seeds and candles. The festivities are best seen in: San Juan de los Lagos, Jalapa; Talpa de Allende, Jalisco; and Santa Maria del Tuxla, Oaxaca. Since some of the tourist highlights are roads away from each other, the best way to go about your stay here in Mexico is to use a car hire. Like rentals in other parts of the world like car rental ireland, cars for hire are fit for every travel purpose.
February 3-8 (2005): Carnaval is an official Mexican holiday that kicks off a five-day celebration of
the libido before the Catholic lent. Beginning the weekend before Lent,
Carnaval is celebrated exhubrantly with parades, floats and dancing in
the streets. Port towns such as Ensenada, La Paz, Mazatlán and
Veracruz are excellent places to watch Carnaval festivities. Dates change
slightly as follows: 2006: Feb 23-28; 2007: Feb 15-20; 2008: Jan 31 -
Feb 5; 2009: Feb 19-24; 2010: Feb 11-16.
February 5: Día de la Constitución an official
holiday that commemorates Mexico's Constitution.
February 24: Flag Day, This Mexican national holiday honors
the Mexican flag.
March 19: St. Joseph's Day, Día de San José,
a religious holiday best seen in Tamulin, San Luis Potosi.
March 21: The
Birthday of Benito Juárez, a famous Mexican president
and national hero, this is an official Mexican holiday.
Semana
Santa: Semana Santa is the holy week that ends the 40-day
Lent period. This week includes Good Friday and Easter Sunday. It is Mexican
custom to break confetti-filled eggs over the heads of friends and family.
May 1: Primero de Mayo is the Mexican national holiday
that is equivalent to the U.S. Labor Day.
May 3: Holy Cross Day Día de la Santa Cruz, when
construction workers decorate and mount crosses on unfinished buildings,
followed by fireworks and picnics at the construction site.
May 5: Cinco
de Mayo is the Mexican national holiday that honors the Mexican
victory over the French army at Puebla de los Angeles in 1862.
May 10: Mother's Day, Due to the importance of the mother
in Mexican culture, Mother's Day is an especially significant holiday.
June 1: Navy Day is an official Mexican holiday.
June 24: Saint John the Baptist Day is celebrated with religious
festivities, fairs, and popular jokes connected to getting dunked in water.
June 29: Fiesta of Saint Peter and Saint Paul notable celebrations
in Mexcaltitán, Nayarit and Zaachila, Oaxaca.
September 1: Annual State of the Union, Though this date
is an approximation, the President delivers the address in the autumn.
September 16: Mexican
Independence Day celebrates the day that Miguel Hidalgo delivered
El Grito de Dolores, and announced the Mexican revolt against Spanish
rule.
October 12: Día de la Raza, This day celebrates
Columbus' arrival to the Americas, and the historical origins of the Mexican
race.
November 1&2: Día
de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) is an important Mexican holiday
that merges Pre-Columbian beliefs and modern Catholocism. Europe's All
Saints' Day and the Aztec worship of the dead contribute to these two
days that honor Mexico's dead.
November 20: Mexican
Revolution Day, This official Mexican holiday celebrates the
Mexican Revolution of 1910.
December 12: Día
de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, or the day of the Virgin
of Guadalupe is celebrated with a feast honoring Mexico's patron saint.
December 16: Las
Posadas celebrates Joseph and Mary's search for shelter in
Bethlehem with candlelight processions that end at various nativity scenes.
Las Posadas continues through January 6.
December 25: Navidad,
the Christmas holiday.
Carnaval
The festival of Carnaval is celebrated as a last indulgence of carnal
pleasures that Catholics must give up for 40 days of fasting during Lent,
from Ash Wednesday to Easter Sunday. The word Carnaval is derived from
Latin, meaning take away or goodbye to flesh, and strict Catholics will
give up meat eating during Lent.
Carnaval is officially celebrated for 5 days, leading up to Ash Wednesday,
with the most vigorous celebration taking place over the one weekend.
The wearing of masks during Carnaval is said to be a pagan practice as
protection from evil spirits, but most likely evolved as a way to participate
fully in the celebration with some anonymity.

