Budget, Backpackers, Surfers, Beach Lovers, Naturalist, Hippie, Sun and Sand worshipers, Off the Beaten Path Paradise! Everyone is welcome at Zipolite!
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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .
Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.ivan
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Saturday, November 1, 2014
The Guardian (blog) Day of the Dead – the Aussie way The Guardian (blog) A boy takes part in the Day of the Dead celebrations in Oaxaca, Mexico. Photograph: Alberto-Sibaja Ramirez/ Alberto-Sibaja Ramirez/Demotix/Corbis. Google Plus Facebook Twitter Flag as irrelevant
Day of the Dead – the Aussie way
A boy takes part in the Day of the Dead celebrations in Oaxaca, Mexico. Photograph: Alberto-Sibaja Ramirez/ Alberto-Sibaja Ramirez/Demotix/Corbis.
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Playa Zipolite Apartments Lonely Planet Read Playa Zipolite, Mexico apartment reviews from independent authors and book Playa Zipolite, Mexico apartment accommodation online with ...
Playa Zipolite Apartments
Read Playa Zipolite, Mexico apartment reviews from independent authors and book Playa Zipolite, Mexico apartment accommodation online with ...
Lonely Planet review
Overlooking picturesque Playa Camarón, a 10-minute walk west from Playa Zipolite, recently-opened Heven features some lovely hand-made Mexican furniture and crafts, including beautiful tilework, in its eight individually-designed apartments and suites and spacious communal areas. Most accommodations have king-size beds.
There's vehicle access from the main road about 1km west of Zipolite.
Our independent authors have visited Heven and selected this as one of our recommended apartments in Zipolite.
Read more: http://www.lonelyplanet.com/mexico/oaxaca-state/zipolite/hotels/heven#ixzz3HpmWfrJD
Day of the Dead helps Valley indigenous groups connect with Mexican roots BY ANDREA CASTILLO The Fresno BeeOctober 31, 2014
Day of the Dead helps Valley indigenous
groups connect with Mexican roots
BY ANDREA CASTILLO
The Fresno BeeOctober 31, 2014 Updated 15 minutes ago
MADERA — The woman’s hands worked with a learned precision, flattening a rounded slab of dough with her fingertips into the form of a person.
She cut slits around the bottom of the figure — a dress. Two slits across the upper sides of the body became arms, which she delicately folded across each other.
Guadalupe Herrera, 49, started baking pan de muerto — bread of the dead — as a 9-year-old in her hometown of Putla Villa de Guerrero in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. The entire village had just three brick ovens, and she remembers each family planning days in advance to prepare the food for her favorite holiday: Day of the Dead.
“I missed all of that,” she said in Spanish. “I never thought I’d be here making this bread.”
Observed every Nov. 2, Day of the Dead is based on the belief that the souls of the deceased visit their families once a year. Aztecs and other Meso-American civilizations believed those souls would experience eternal despair if their memory was forgotten.
It survived major changes in Latin America’s history, evolving through the Spanish conquest and mass conversion to Catholicism. Spaniards changed the dates of the rituals to correspond with two Christian holidays: All Saints Day on Nov. 1 and All Souls Day on Nov. 2. Believers say the souls of dead children return Oct, 31, the souls of adults on Nov. 1 and all souls together on Nov. 2.
Rather than being a period of mourning, Meso-Americans treated death as an extension of life worth memorializing. On Day of the Dead, families honor their ancestors by creating altars that display photos, favorite foods and possessions. The altars symbolize the gate to heaven and are decorated with candles and marigolds, which are said to draw the person’s soul back for the festivities. They burn incense to purify the area surrounding each altar as a sacred place.
Inside a small commercial kitchen Thursday at Iglesia Santa Ines, a church in Madera, Herrera led five women in baking around 200 breads for Saturday’s Day of the Dead celebration. They are part of a mixed group of indigenous women, including Mixtecos, Zapotecos and Triquis. Oaxaca, their home region, has 16 indigenous groups.
Herrera had been awake since 4 a.m. preparing the dough. The day was overcast, but inside the small chapel it was hot and humid with the sweet smell of baking bread.
Once shaped, the women added details to the dough people, like buttons or bows, then sprinkled sesame seeds on top. A butter glaze finished them off.
The bread symbolizes each person who has passed on. Herrera set aside 10 large slabs of dough to represent the grandparents of the 10 women most involved in their group. The rest will be sold along with Oaxacan meals of mole, tamales, posole and other traditional foods.
For Herrera, Day of the Dead is about connecting with her family.
“My father died here,” she said in Spanish. “For me, it’s as if I’m saying, ‘I’m here, Dad. I’ll put (on the altar) everything you like.’ If I didn’t do this, I would feel really sad. This is part of our culture. It is part of us.”
Duties for Madera’s Day of the Dead celebration were divided along traditional gender roles: Women baking and cooking; men building and decorating the community altar.
For the individual family, finding decorations needed for the holiday has gotten easier in Madera. Many people, including Javier Lopez, plant marigolds. Their strong scent is said to attract the souls of the dead.
Lopez, 45, has been planting the flowers for 12 years, most recently at his home near Highway 99. He sells them in large bundles for $20. It’s a family affair, with his four children helping him cut, bundle and deliver the flowers to Day of the Dead believers in town.
The tradition of growing marigolds was passed from Lopez’s grandfather to his father, then him. Now his 5-square-yard garden is overgrown with rows of pungent orange varieties of marigolds.
“I do this so (the tradition) won’t stop,” he said in Spanish. “Even from afar, but we are here remembering our customs. I have to show my son what the culture is like over there in Oaxaca.”
It doesn’t appear the tradition is in jeopardy. Colorful Day of the Dead sugar skull and skeleton iconography, which symbolize death and rebirth, can now be seen across graffiti, low-rider and tattoo culture, said Frank Delgado, executive director of Arte Américas in Fresno.
Delgado said the holiday provides an entry point to educate the larger community about Mexican cultural traditions, especially as Day of the Dead becomes popularized, he said.
“We bring it back by always maintaining the importance of the indigenous roots of the celebration,” he said. “We arm people with information that is contextualized.”
Juanita Gomez, one of the women who baked bread on Thursday and a leader of Madera’s Mixteco community, said that context makes Day of the Dead especially significant for indigenous people.
“We begin learning our past to understand our future,” she said. “When we are on this side of the border, we hold onto those traditions and customs. It’s difficult because we don’t find all the ingredients, plus the graves are not here.”
But Gomez recalled an old saying: “Prepare the mole, put the glass of water, put a chair, incense and some yellow flowers, because soon enough they will come.”
Read more here: http://www.fresnobee.com/2014/10/31/4209635/day-of-the-dead-helps-valley-indigenous.html?sp=/99/406/#storylink=cp
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