Burning of Judas: A Mexican Easter Holy Week Tradition Gets Political Agence France-Presse | |
go to original April 6, 2015 |
People observe the "Burning of Judas" a celebration held on Holy Week, at the La Merced neighborhood in Mexico City on April 4, 2015 (AFP)
During Holy Week in Mexico there are always processions and prayers, traditionally observed by worshipers across the country. But lesser-known traditions also persist, such as burning Judas figures as a means of overcoming evil.
Judas, the apostle who betrayed Jesus, gets what’s coming to him in this bit of faith-inspired Easter street theater: giant papier mache Judas figures — they can cost as much as $4,000 to make — are hung over crowds who light giant sparklers that hiss and crackle as the bad guy goes down in flames.
“This has been handed down from generation to generation,” said Leonardo Linares at the capital’s Sonora marketplace, among a clutch of Judas figures getting ready to be torched.
“This really is where you learn tradition, we have kept it up all this time because we have seen everything that this art has brought, felt it being handed from parents to children.”
One quirky Mexican twist: what started as a symbol of rage against a biblical traitor has expanded to the political realm.
Anybody who is particularly unpopular could be in line, such as President Enrique Pena Nieto. A figure in his likeness disappeared into flames before cheering crowds at this weekend’s Easter celebrations.
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