Many cities have Carnaval celebration of various sizes, but the biggest
events take place in the port cities, with the largest of all in Mazatlan.
Mazatlan's Carnaval is said to attract well over 300,000 people, making
it the third largest such event behind Rio de Janeiro and New Orleans. Port
towns such as Ensenada, La Paz and Veracruz are also excellent places to
watch Carnaval festivities.
This is one of the few times that hotel reservations are both necessary
and more expensive. If you plan to attend, make sure you have arrangements
in place several months in advance.

During Carnaval, everyone participates in the many events and activities
that make up the celebration. People of all ages throw and break cascarones,
confetti filled eggshells, over each other. There are many booths that
offer food, drinks, snacks and games and crafts of every type. Music of
all sorts is played non-stop, by live bands, DJs or the boom box.
Some Carnavals also have a collection of rides like those found at an
amusement park. Depending on the town, there may be many organized parties,
outdoor festivals and masquerade balls. Many of these types of events
charge an entrance fee, or may be entirely private. Mazatlan hosts a public
street fair and dance for a small admission, as well as on offshore fireworks
display that commemorates an old naval battle.

During the final days, many different events present awards, one for
the Flower Queen, and literary awards to those who have written the best
Flowery Poem. In Mazatlán, a prestigious national award is presented
for the best unpublished literary work from anywhere in Mexico, called
the Clemencia Isaura Poetry award.
In the evenings there are fireworks displays including the traditional
castillo, or castle, a large fireworks platform unique to Mexico. On Saturday
evening, there is the coronation of the Carnaval Queen and the humorous
El Rey Feo, or Ugly King. There will also be the burning of an effigy,
usually someone unpopular at the time, known as the Quema de Mal Humor
or Burning of Bad Humor.

Sunday is the biggest organized celebration of the weekend, and typically
includes the big float parade, and lots of musicians playing on stages
and dancing in the streets. When Monday arrives, there is El Día
del Marido Oprimido, or the Day of the Oppressed Husband. On this one
day, for 23.5 hours, husbands have the freedom to do as they wish ...
within the law and religious faith of course.
By the time Fat Tuesday rolls around, many people have to get back to
work, and just about everyone has had their fill of revelry and indulgence,
ready to accept the restrictions of Lent.

The dates for the celebration change slightly from year to year, according
to the following schedule (provided by the Mazatlan Carnaval promotions
department): 2006: Feb 23-28; 2007: Feb 15-20; 2008: Jan 31 - Feb 5; 2009:
Feb 19-24; 2010: Feb 11-16.
If you're looking for a festival of dancing, costumes, music, fireworks,
food, drink and just being wild and crazy ... then Carnaval is the holiday
for you.
Semana
Santa
Semana Santa is Mexico's second most important holiday season of the
year, behind only Christmas, and runs from Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday.
In addition to attending Mass on Good Friday and Easter Sunday, many Mexicans
will also take advantage of the holiday to go on vacation. If you're planning
to visit Mexico during Semana Santa, make sure you checked on availability
in advance.
Semana Santa, or Holy Week, celebrates the Christian holiday of Easter.
Mexico is nearly 90 percent Catholic, so this religious holiday takes
on a special meaning that the entire community shares and participates
in.

All of Mexico celebrates Semana Santa, but certain cities and villages
are better known for celebrating the holiday, and often provide reenactments
of the events leading up to Christ's crucifixion on the cross. The best
known cities are Ixtapalapa (in Mexico City), Pátzcuaro, San Cristobal
de las Casas (Chiapas), and Taxco. Smaller and silent torch lit processions,
Processión del Silencio, also take place in Aguascalientes and
San Luis Potosí.
Each community celebrates the holiday with it's own regional flavor, however,
popular with the whole country is the breaking of cascarones, colored
egg shells filled with confetti, over friends and family. Churches will
be filled with those attending Mass on Good Friday and Easter Sunday,
and families will take this opportunity to be together.
The most moving event of Semana Santa is the reenactment of the Passion
of Christ, or the Passion Play. The event's in the mentioned cities are
sponsored by religious or community groups, and can include large processions
of penitents, sometimes on their knees, a portrayal of the last supper
and the crucifixion itself.

