Kathleen ElliottComment

Mexico’s Day of the Dead mourns quake victims

Kathleen ElliottComment
Mexico’s Day of the Dead mourns quake victims

Mexico’s traditional Day of the Dead is opening with a sadder tone than usual Wednesday.

People in Mexico City and nearby states are marking this year’s holiday by remembering the 369 people killed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, 228 of them in the capital, where 38 buildings collapsed.

Mexico’s traditional view of the dead is not ghoulish or frightful — rather they are seen as the “dear departed,” people who remain close even after death. On the Nov. 1-2 holiday, Mexicans set up altars with photographs of the dead and plates of their favorite foods in their homes. They gather at their loved ones’ gravesides to drink, sing and talk to the dead.

But this time many of the dead departed so recently that the grief is still fresh.

Neighbors of the Enrique Rebsamen school, part of which collapsed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, make a trail of marigold petals from the school entrance to an altar where they have placed toys, food, sugar skulls, and flowers for the dead, in Mexico City, late Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. The trail was meant to provide a symbolic path for the spirits of the more than 20 children who died there to reach the altar on the night of Day of the Dead celebrations when children are remembered. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

An altar in honor of the dead stands in the Zocalo, as part of Day of the Dead festivities in Mexico City, late Monday, Oct. 30, 2017. The capital's main plaza is filled with shrines dedicated to those killed in two recent earthquakes, ahead of the Nov. 2 holiday. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

A skeleton figure stands in a miniature cemetery, part of a small Day of the Dead altar across the street from the remains of Alvaro Obregon 286, where dozens of people were killed when the seven-story office building collapsed in the Sept. earthquake, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. Mexico's traditional view of the dead is not ghoulish or frightful, rather they are seen as the "dear departed," but this time many of the dead departed so recently that the grief is still fresh. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

Nayeli Flores struggled to bring up her two children, working as a legal aide and studying law, so she never had time or money to set up an elaborate Day of the Dead altar as her son, Julian, wanted to do. This year Flores will fulfill his wish for an altar — dedicated to the 11-year-old boy and his 6-year-old sister, Ximena, who died when the quake collapsed their apartment building into a pile of rubble on the city’s south side. The two kids had stayed home from school that day while their mom was working.

“My son always complained because we didn’t put up an altar,” Flores said between sobs. “So this year I am going to do it, in his memory.”

Altars are always personalized, with a photo of the dead and candles. Offerings for adults often include their favorite food, drink and even cigarettes. For kids, it is the same, only with candy or toys.

Pictures of Julian Flores, 11, and his little sister Ximena, 6, lie amidst flowers and candles in a Day of the Dead altar erected in a tent camp outside Mulitfamiliar Tlalpan, where nine people including Nayeli Flores' two children were killed when a building collapsed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

“One of Julian’s friends brought me a bag of candy, as a donation for earthquake victims,” said Flores, who has kept herself busy since the quake by distributing donated aid. “But I am going to take a few for the altar” for Julian.

Flores wants to make sure there are stuffed animals on the altar, too. “They used to love them; they would fight over them,” she remembered.

Many of the residents of the 1960s-era apartment complex Flores called home are still living in tents beside buildings that survived. Some of the structures can be repaired, but others will have to be torn down.

A girl gets her Day of the Dead makeup wiped off beside an altar inside a tent encampment at Multifamiliar Tlalpan, where nine people died when a building collapsed in the Sept. earthquake, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. People in Mexico are marking this year’s holiday by remembering the people killed in the Sept. 19 earthquake. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A Day of the Dead altar is set up next to playground equipment under a tent encampment at Multifamiliar Tlalpan, where nine people died when a building collapsed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. Mexico’s traditional Day of the Dead is opening with a sadder tone than usual Wednesday. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

Seven other people died along with Flores’ kids in the building that fell. Survivors are erecting a big altar honoring the nine. Yet another altar commemorates all the quake’s victims.

