Astrology

Day of the Dead 2023: The history and meaning behind the Mexican holiday

In life, death is only the beginning.

An excerpt from decrees “For bones are like seeds: everything that dies goes into the Earth, and from it new life is born in the sacred cycle of existence.”

Día de los Muertos, or Day of the ☂Dead, honors that sacred cycle by venerating the dead and celebrating their annual return to the world of the living.

What is the Day of the Dead?

Día de los Muertos is a braiding together of pre- Colombian ritual and European tradition celebrates the richness of life and the inevitable journey 🐭of death. It is important to note that Día de los Muertos celebrations vary fꩵrom region to region and not all communities in Mexico celebrate the holiday.

To show the dead that they have not been forgotten, altars or ofrendas are constructed in the home. During Día de los Muertos celebrations, family members will often visit the cemeteries where their lost loved ones are int🌠erred, cleaning and decorating the tombs and gathering graveside to eat, play music, and speak of and to the dead.

When is the Day of the Dead and where is it celebrated?

Día de los Muertos is observed by those of Mexican heritage throughout Central, South and North America on November 1 and 2nd. The former date is dedicated to the souls of departed children while the 2nd is reserved for the souls of adults. These dates correspond to the Catholic feast days of All Saints’ and All Souls. Mexico City and Oaxaca are renowned for the scope of their Día de los Muertos festivities while San Antonio is home to the largest Day of the Dead celebration in the United States

Day of the Dead history

The Day of the Dead from Banda Monumental De Mexico perform on the Esplanade of Edinburgh Castle. PA Images via Getty Images

The origins of Día de los Muertos extend back 3,000 years to the death rituals of the Nahua people of Mesoamerica. The Nahua, which includes the Aztecs, saw the universe in cyclical terms and humanity as duality made manifest. Death was not a division from life, but an integral part of it. According to the “Humans were the bridge between heaven and earth – the point of contact between the divine and profane, the spiritual and material, the rational and irrational. Man was the union of opposites, and responsible for maintaining the balance between the contradicting forces of the universe.”

Death was not an ending, but a kind of embarkmen🅠t.

For the Na🍸hua, death was not an ending, but a kind of embarkment. Upon dying, a person made the soul voyage to Chicunam♒ictlán, or underworld. After a trying journey of nine levels and four years, the soul would at last be delivered to Mictlán, its final resting place. Originally, rituals for venerating the departed were held in August and the living offered essential sustenance like food and water to help their ancestors along this journey. These ancient offerings served as the inspiration for the altars and alms that mark contemporary Día de los Muertos celebrations.

Spanish influence

Oaxaca De Juarez during the annual Day of the Dead festivities. dpa/picture alliance via Getty I

In the 16th century, Spanish conquistadors, fresh off the dark days of the black plague and sails high with the fumes of Christianity had a decidedly grimmer view of death, not that it stopped them from delivering it en masse to those they ruthlessly colonized. I digress. The Christian faith has a long history of “rebranding” the sacred sites, myths and celebrations of those they seek to convert. In this way temples are toppled to make way for churches, the nuanced underworld becomes a fire and brimstone hellscape and sacred occasions are aligned with feast days. Such was the fate of the Pagan feast of Samhain and so too did the death rituals of the Nahua come to be aligned with All Saints and All Souls day.

Despite the be🌱st efforts ﷺof the Spanish to cast death as something to be feared, the ethos of death as celebratory and the universe as cyclical, persists in and through the observation of Día de los Muertos.

Despite the best efforts of the Spanish to cast death and the afterlife of the soul as something to be feared, the essential ethos of the universe as cyclical and death as celebratory, persists in and through the continued observation of Día de los Muertos. The significance of Día de los Muertos was recognized by UNESCO in 2008 when the organization added the holiday to its list of , citing “This encounter between the living and the dead affirms the role of the individual within society and contributes to reinforcing the political and social status of Mexico’s indigenous communities.”

Day of the Dead traditions

This traditional ‘Dia de Muertos ofrenda has seven levels, relative to the number of steps a soul must make on its way to heaven. Getty Images

Altars called  are among the most prominent and significant features of Day 🍒of the Dead celebrations as their function is to show the dead that they have not been forgotten and to guide them home. Depending upon region and tradition, altars are built with a varying number of tiers and a wide assortment of offerings. In this context, ofrenda is used to describe both the altar and the offerings.