Something to be prepared for are the penitent ones or penitentes - the
men and women who show their faith and penitence by inflicting pain on
themselves during this most holy week - an ancient tradition dating to
the middle ages and introduced to Mexico from Spain almost 500 years ago.
Self flagellation in the streets is included as are the Animas, women
dressed in black with hoods and chained together carry crucifixes.
In many cities, important religious images from the church will be displayed,
traditional altars are decorated at home and in the streets, and flower
decorations and palm crosses will be found everywhere. The central colonial
cities seem to celebrate this holiday with the most reverence and tradition,
and if you wish to see the beauty of traditional Mexico, Semana Santa
would be well worth seeing for yourself.
Cinco
de Mayo
History:
The battle at Puebla in 1862 happened at a violent and chaotic time in
Mexico's history. Mexico had finally gained independence from Spain in
1821 after a difficult and bloody struggle, and a number of internal political
takeovers and wars, including the Mexican-American War (1846-1848) and
the Mexican Civil War of 1858, had mostly wiped out the national economy.
During this period of struggle Mexico had accumulated heavy debts to
several nations, including Spain, England and France, who were demanding
payment. Similar debt to the U.S. was previously settled after the Mexican-American
War. France was eager to add to its empire at that time, and used the
debt issue to move forward with goals of establishing its own leadership
in Mexico. Realizing France's intent of empire expansion, Spain and England
withdrew their support. When Mexico finally stopped making any loan payments,
France took action on it's own to install Napoleon's relative, Archduke
Maximilian of Austria, as ruler of Mexico.
France invaded at the gulf coast of Mexico along the state of Veracruz
(see map) and began to march toward Mexico City, a distance today of less
than 600 miles. Although American President Abraham Lincoln was sympathetic
to Mexico's cause, and for which he is honored in Mexico, the U.S. was
involved in its own Civil War at the time and was unable to provide any
direct assistance.
Marching on toward Mexico City, the French army encountered strong resistance
at the Mexican forts of Loreto and Guadalupe. Lead by Mexican General
Ignacio Zaragoza Seguin, a small, poorly armed militia estimated at 4,500
men were able to stop and defeat a well outfitted French army of 6,500
soldiers, which stopped the invasion of the country. The victory was a
glorious moment for Mexican patriots, which at the time helped to develop
a needed sense of national unity, and is the cause for the historical
date's celebration.
Unfortunately, the victory was short lived. Upon hearing the bad news,
Napoleon had found an excuse to send more troops overseas to try and invade
Mexico again, even against the wishes of the French populace. 30,000 more
troops and a full year later, the French were eventually able to depose
the Mexican army, take over Mexico City and install Maximilian as the
ruler of Mexico.
Maximilian's rule of Mexico was also short lived, from 1864 to 1867.
With the American Civil War now over, the U.S. began to provide more political
and military assistance to Mexico to expel the French, after which Maximilian
was executed by the Mexicans - today his bullet riddled shirt is on display
in the museum at Chapultepec Castle in Mexico City. So despite the eventual
French invasion of Mexico City, Cinco de Mayo honors the bravery and victory
of General Zaragoza's small, outnumbered militia at the Battle of Puebla
in 1862.

Today the holiday of Cinco de Mayo is more of a regional holiday in Mexico,
celebrated most vigorously in the state of Puebla. There is some limited
recognition of the holiday throughout the country with different levels
of enthusiasm, but it's nothing like that found in Puebla.
Celebrating Cinco de Mayo has become increasingly popular along the U.S.-Mexico
border and in parts of the U.S. that have a high population of people
with a Mexican heritage. In these areas the holiday is a celebration of
Mexican culture, of food, music, beverage and customs unique to Mexico.