“This is going to be difficult, because it is all very recent, but in the end we are honoring their memories,” said Carlos Luz, one of Flores’ neighbors. “It means a lot to the people who lost family members.”

There are already impromptu memorials at the collapse site: floral wreaths, balloons and candles, and painted hands on the plywood wall around the collapse site, which is also decorated with photos of the victims.

Altars in honor of the dead cover the Zocalo as part of Day of the Dead festivities in Mexico City, late Monday, Oct. 30, 2017. The capital's main plaza is filled with shrines dedicated to those killed in two recent earthquakes, ahead of the Nov. 2 holiday. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

The quake hit particularly hard in the string of ancient villages on Mexico City’s southern outskirts where people had kept up particularly colorful and authentic Day of the Dead celebrations. Several people were killed, the local parish church was damaged and many of single-family homes made of adobe or brick collapsed.

“Everyone is very sad, their lives have been destroyed,” said Rev. Francisco Efren Castellanos, the parish priest in San Gregorio.

There is no money for the elaborate offerings of food, drink, flowers and candles that people normally make. Still, there will be offerings, no matter how simple.

“This year there is a sense of determination, even if it is just beans and tortillas,” said Castellanos.

A musician from the Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra, with her face painting as "Catrina," acknowledges the crowd between songs during Day of the Dead festivities in the Zocalo of Mexico City, late Monday, Oct. 30, 2017. The capital's main plaza is filled with shrines dedicated to those killed in two recent earthquakes, ahead of the Nov. 2 holiday. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

Young men carry skeletons out to a Day of the Dead altar in the midst of a tent encampment at Multifamiliar Tlalpan, where nine people died when a building collapsed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. Mexico's traditional view of the dead is not ghoulish or frightful, rather they are seen as the "dear departed," but this time many of the dead departed so recently that the grief is still fresh. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A young man arranges skeletons on a Day of the Dead altar at a tent encampment at Multifamiliar Tlalpan, where nine people died when a building collapsed in the Sept. earthquake, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. People in Mexico are marking this year’s holiday by remembering the people killed in the Sept. 19 earthquake. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

Neighbors of the Enrique Rebsamen school, part of which collapsed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, set up a Day of the Dead altar across the street from the school entrance in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. Mexico's traditional view of the dead is not ghoulish or frightful, rather they are seen as the "dear departed," but this time many of the dead departed so recently that the grief is still fresh. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

An photograph of Alexandra Arias, 11, is surrounded by food, flowers, and candles in a Day of the Dead altar set up in front of the Enrique Rebsamen school, part of which collapsed in the Sept. 19 earthquake, killing more than two dozen people, mostly children, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. Mexico's traditional view of the dead is not ghoulish or frightful, rather they are seen as the "dear departed," but this time many of the dead departed so recently that the grief is still fresh. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

A path made of candles and marigold flowers lead to the main church in San Gregorio Atlapulco, Mexico where a Day of the Dead altar honors two people who died when the church dome fell during the earthquake, late Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017. People in Mexico are marking this year's holiday by remembering the people killed in the Sept. 19 earthquake. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

A woman stands beside a Day of the Dead altar outside the Enrique Rebsamen school, part of which collapsed in the Sept. earthquake killing more than two dozen people, mostly children, in Mexico City, Tuesday, Oct. 31, 2017.  People in Mexico are marking this year’s holiday by remembering the people killed in the Sept. 19 earthquake. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)

In this Monday, Oct. 30, 2017 photo, papier-mache skeletons wearing rescue personnel vests and helmets symbolizing the volunteers who worked in the aftermath of the Sept. earthquake, stands on display as part of an altar honoring earthquake victims during Day of the Dead festivities at the Zocalo in Mexico City. Many of the dead departed so recently that the grief is still fresh. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)


Text from the AP news story, Mexico’s Day of the Dead mourns quake victims, by Maria Verza.

Photos by Rebecca Blackwell, Eduardo Verdugo and Moises Castillo