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DAY OF THE DEAD 2004

One of the most colorful and intriguing celebrations in Mexico, the Day of the Dead is celebrated throughout the country and coincides with the Christian "All Souls" and "All Saints" days. On November 1st and 2nd Mexicans remember those who have passed away and in doing so erect beautiful altars which symbolize the loving dialogue between death and life. The Mexican Society UEA with the help of many members placed an Altar within the Hive to share this tradition with the University's community.

* click on the picture to see it larger

"The opposition between life and death was not so absolute to the ancient Mexicans as it is to us. Life extended into death, and vice versa. Death was not the natural end of life but one phase of an infinite cycle. Life, death and resurrection were stages of a cosmic process which repeated itself continuously. Life had no higher function than to flow into death, its opposite and complement; and death, in turn, was not an end in itself; man fed the insatiable hunger of life with his death"

Octavio Paz (1950)
The Labyrinth of Solitude, pg. 54

 

 

 

 

 


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Modified on 03/ March / 2007