Modern realities of the Mexican postman
Mexico’s crowded holiday calendar marks November 12 as Dia del Cartero (Postman’s Day).
Mexico’s crowded holiday calendar marks November 12 as Dia del Cartero (Postman’s Day).
Ajijic’s innovative Night of the Dead festival rated as a rousing success, with hundreds turning out to watch the spooky torch-light parade, wander the plaza for a peek at traditional memorial altars and marvel at a block-long colored sawdust carpet artfully laid out on Calle Parroquia.
Dozens of Mexican students and young people were given a crash course in U.S. electoral procedure at an election night reception organized by the U.S. Consulate in Guadalajara and held at the Instituto Cultural Mexicano-Norteamericano.
The mood went from edgy to cautious optimism to jump-up-and-down jubilation as members of the Ajijic chapter of Democrats Abroad and others congregated for an election night vigil at Club Exotica on November 6.
An international tribunal is set to review the construction of a controversial dam in northern Jalisco next week, in the first of many hearings to take place in Mexico over the next three years.
Guadalajara’s craft beer industry is booming, with new microbreweries cropping up all the time. Among those to catch the Reporter’s eye during the International Beer Festival in October was the boldly named Cerveza Uno, a one-man operation run by Luis Enrique Lepe Tinoco.
The image of a young blonde girl begging on the streets of Guadalajara caused an online uproar last week, raising the often overlooked issue of racism in contemporary Mexican society.