Commercial interests in the United States and Mexico have also been successful
in promoting the holiday, with products and services focused on Mexican
food, beverages and festivities, with music playing a more visible role
as well. Several cities throughout the U.S. hold parades and concerts
during the week following up to May 5th, so that Cinco de Mayo has become
a bigger holiday north of the border than to the south, and adopted into
the holiday calendar of more and more people every year.

[Sources: Encyclopedia Encarta, Encyclopedia Britanica, Prescott's Mexico:1900,
HistoryChannel.com, other sources.]
Mexico's
Día de los Muertos (The Day of the Dead holiday)

Día de los Muertos is an important Mexican holiday that merges
Pre-Columbian beliefs and modern Catholocism. Europe's All Saints' Day
and the Aztec worship of the dead contribute to these two days that honor
Mexico's dead. Dead relatives, both young and old, are allowed to return
to the mortal world for two days to visit loved ones.

Mexicans welcome the spirits of their families with delicious food,
tasty candies decorated like skulls, and lighted candles to guide them
home. Gravestones are decorated, and the whole family will gather in the
graveyard to await and pay respects to the deceased.

Dia
de la Virgen de Guadalupe - December 12
The Celebration
On this day people from all parts of Mexico make their way to Mexico's
chief religious center at the Basilica of the Virgen of Guadalupe, located
in Villa de Guadalupe Hidalgo, a northern neighbourhood of Mexico City.
There, they will celebrate the Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe (Our Lady of
Guadalupe) with a mass ceremony and a traditional fair in her honor. The
Dia de la Virgen de Guadalupe became an national holiday in 1859.

Today, tens of thousands of people travel to Mexico City to visit the
place where the Virgin appeared to the Mexican People. The holiday is
a national fiesta that includes traditional music and fun attractions.
Pilgrims bring presents to the virgin, usually bouquets of flowers while
other visitors will perform dances and song for her. Some pilgirms walk
on their knees on the stone street leading to the Basilica, asking for
miracles or giving thanks to the virgin for a petition granted.
At the plaza the fiesta starts after the mass ceremony with delicious
food, vendors selling crafts and clothes, along with many performences
of music and dance. In other parts of Mexico, similar festivities are
organized with some unique variations of the celebration. In some places,
altars of flowers are built in her honor. Other parts have traditional
food prepared like buñuelos, raspados and tortas as well as activities
like parades, rodeos, and bullfights.
History of the Celebration
The Story behind this celebration demonstrates how the Catholic faith
gained importance in the hearts of the Mexican people. It is a story of
miracles and faith which mark a change in the history of Mexico.
The Spaniards, after they conquered Mexico, had in mind the goal of converting
the indigenous indians into catholicism. But the spaniards encountered
many difficulties because the Mexican people had existing strong beliefs
in their many gods. It wasn't until the story of the Virgin of Guadalupe
and Juan Diego that this started to change.
Juan Diego was a young indigenous Indian walking toward the Hill of Tepeyac
on December 12, 1531 when he was stopped by the appearence of the Virgin
Mary. The Virgin Mary appearing to Juan Diego was a young woman with black
hair and dark skin which looked more like an indigenous person. She ordered
Juan Diego to go to the Bishop and ask him to build a church at the Hill
of Tepeyac. Juan Diego then ran to the Bishop to tell him what the Virgin
Mary had told him. The Bishop didn't believe what this young men was telling
him and decided to ignore the petition.

