userbest.com userbest.com
   Index Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> ToS :> Add Url :> Submit Article
Search:   
Add URL
 

Online & Board Games

Shopping & Auction

Business & Services

Healthcare & Treatment

News & Media

Entertainment

Property & Estate

Outdoor & Sports

Computers & Software

Fashion & Lifestyle

Eating & Drinking

Travel & Vacation

Teens & Kids

Science & Research

Self Enhancement

Home Family & Garden

Academics & Education

Vehicles & Automotive

People & Communities

Creative Arts

Jobs & Employment

Health & Hygiene

Investment & Finance

Government & Politics


 

Index Page –› Academics & Education –› Language Programs
 

Spanish Immersion Program During the Day of the Dead in Oaxaca

 

Author: John Slocum

In the southern states of Mexico where indigenous people and their cultures thrive, the Day of the Dead is a very important syncretistic festival from October 31st November 2nd and is dedicated to the family and their deceased family members. I was glad I had chosen my Spanish immersion program during these dates.

Repetitive chanting solemn alternating with joyous song excitement of children running around all night vigils. Those were some observations of our visit to the cemetery of Xoxocotlan in Oaxaca that drew us in with a sense of complete disbelief and wonderment during our Spanish Immersion Experience in Mexico. I was experiencing the Day of the Dead, a traditional celebration in Oaxaca that would make my spanish immersion experience incredible!

All of our senses were alive that night as we very cautiously edged our way through the maze of hundreds of crowded tombstones, watching each step carefully along darkened and bumpy paths lit only by candles and the occasional camera flash from visitors.

Families were seated on the ground around the gravesites waiting out their overnight vigil with food, drinks, cigarettes, music and friends to keep them company. Our entry into the cemetery was no less than amazing, lit by candles and accompanied by a blanket of somber music being played.

The best part of my trip was that it was a complete Spanish immersion experience where I got involved in the culture. A week or two in advance of the 3-day festival, the families begin preparing for the actual return of their loved ones to the gravesite and I was there. Preparations include cleaning the grave to refresh the dirt and flowers around it and planting new flowers, making loaves of beautifully decorated pan de muertos (a special sweet bread) and other foods that their loved one enjoyed while alive, molding chocolate into shapes and constructing the altar.

The making of an altar is very personal, varying from one family to the next, built to display special items of remembrance of the deceased person in an attempt at bringing them back home once a year. No matter how modest the house is, everyone makes some type of altar. It may be as plain as a table with the loved one's photo and offerings such as chocolate, pan de muertos and flowers or it may involve a more elaborate assemblage of several step-like platforms with all of these items plus miniature "calaveras" (skeleton figures) and more. The structures themselves are covered in a cloth sheet before adding personal items and bright gold marigold-type flowers called zempasuchil are added.

During my Spanish immersion experience I visited the open-air Abastos market in Oaxaca, there was a stand dedicated to making and selling all types of chocolate. Not surprisingly, this stand was one of the more popular stops for visitors and locals alike who would take their chocolate home to mold it into shapes for the dead. I remember watching the shop employees make the chocolate fresh for purchase. After buying some chocolate, it was handed to you still hot and in liquid form in a big plastic bag.

Later during the week, through the spanish immersion experience in Oaxaca I visited the market. We bought some chocolate for our host mother who used some of it for her altar and then watched as she prepared a homemade hot chocolate that she served to us every morning along with slices of pan de muertos and other typical Oaxacan dishes. She first placed broken pieces of the chocolate into a blue-glazed clay pitcher, poured in boiling milk and then used a wooden utensil called "molinillo" (similar to a honey dipper but larger) which, when the long handle was twirled back and forth between her hands, created a frothy layer on the chocolate. As she poured some chocolate into 2 mugs, she explained to us that the way we should eat the pan de muertos is by first dunking it into the chocolate. The combination of the sweet bread and warm chocolate was enough to make us happy for the rest of the day, thinking about the following day's breakfast that would undoubtedly include chocolate.

All in all, my Spanish immersion experience in Oaxaca was unforgetable. Experiencing the Day of the Dead during my Spanish immersion program abroad helped me realize that it is not enough to learn the language, do a Spanish immersion program, live with a local family but the combination of all these components that make you really learn the culture.

Author Bio:

John Slocum

Enjoy a free Spanish Phrase ebook - This 30-pager is great if you quickly want to learn Spanish phrases for travel or life in general. Also pronunciation and basic grammar. John Slocum is the president of AmeriSpan, a leader in language programs and study abroad since 1993. 85 cities, 35 countries. 25,000 past participants. To learn more about a Cultural Immersion Experience visit AmeriSpan .

You can also reach this article by using: italian language courses, italian language schools, learning sign language
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
"Impact with Intent" author Jack H. Jones: BOOK REVIEW
 
An Introduction to Biodiesel
 
Atomic Clocks: Why They Are The Best
 
Biography of Mikhail Gorbachev
 
Office Administration Schools Offer A Variety of Degrees
 
Back to School Time: Will it be Back to Classroom Management and Behavior Problems for Teachers?
 
Beating the High Price of Gasoline with Biodiesel
 
Small Business Book Review - Ries and Trout on Positioning
 
Al Jazeera - The Novel?
 
"Goblins" Flops
 
 
 
 

Don't Let Anyone Keep You From Writing!

"I got some terrible advice from my agent, who actually wanted me to write LESS," says Dr. Gary S. G ... - Dr. Gary S. Goodman
 

Interview with Patricia Fry, author of "The Right Way to Write, Publish and Sell Your Book"

"The Right Way to Write, Publish and Sell Your Book" has been a long-time coming. This definitive gu ... - Juanita Watson
 

Double Eye Hurricane? Venus Vortex Vicious Voracious Violence

Is it possible to have a double by eye-walled hurricane? Well it appears that this is happening on V ... - Lance Winslow
 
 

Exam Results - Ten Stupid Things People Do to Trash Theirs - And How to Fix It

Has this ever happened to you? You've studied and researched and done lots of work, and yet somehow ... - Teresa Bolen
 

I'm Giving Away My Proven Formula on How to Get a Book Published

If you are going to follow any formula on how to get a book published you?d better make sure it come ... - Jim Green
 

Plain Speaking - 4 Secrets For Getting Your Book Purchased

What's the point of writing a brilliant book if you don't entice people to even open it? Make sre yo ... - Terry Freedman
 

Small Business Marketing Review - Value-Added Selling Techniques

OK, this article reviews a book on...sales. - Craig Lutz-Priefert
 

The Right Words

When Marlo Thomas was an 18-year-old up-and-coming actress, she was devastated when journalists bega ... - Paul Stevens
 
 
   Index Page :> Security & Privacy :> ToS
© 2006-2008 www.userbest.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.