Posted in April 2009

Mexico Travelogue (Part 3): Palm Sunday

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There was a welcomed serenity to Guanajuato on the morning of Palm Sunday. The light was crisp, the air oddly still, and the few people who were out and about were headed to church.

The night before had been merry and raucous. Jardin de la Union was profuse with music as mariachis serenaded diners. At one restaurant, a single table was surrounded by a six-piece band, blaring trumpets, drum kit and all. I was getting the impression that this wedge-shaped plaza with tightly packed shade trees was always this cheerful.

Just steps away from the plaza we had dinner, and then made our way back to Hotel Antiguo Vapor, but found ourselves on the steps of Templo de San Roque watching another open-air baile folklorico performance. Guanajuato’s serendipity struck again, and its energy seemed to be ceaseless.

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But in the morning, things were refreshingly different. On the steps of Basilica Colegiata de Nuestra Señora de Guanajuato (which is fun to say backwards as fast as you can), men, women and children of all ages gathered and wove palms into beautiful crosses and Christian icons. We purchased one that incorporated rosemary, simply to fill our room with its wonderful scent. Two blocks away at Templo de la Compañia de Jesus, a teenage girl was selling incredible palm crucifixes, the chest and arms of Christ appearing like a braided helix of DNA. I bought one, not knowing fully what to do with it, and together we walked to breakfast at a subterranean restaurant called Papalotl, where they serve eggs scrambled in mole sauce with a side of fried plantains.

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Guanajuato in April is blazing hot, and our afternoons were consumed with napping or pursuing a cold cervaza. Palm Sunday, our last day in the city, proved to be no different. A one-hour siesta, a cold soak in the bathtub and then a late lunch (that also passed for dinner) at La Bottelita on Jardin de la Union. Tricked out in funky Mexican folk art and garish colors, the bar/restaurant was one big nonchalant fiesta. We ordered a molcajete filled with enough steak, chicken, chorizo, onion, jalapeño, nopal (cactus), and grilled pineapple to feed a six-piece mariachi band, and then opted for a tram ride back up to El Pipila for sundown.

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As we waited for the light to fade into blue hour — that magical time when a cityscape lights up but preserves its daytime colors — we heard an eruption of drums coming from the general direction of Templo de San Roque. Its acoustics moved through the winnowing streets below and echoed off the ravine walls of the city, and soon we could see a colorful parade leading past Basilica Colegiata de Nuestra Señora de Guanajuato. A girl sat on a mule, altars covered with flowers were carried past, and a steady stream of young boys in shiny, colorful robes walked by. In the slanted evening light, it would have made for amazing photographs.

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But an hour later, I was happy we stayed put. Blue hour over Guanajuato was simply gorgeous.

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Mexico Travelogue (Part 2): The Man with the Torch

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Crowning Guanajuato is a massive, 30-foot stone man, his face contorted with determination, a torch in his hand. His name is José de los Reyes Martínez, a local miner from the early 1800s better known by his nickname, El Pípila. The hill he crowns and the stunning overlook of the city that rings his feet is simply known by his name, and its the place to be at sundown. Playful music swells from the tight alleyways below, locals sit and eat corn on the cob slathered in mayonnaise, and the late-evening light intensifies the colorful buildings below.

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When it comes to Mexico’s independence from Spain, Guanajuato lies in the thick of things. It is in a sense, Mexico’s version of Boston, a place hewn from its defiance to imperialist power. For all its Spanish colonial architecture and happy colors, there is a fiery spirit to Guanajuato that only rises to the surface when you understand its history. I wasn’t visiting for the museums (Diego Rivera also hails from Guanajuato, and his childhood home is now an homage to his life), but I couldn’t help but be captivated with the raging, undaunted insurgent who was visible from every spot in town.

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On a September night in 1810, a band of independence fighters led by Father Miguel Hidalgo stormed Guanajuato’s Alhóndiga de Granaditas (pictured above, right), a hulking stone fortress filled with provisions, 3 million pesos worth of silver, a heavily armed Spanish garrison and the provincial governor. It’s not just that El Pípila got them in the door, allowing the insurgents to capture the critical post. It’s that he crawled to it with a slab of flagstone on his back, deflecting the Spanish musket fire until he could torch it. From there, a hellacious battle ensued resulting in the death of every Spanish soldier. The independence movement was in its infancy, and soon its four main leaders — Hidalgo, Juan Aldama, José Mariano Jimenez and Ignacio Allende — would be executed, their heads staked to the four corners of the Alhóndiga by the Spanish as a gruesome warning to like-minded individuals.