The Virgin Mary appeared again in front of Juan Diego and told him to
collect flowers from the top of the hill, but because it was December
Juan Diego knew that there was not going to be any flowers at the rocky
hill. Upon reaching the top of the hill, Juan Diego was surprised to see
that it was covered with colorful and beautiful flowers. Juan Diego, as
he was asked to, collected the flowers using his overcoat and ran again
to see the Bishop.
Juan Diego gave the coat full of flowers to the bishop, and here the
bishop discovered the image of Virgin Mary's picture was miraculously
traced on the coat. Seeing both the unseasonal flowers and the image of
the Virgin, the Bishop realized Juan Diego had told him the truth and
The Basilica of the Virgin of Guadalupe was built on the hill of Tepeyac
in Mexico City.
Celebrating
Christmas in Mexico - Posadas y Navidad
Almost everyone in Mexico takes the last two weeks in December off. One
of the biggest fiestas of the year - in small towns, big cities, the beach
resorts, everywhere - Christmas in Mexico is celebrated in a variety of
ways. A common denominator is the posada, a recreation of Mary (on donkey)
and Joseph searching for a "room at the inn." Accompanying them
is a choir of small children who knock on doors asking for lodging for
the weary couple. By previous arrangement, there are no takers.
The procession, which takes place during the 12 days before Christmas,
moves along, growing in numbers until it reaches the church, where mass
is held. After the service, the children get to enjoy a festive piñata
party.
You can expect to find some regional differences, which makes a Mexican
Christmas not only a cross cultural mix, but a varied and interesting
experience.
For example, in the Ajijic area, a "riviera resort community"
suburb of Guadalajara, in the little village of San Antonio, the posada
is a most moving and spiritual experience. Same for Taxco and Querétaro.
Catch the event in these areas if you can. Also in Querétaro, there's
a huge parade on December 23.
In the town of Cajititlán (near Guadalajara), as in many other
places in the Hispanic world, they celebrate the holidays on Three Kings
Day (Epiphany), which falls on January 6th. In fact, this was the traditional
time to celebrate the gift-giving aspect of Christmas throughout Mexico.
But in most parts of the country, the holiday now coincides with the day
of celebration north-of-the-border: December 25. Many children now expect
gifts on both days.
The ritual often begins in the afternoon or at dinner time when the family
shares a rosca or two (a rosca is a sweet, ring-shaped loaf with a ceramic
muñeca (doll) representing the Christ child baked inside). Unlike
a cracker-jack box where the winner takes all, whoever is unlucky enough
to get the doll has to throw a party on February 2 (Día de Candelaría)
for all the others present. In this case, the "winner", who
has to foot the time and expense, is often the loser. (Note: on the afternoon
of Día de Candelaría, dancers gather for a performance in
the churchyard. Sometimes as many as six different dance groups perform
at the same time. The dancers are divided among those portraying Christians
and Moors, each competing for the most attention. Other groups are represented
as well. In small towns where this festival is held, there's also a special
market on that day.) The party itself usually includes some favorite dish
spiced with a zesty regional molé sauce.
The fiesta for the Virgin de la Soledad, the patron saint of Oaxaca,
December 16-18, signals the beginning of the navidád festivities.
The highlight, again, is the posada, held at a different church each night
from December 18-24. On December 23, the annual Noche de los Rábanos
takes place. This is a very festive time when booths are set up along
the length and breadth of the zócalo. The focal point of each booth
is an exhibit of hand-carved, giant radishes. Most often, these sculptures
carry a religious theme. But this is not necessarily so. The subject could
be comical, a scene from a bullfight or anything that strikes the fancy
of the sculptor. On Nochebuena, processions from various churches fan
out to the zócalo. There are also colorfully-decorated floats,
music, traditional dancing, and piñata prizes. The crowning glory
of this fiesta is a mammoth fireworks display.

On Christmas Eve, in Santiago Tuxtla (Veracruz), everybody assembles
in the zócalo for an evening of dancing the huapango to the accompaniment
of a jarocho band.
In Quiroga (Michoacán), villagers present Nativity plays (Pastorelas)
at churches on Christmas Eve and on Christmas Day.
México City, takes on a festive air with the famed zócalo
(or sometimes called the Plaza de la Constitución) ablaze with
a sea of colorful lights festooning this ancient square. The festival
of lights goes on throughout the Christmas/New Year's period. In addition,
there's a colorful flag-raising/lowering ceremony every morning and afternoon
during the holidays. The rest of the city is similarly decorated. And,
of course, traditional services are held in the city's many churches.
-Lonely Planet
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