Tonala offers unique cultural experience July 25

This month the metro-area suburb of Tonala will host the famous Dance of the Tastoanes, an annual ritual commemorating an indigenous insurgence during the Spanish invasion of western Mexico.

pg9aaThe centuries old religious tradition dates back to the arrival of the Spanish in the kingdom of Tonallan. The Indian queen Cihuapilli received the Spanish troops with open arms and willingly converted to Catholicism. But a group of Indians less enamored with the European invaders and their religion banded together and rebelled, putting up a heroic fight on Tonala’s Cerro de la Reina hill. As legend has it, when their rebellion was put down, they were turned into grotesque monsters known as “tastoanes.”

Monday, July 25, Tastoanes dressed in bright and outlandish costumes will perform a war dance  in Tonala’s main plaza at various times between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Unique to the states of Jalisco and Zacatecas, the Tastoanes festivals feature dramatization and ritualistic dancing to symbolize the eternal struggle between the forces of good and evil.

The action revolves around Saint James the Apostle, known in Spanish as Santo Santiago, brandishing his sword atop a handsome white stallion to defend the faith against the heathen Tastoanes.

The festivities feature a procession of bizarre but beautiful masks handmade from wood and adorned with clay and even horses’ teeth. Tastoan mask making has become one of Tonala’s emblematic art forms. Special prizes are awarded each year for the best original creation and top entries conserved in the permanent collection of various local museums. The Museo Tonallan hosts the Mundo Toastoan exhibit of masks. Ramon Corona 73, Central Tonala. Open Tuesday to Sunday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tel. 331-200-3936.