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The Alhóndiga’s southwestern corner was visible from our hotel’s patio, and simply inscribed in the buildings stone was the name “Allende.” This must have been where his head was positioned for the 10 years that the war raged on, a chilling thought. These reminders of the past were just as much a part of Guanajuato’s visual feast as the colorful homes, the merry minstrels from the university, the mariachis in Jardin de la Union, and the ornate facade of the Teatro Juarez.

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Mexico Travelogue (Part 1): Viernes de Dolores

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It took roughly five minutes on the ground in Léon to ditch any lingering fear I had about traveling in Mexico. I’d love to point to one symbolic thing that put me at ease — a child releasing a white dove by the side of the road, or something ridiculous like that — but I can’t. It was just a feeling. Got bags, cleared immigration, found a taxi, we’re moving. OK, it’s go time. We’re on vacation. We’re traveling. Look: a Pollo Feliz billboard.

Soon, the taxi driver was excitedly conversing with Hailey about Guanajuato and the heat. Hace mucho calor, verdad? My Spanish is spotty, but I was catching the drift. I was still wearing jeans from an early start in Denver, and now the heat was making me regret it. This I resolved to change as soon as we checked in.

The highway between Léon and Guanajuato was finding a fold in the landscape and climbing into a dusty canyon speckled with dead-looking trees and colorful houses: the outskirts of the city. There was a festive air to Guanajuato on this Friday afternoon, and it was readily apparent even on the fringes of the city. Families were out in the plazas and in the parks, doing things together in the hot April sun. It was Viernes de Dolores, the Friday of Sorrows, just two days shy of Palm Sunday and the first in a chain of holy events we’d experience during our time in Mexico. In fact, despite being curious agnostics, Semana Santa was the whole reason Hailey and I were coming to Guanajuato and later visiting San Miguel de Allende. The celebrations and pageantry were something I had read about and wanted to photograph for some time. My religion didn’t matter, just the desire to witness an intense cultural celebration and learn from it. Little did I know just how much I would learn.

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By the entrance to the Hotel Antiguo Vapor was an altar to the Virgin Mary, decorated in papel picado, clipped flowers and candles. By nightfall we had seen dozens of these shrines, some decorated in sawdust, others with dried food like corn and beans. All of them were intensely purple — a sovereign color that would mark the days of our travels through Easter — and all of them were centered on a portrait of Mary.

At first glance, the shrines seemed to be in the background of Guanajuato’s festive atmosphere. Our introductory walk through town led us by an endless stream of food vendors, street musicians and comically overburdened toy salesmen who catered to moms and dads and children who were cramming as much fun as they could into their day off. Our wanderings lead us to the El Pípila monument — one of the most impressive city overlooks I’ve ever visited — and it too was crawling with families and permeated with the vendors who were capitalizing on their hunger, their thirst, and their desire for simple but amusing toys.

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But the solemnity of the Viernes de Dolores emerged at nightfall. We had negotiated our way through the streets to Plazuela de San Fernando and dined on a molcajete filled with steak, chorizo, chicken, onions and nopales. Slap the ingredients on a corn tortilla, drop a spoonful of salsa verde across the top and you have one of Guanajuato’s signature dishes. We would have an even better one two days later at La Botellita, which included pineapples. But as dinner wrapped up, a cacophony of drummers echoed from Iglesia de San Roque, a yellow and red church just a block away. Soon, a massive procession of drummers of all ages entered the square, followed by an altar with a plaster statue of the Virgin Mary, dressed in purple robes and bedecked with flowers. The altar was too tall to pass underneath the phone and electrical wires draped across the narrow streets. So, it was an individual’s task to follow the altar with a large, forked stick and lift the loose wires for Mary to pass beneath.

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It was the trip’s first instance of serendipity. It’s second would follow on the heels of the parade. After we watched the parade continue into the heart of the city, we opted to walk back to the hotel — a bit fatigued and a bit comotose from the molcajete. We got a mere 100 yards before we discovered a crowd of people congregated around a stage set beneath Iglesia de San Roque. Merry mariachi music filled the air, and on stage, eight couples danced in a beautiful performance of baile folklórico. They pranced with gleeming smiles, and while it was so quintessentially Mexican in its colors, its sounds and its movements, it was also chivalrous and nostalgic, the kind of display that allows the audience to reach back for simpler times.

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Behind the audience, Guanajuato crawled up the hillside like a colorful array of Legos piled toward the stars. My feet were tired, and I was a bit dehydrated, but I was happy to be standing there. After all, we’d thought about cancelling the trip because of safety concerns. After all, Edward James Olmos — the guy who played Selena’s dad! — said “don’t go to Mexico…anywhere.”

