The Day of the Dead – El Día de los Muertos – in Spanish is a Mexican celebration of deceased ancestors. Multi-coloured ...
Over the course of Mexico’s history, Día de los Muertos has provided an intimate space of encounter between the living and the dead at home and at grave altars. Families prepare lavish offerings of ...
Mexico City is the most popular Day of the Dead destination, but Mexico's Pueblos Mágicos are worth exploring too, and may be ...
The Casa de México in Madrid is exhibiting the largest altar to the dead in Europe. Guillermo González is the designer of ...
Marigold? Check. Candles? Check. And of course, sugar skulls - the final touch on altars honouring deceased loved ones during ...
I just got back from Puerto Vallarta, which means I spent five days in Mexico visiting our hotel bathroom all alone, ...
The cempasuchil, also known as the Mexican marigold, has been farmed for generations and takes the spotlight every year in ...
Families in a small town in western Mexico kept an all-night vigil at a candlelit cemetery, waiting for the souls of their ...
At around 3:09 p.m. local time on Saturday, Nov. 1, an explosion occurred at Waldo’s in Hermosillo that caused a blaze while ...
These five spots in Mexico host some of the best Day of the Dead celebrations and one of them is near AZ. Here's what to expect from each.
Parishioners in Mexico City, Mexico, celebrate one of the country's most profound cultural traditions, Day of the Dead, on ...
Día de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is more than a holiday — it’s a vibrant reflection of how Mexicans and many Latin Americans understand life and death. Its roots stretch back roughly 2,500 to 3 ...