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Church of Saint Death

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AGBF

Super_Ideal_Rock
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In another thread a poster asked who designed the wedding gown worn by Thalía in her wedding at St. Patrick's Cathedral. I decided to give the research a whirl and found that the dress was designed by Mexican designer Mitzy. In the process I also found out that he had designed the wedding gown of the Cuban-Mexican entertainer Niurka Marcos. (One can see pictures of her wedding gown in that thread.)

Niurka got married in the Church of Saint Death in Mexico City. I thought that the rising interest in this church was interesting. Some excerpts from the article follow.

"Deep in the heart of Mexico City's toughest neighborhood, in streets plagued by drugs and prostitution, faithful Catholics are praying to a new and fearsome saint: death itself.

They come by the dozens to the Mercy Church, a former house in the Tepito neighborhood stuffed with statues and posters of the Grim Reaper, known among the devotees as St. Death.

They ask La Santa Muerte for miracles, light candles and give offerings of food, liquor and cigarettes. Some bring their children, who look up with awe at the grinning skeletons and their scythes.

The Roman Catholic Church says the veneration of St. Death is growing in Mexico despite attempts by priests to stop it. There are 40 shrines to Death in Mexico City and about 400 nationwide, said Davíd Romo Guillen, bishop of the Traditional Catholic Church Mex-USA, which runs the Mercy Church and has become the most visible promoter of St. Death. There are five prayer groups in California, Oregon and Washington, D.C., Romo said, but none in Arizona.

...

Devotees say death worship stretches back to pre-Columbian times in Mexico, and the veneration of saints is popular among Catholics worldwide. But Román said the St. Death phenomenon began about 10 years ago in Mexico's slums and prisons and has accelerated in the past two years.

The Mercy Church was founded in 2000, and the Traditional Catholic Church Mex-USA was officially recognized as a religion by the Mexican government in 2003. The church's priests now perform marriages, including the much-publicized wedding of actress Niurka Marcos.

Followers deny they practice witchcraft or Satanism, and the church has sued the Roman Catholic bishop of León for suggesting a link. Devotees regard Death as a kind of angel who kills people on God's orders, akin to Archangels Gabriel and Michael. They have even picked a festival day for her, Aug. 15. Vendors now sell Grim Reaper T-shirts, complete with the "Prayer to Saint Death," outside the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Mexico's holiest shrine.

'The people who live here are people who have problems, and death is a very real and close thing to them,' said Arturo Garcia, one of Mercy Church's priests. 'For us, Saint Death is an angel of God, a messenger.'

The movement is unrelated to the Day of the Dead, or All Souls Day, when Mexicans honor family members who have died.

Altars to St. Death have popped up in unlikely places, like the Pardo Jewelry Shop frequented by tourists on Mexico City's main plaza, the Zócalo.
...

The Chapel of the Most Holy Death is filled with pictures and statues of the Grim Reaper, and the altar overflows with offerings of fresh fruit, bread, cigars and tequila.

The skeletons are dressed in hooded robes, some of them covered with white lace like wedding gowns. Some wear crowns or carry a globe. All of them carry long scythes.

A sign warns, 'The lighting of black candles is strictly prohibited,' an effort to discourage witchcraft, Treja said.

Worried by the trend, Catholic priests in central Mexico City are giving sermons about Rome's take on the issue: that death is a phenomenon, not a saint or an angel. Last month, 500 Catholics from three parishes held an outdoor Mass near one of the St. Death shrines to show they reject the movement, Román said.

...

But the condemnation seems to be falling on deaf ears. During one recent afternoon, Mercy Church was buzzing with activity while the San Antonio Tomatlan Catholic Church down the street was deserted.

About 20 people moved past the robed skeletons, bowing their heads and touching the glass cases around some of the more elaborate statues. The gift shop did a brisk business, selling Grim Reaper amulets for 90 cents and shiny metal figurines for $3.

Outside the church, a vendor sold statues of Michelangelo's Pietá, but with Death cradling the body of Jesus instead of Mary.