I can tell you right now: from where I sit and from what I experienced in Guanajuato and San Miguel de Allende, go to this part of Mexico. It is so very worth it.

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Sterile Miniature Airports: DIA and DFW

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The world of today’s air traveler is a far cry from any jetset, glamorous notions of the ’50s. It is a miniature world of OCD rules and filthy public bathrooms. A place where TSA officials wear latex sanitation gloves to examine your passport (don’t know about you, but I sneeze on my passport all the time). It’s a realm of white noise and insulated thoughts, exaggerated anxiety and grey plastic bins. The threat level has recently been raised to orange for seven years now.

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And then there is the dietary habits of today’s traveler. Short layovers squeezing lunches into a 15 minute window — cardboard ingredients forced down a throat at 10:15am.

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There are worker bees who live this reality five to seven days a week. The burdens of the lifestyle are insane: shoes X-rayed twice a day, pockets stuffed with boarding pass stubs from yesterday, a two-minute wait for the next train to Terminal D. It is a life of 1,000 petty anxieties, each ticking the blood pressure up a notch each day.

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And then there was this girl in pink, staring at the candy store, waiting with her dad for it to open. And it reminds you that you are going somewhere deliberately — for once. No agenda. No business suit to iron. Just a lot of shorts and T-shirts in your suitcase. You’re three hours from walking off the plane into the realm of Mexico, a place that is familiar and yet all together new, exhilerating and bizarre. And you put your camera and its rented tilt-shift lens back in the bag and go find an exchange counter to get some pesos to get you started. Oh yeah: now I remember why I like traveling.

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The Moment: Good Friday in San Miguel de Allende

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My impressions of Christianity will never be the same. Not after yesterday in San Miguel de Allende. Good Friday was marked by two vivid processions through the streets of this 400-year-old Mexican city. At noon, the Passion of the Christ was marked with a steady parade of Roman centurions, angels, and two men portraying the thieves crucified with Christ (pictured above). At dusk, a silent parade of some 2,000 mourners marked the funeral of Jesus Christ. It was stirring, graphic, and oddly foreign — odd in that I come from a “Christian nation” and have never seen such a display of devotion. Between the men being whipped shirtless in the streets, to the old women carrying massive altars of the saints that must have weighed at least 1,000 pounds, I have developed a whole new understanding of Christianity’s complexities, both spiritual and cultural.

I will do a whole blog post on the parades when we get back. For now, I just wanted to post one image that captures one moment in a more significant journey. Tomorrow is our last full day in San Miguel de Allende. Monday, we return.

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Thoughts from San Miguel de Allende

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San Miguel de Allende is a magnificent place, and nothing like Guanajuato. If anything, it reminds me of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Then again, comparison is always one of those crutch devices to try to understand a place. Apple-to-orange notions fall short every time.

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There are a lot of things that I don’t get about this place. For one, its existence. The drive from Guanajuato to San Miguel was desolate and largely featureless — hardly the type of place where you’d expect to find a flourishing spiritual, artistic and historic city. Arriving on the outskirts of town is, to be frank, underwhelming. But then you reach the cobbles, and the character changes. Color explodes in the crisp desert light, temples of Catholicism rise needle straight into the sky, and mariachi music rises with blaring beauty from the main garden square. By day three, you realize that you are constantly discovering new courtyards, new cafes, new shops, new fountains, and new details of quiet beauty. For instance, the way they display roses for sale … by leaving them in a trickling fountain in the hot afternoon.

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And yes, there are lots of gringos. Tourists, but also residents. A couple from Canada whom we had drinks with noted that 20% of this town’s population is gringo. So be it. It’s still a gorgeous and inspired place, even if its existence is still something I’m working on.

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Welcome to Guanajuato, Mexico

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Here’s the thing about blogging from your vacation: where’s the fun in it? It literally cuts off any chance you may have to brag about the trip when you come back — people already know what you did.

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I will say this: Guanajuato is extraordinarily fun. From atop the city’s El Pipila lookout, you don’t hear the roar of traffic — like you’d expect in a town this size — you hear three or four different sets of live music coming from the many plazas that are tucked in the ravine of this ancient city.

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These are just a few of the shots we’ve taken so far. I’ve deliberately left my favorites out, just because I want to give this trip more justice when I’m back and able to write about it without cerveza on the brain.

Today we’re heading over to San Miguel de Allende for Semana Santa. Perhaps I’ll blog again from there … perhaps I won’t.

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