Burning of Judas puts a bang in Easter jubilation
No Mexican festivity seems complete without noisy fireworks, even the most solemn of all religious celebrations, Easter.
No Mexican festivity seems complete without noisy fireworks, even the most solemn of all religious celebrations, Easter.
Pedro Jimenez: A Mexico City-born-and-raised communications professional turned mescal producer/bar owner with the faraway contemplative gaze, slightly weary and bemused demeanor of a man with little to prove and even less interest in doing so.
Reports on the tragic struggles of migrants all around the world fill the international news media.
A miraculous healing inspired lakeside resident Janice Paul to work as a missionary in India, care for lepers, travel to remote villages, marry an Indian man 25 years her junior in secret – and write about it.
Plaza de Liberacion, centro historico’s largest public square, sees a lot of things: mangers featuring terrifyingly large facsimiles of biblical personalities and hooved desert pack animals, the largest number of agave jimadores ever assembled in one place, countless mariachi concerts, and more.
A 70-something Tapatio recalls Holy Week in Guadalajara: “When I was a child, there was no radio, we didn’t go to the movies.
March 6 and 7 at the Auditorio de la Ribera, when the lights went down and the theater became black, most of the audience didn’t know what to expect.