These offerings can include photos of lost loved ones, salt, water and alcohol to satisfy their thirst, and calavera, brightly decorated skulls made of sugar and meringue that represent those that have passed and serve as a symbol for the sweetness of life. The perforation in the colorful tissue paper known as papel picado allows for easy access for traveling souls while the delicacy of the paper symbolizes the frangible nature of life i🃏ts♏elf.

A stack of decorative calaveras, typical of those used to decorate Día de los Muertos altars. NurPhoto via Getty Images

Pan de Muerto, bread of the dead, is one of many food items placed on the ofrenda. Flowers including marigold and cockscomb are commonly added to altars, with the petals sometimes strewn from home to altar 💧in the hopes that the vivid color and strong fragrance of the flowers and the flickering light of ꦬcandles will serve as guides to ancestral spirits.

Día de los Muertos preparations are done with great care to ensure the dead are welcomed and satisfied as it is believed that they carry with them the power to deliver pain or prosperity depending on the quality of the offerings and the execution of tꩵhese rituals.

Day of the Dead is NOT a Halloween celebration

Celebrants during the parade of the “Day Of The Dead Festival” in Guanajuato, Mexico Getty Images

Though themes of death feature heavily in both traditions, Día de los Muertos is NOT the same thing as Halloween and the conflation of the two and the commodification of the former is a source of controversy and cultural appropriation. As the argues, “Day of the Dead effectively has become rolled up into the Halloween retail juggernaut, unsettling some observers who see it as cultural appropriation that turns the centuries-old Day of the Dead remembrances into crass commercialism.”

“Dressing up is for Halloween, and Día de los Muertos is not a costume.”

Jessica Razo

Halloween is closely related to the ancient Pagan harvest festival known as Samhain (link to Samhain explainer when published) and modern Halloween celebrations share little beyond skeletal imagery and a seasonal convergence with Day of the Dead. As reminds us, “Dressing up is for Halloween, and Día de los Muertos is not a costume.” So please, if you were not raised in a community that traditionally observes the holiday, . Ever.

Day of the Dead and cultural appreciation vs. appropriation

A Día de los Muertos celebrant wears calavera makeup. Future Publishing via Getty Imag

Mourning, (alongside courtship, music, language, a love for Paul Rudd and an aversion to incest) is one oꦐf our primary cultural universals and Día de los Muertos can provide the impetus to explore our own ancestral traditions r🌼elative to death. There is however a very fine and precarious line between appreciation and appropriation and the divide between bowing to and borrowing from.

Día de los Muertos is a significant cultural celebration not a name or an aesthetic that can be trademarked for profiteering, much to the chagrin of the and Mattel who came under fire for their Day of the Dead themed Barbie. Sigh.

“The biggest way to change the culture of appropriation is with your wallet…if you want to buy sugar skulls or Day of the Dead merchandise, make sure your money is going into the hands of the people who actually benefit from it, and not foreign conglomerates.”

Jeremy Cohen

Those that did not grow up with the traditions of Día de los Muertos but are drawn to the holiday can educate themselves and observe celebrations with curiosity and ultimate reverence. Learn and engage with, but do not take from. Ask permission to use photography. It’s important for observers and appreciators to be mindful about how and where they spend money in relationship to the holiday and the items associated with it.

“The biggest way to change the culture of appropriation is with your wallet,” Jeremy Cohen explains in . “If you want to buy sugar skulls or Day of the Dead merchandise, make sure your money is going into the hands of the people who actually benefit from it, and not foreign conglomerates.”

In spending ꦿthoughtfully, observing respectfully, and investigating your own ancestral traditions, you can pay homage to the sacred cycle of existence that counts bones as seeds and birth and death as equal blessings.


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Astrologer  researches and irreverently reports back on planetary configurations and their effect on each zodiac sign. Her horoscopes integrate history, poetry, pop culture and personal experience. She is also an accomplished writer who has profiled a variety of artists and performers, as well as extensively chronicled her experiences while traveling. Among the many intriguing topics she has tackled are cemetery etiquette, her love for dive bars, Cuban Airbnbs, a “girls guide” to strip clubs and the “weirdest” foods available abroad.