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Semana Santa in Mazatlan is basically an expression of the general feeling,
"We had so much fun at Carnaval, let's do it all over again!" Everyone
is on vacation, so the western half of Mexico comes here and parties on
the beach and in the street. The main drag becomes clogged with parades,
cruisers and taxis. The sidewalks overflow onto the road, and vice versa.
The beach is teeming with people. Hotels downtown rent out space on top
of their rooftops. It is an epic event on the scale of a Cecil B DeMille
movie, or is it Fellini? Toddlers in princess costumes perched on the
hoods of Dodge Darts without so much as a crash helmet or a bunjee cord.
A family of five balanced on a moped, all clutching roses to sell. Pick
ups full of teenagers waving cans of Modelo and shouting at each other
above the thumping roar of Shakira's latest smash hit. Luckily nobody
is moving very fast, traffic being backed up as far as the eye can see.
The intersections are enlivened by flaming sword swallowers, balloon sculptors
and windshield abrasers. The astute traveler will enjoy bemusedly observing
the spectacle while maintaining a safe distance from the stampede, much
the same strategy as that employed by survivors of the running of the
bulls in Pamplona. This is a good time for discovering the shady comfort
and tranquility of your balcony, watching the crazy ensemble go by without
being jostled. Of course, there will always be those restless, intrepid
souls who will insist on charging into the melee, often the same ones
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who will spurn sunblock cream their first day in the tropics. Don't come
crying to me because somebody stepped on your foot or your nose is sunburned.
I was unprepared for the excesses of Holy Week down here. Easter in my
old home town tended to be, as I recall, a pretty low key affair. It's
been a few years, but I vaguely recollect chocolates and ham, an egg hunt
on the church lawn, and a sermon about rising from the dead, emerging
from the cave, and if He sees His shadow, there's six more weeks of winter.
Here, attending Easter Mass at the Cathedral in Old Mazatlan is a truly
awe inspiring experience, and being in Spanish it seems somehow more authentic,
more like the original unintelligible Latin. The Cathedral becomes a spiritual
haven, while all around swirls a sort of madness, a kind of Spring Break
for the whole family. It all reflects the oneness of La Raza, the hundred
million Mexicans who share an ethnicity and culture that goes even beyond
belonging to the same Church. Gueros and morenos, chilangos and norteņos,
they are all in the same boat together. It shows in the way a stranger
will pick up a woman's baby, give it a hug and a kiss, and pass it back.
You can feel it when they fill the streets, celebrating together. While
the US becomes increasingly fragmented, a bewildering melange of sub-cults,
peer groups and hyphenated ethnicities, it is impressive to see cultural
solidarity on such a massive scale. The nation that plays together, stays
together. If only they would keep it down, so this outsider could get
some sleep!
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