Two police officers stopped and crossed themselves in front of a life-size, scythe-carrying skeleton in a satin robe mounted in a glass case in front of the church. A few minutes later, a man with a face covered with tattoos and cuts did the same. Another passer-by kissed the glass, then knelt on the sidewalk and prayed.

'To the people here, Death offers friendship, hope, and miracles,' Romo said. 'We're the church of the people, down here among the people . . . and that's why the Roman Catholic church sees us as a threat.'
 

MINE!!

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My God... I have no idea what to say...
 

AGBF

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I have been looking for more to read about this religion. This article has some new things to say. Here are some excerpts and a link.


"Like many Santa Muerte wor-shippers, Gutierrez asks God's permission to pray to Death, unconcerned by the contradiction between practicing Christianity and a growing pagan cult, which is experiencing a revival after lying dormant until the 1960s.

Eduardo Ruben Villegas shows off his amulets outside the shrine to Santa Muerte in Tepito district, Mexico City, on March 15. "First for me comes God and then Santa Muerte," he said.

Before her glass casing, followers deposit apples and eggplants to symbolize abundance, flowers, glasses of tequila and half-smoked cigarettes. Some blow cigar smoke over her image in a cleansing rite.

'She likes it when we do that. She likes the smell of tobacco,' said Enriqueta Romero, who tends the shrine.

A funeral cortege of gangsters sporting shades and gold chains passed by in gleaming cars, music blaring, saluting the shrine as they went.

'People ask her: `Protect me tonight because I am going to kidnap or assault somebody,' said Mexican writer and poet Homero Aridjis, who documented this thriving cult in a book of fictional stories called 'Santa Muerte.'

The title story is based on a debauched birthday party Aridjis attended of a powerful politician with links to drug traffickers.

At the host's lavish ranch, where former beauty queens plied guests with alcohol and cocaine, Aridjis says he witnessed members of Mexico's political and business elite worship at a secret altar to Santa Muerte -- his first encounter with the phenomenon.

PAGAN DEVOTION

Mexicans have long had a complex relationship with death. Ancient indigenous cultures worshipped a god of death called Mictlantecuhtli, and the Aztecs believed mass human sacrifice was vital to feed the gods and keep the life cycle going.

Even after the Spanish conquest brought Catholicism to the region, Mexicans retained a strong pagan devotion to death, as seen by their celebration every November of the Day of the Dead when they erect altars to the dead in their homes and prepare elaborate meals for the departed souls. It is akin to Roman Catholics' observation on Nov. 2 of All Souls' Day, when they pray for the souls of the faithful departed.

'The cult to Santa Muerte is a syncretism between the Catholic Church and pre-Colombian worship of death,' Aridjis said.

Halloween, originally a Celtic pagan feast of the dead to mark the end of the harvest and start of winter, is celebrated in the US and parts of Europe, mainly as a commercial holiday.

The cult of Santa Muerte has seen a revival in the past decade, a revival which Aridjis attributes to disillusionment with 'the system.'

'There is a complete disappointment with the government, people can't expect anything from the politicians, the parties or the established Church,' he said.

A shrine to the Virgin of Guadalupe, Mexico's beloved dark-skinned version of Mary, stands on the next street corner from the macabre Tepito shrine.

'Santa Muerte is a saint like any other. She performs many miracles,' said shaven-headed taxi driver Eduardo Ruben Villegas, 35, who sports multiple tattoos and has an altar in his home to Santa Muerte.

He has been a devotee since she cured his sister of cancer, he said."

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movie zombie

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you always find the most interesting articles...!

peace, movie zombie
 

AGBF

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Date: 6/1/2005 12:01:21 AM
Author: movie zombie
you always find the most interesting articles...!

Well...thank you. I believe it is just that we have similar *taste* in articles! The bulk of my newspaper reading is about mundane issues that I would never consider discussing here. I share 1 in 1,000 articles (or so it seems). When I see something that seems out of the ordinary and interesting I tend to think of Pricescope. Right now I am thinking we need to read about the revelations on the identity of Woodward and Bernstein''s "Deep Throat".

Deb
 

LadyluvsLuxury

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