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The Day of the Dead Festival

Logo of teh Dead of the Ded with a female skull face

Oct 28 - 30, 2022 • 12 - 5 pm

St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery

131 E 10th St, New York, NY 10003

Celebrate our beloved Day of the Dead tradition in New York City with art-making, live music, and more.

Day of the Dead (Día de Muertos) is a time to honor and revere our deceased family members and ancestors. This tradition is rooted in the native Mexican belief that life on earth is a preparation for the next world and of the importance of maintaining a strong relationship with the dead.

Celebrate the lives of members of your family and our community who have died. Remember your loved ones by bringing copies of photographs to be part of the ofrenda and honor them during the celebration.

Schedule

Friday, October 28

12- 5 pm - Market

Mexican folk art, papel picado, sugar skulls, pan de muerto bread, and Mexican food on sale   

12- 5 pm - Altar building

Join us for our traditional altar installation led by tradition bearer Danny Tepi. Members of the public assist in decorating and dedicating the ofrenda to our departed loved family members and friends.

4 pm    Workshop

 

Saturday, October 29  

12 - 5 pm - Marketplace

Mexican folk art, papel picado, sugar skulls, pan de muerto bread, and Mexican food on sale

1 - 4 pm - Workshops

Make paper flowers, decorate your Día de Muertos button, and more

3 pm - Claudia Valentina Montes (Music)

Enjoy the beautiful soulful performance 

4 pm - Son Pecadores (Son Jarocho)

Enjoy the regional folk musical style of Mexican Son 

Sunday, October 30

12 - 5 pm - Marketplace

Mexican folk art, papel picado, sugar skulls, pan de muerto bread, and Mexican food on sale

1-4 pm - Workshops

Make paper flowers, decorate your Día de Muertos button, and more

1 pm - Cetiliztli Nauhcampa Quetzalcoatl in Ixachitlan (music and dance)

Ceremonial performance by the indigenous community-based circle

3 pm - Linda EPO (Music) 

Linda's voice represents the melting pot she was born into, blending the powerful yet coy vocals found in Mexican ranchera music with the jazz and blues influences she grew up with in New York City.

4 pm - Mariachi Real de México

Enjoy the world-renowned Mariachi music native to a region of western Mexico that includes what are today the states of Jalisco, Nayarit, Zacatecas, Aguascalientes, Guanajuato, Michoacán, and Colima

5 pm - Taking down the Altar & closing

Live Music • Mexican Folk Art Market • Mexican Food

This event is free and open to the public. RSVP is not required but appreciated.

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The Day of the Dead at St. Mark's is outdoors, rain or shine. The scheduled activities are subject to change or cancelation if there are strong wind gusts, hail, or snow. For updates during the event, follow us on Twitter at @MexCulture.

Since 2005, We have celebrated the Day of the Dead in the East Yard of the historic St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery.

Our past Day of the Dead celebrations.

About the Day of the Dead

DAY OF THE DEAD (Día de Muertos) has been an important celebration in Mexico since pre-Hispanic times. The Mexica (Aztecs) memorialized their dead for two months in the summer: Miccailhuitontli (for children) and Hueymicailhuitl (for adults). Spaniards introduced the Catholic calendar and moved the practice of honoring the dead to All Souls Day, celebrated on November 2nd.

The tradition is rooted in the native Mexican belief that life on earth is a preparation for the next world and of the importance of maintaining a strong relationship to the dead. During this celebration, families gather in the cemetery to welcome the souls on their annual visit home. People prepare altars with traditional ephemeral elements for the season, such as cempasúchil (marigold) flowers, copal incense, fresh pan de muerto bread, candles, papel picado, and calaveras (sugar skulls). Photographs, mementos, and favorite items used by the departed are included.

The Mexica believed that when a person died, their teyolia, or inner force, went to one of several afterworlds, depending on how they died, their social position, and their profession (not by their conduct in life). There were special afterworlds for children, warriors and women in labor, people who died by drowning, and all others. This practice still endures today, with special altars built for people who have died in accidental deaths, for deceased children, and for adults who have died a natural death. The Mexican diaspora has taken this tradition to celebrate it across borders. Mano a Mano continues this tradition by highlighting important contemporary themes and popular public figures.

Día de Muertos or Dia de los Muertos


We use the traditional name of Día de Muertos. Día de los Muertos, frequently used in the U.S. and other English-speaking countries, is a back-translation of Day of the Dead into Spanish. In Mexico, traditionally, this celebration is known as Día de Muertos.

Downloads

 

Upcoming Events

Día de Muertos | Day of the Dead • 2022
Día de Muertos | Day of the Dead • 2022
Multiple Dates
Oct 30, 2022, 12:00 PM
St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery
Join us for our beloved Day of the Dead festival in New York City.
New York State Council on the Arts Logo
NY Community Trust Logo
NYC Department of Cultural Affairs Logo
Lincoln Center Logo
Mex-Am Cultural Foundation Logo
St. Mark's Logo
Copalli Logo
CUNY Mexican Studies Institute
CRNY logo

Thank you to our Supporters

 

The Day of the Dead festival is supported, in part, by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; Lincoln Center for the Performing Art's Latine Employee Resource Group, Mex-Am Cultural Foundation Inc.; CUNY Mexican Studies Institute; The New York Community Trust - Mosaic Network & Fund.

 

Additional support is provided by St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, Copalli Mexican Folk Art, and Creatives Rebuild New York.

Papel Picado Mano a Mano

© 2020 MexCulture

Mano a Mano: Mexican Culture Without Borders (MexCulture) is a New York-based 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization dedicated to celebrating Mexican culture.

Tel. (212) 587-3070 • (212) 587-3071 • info@manoamano.us 

475 Riverside Drive, Suite 434. New York, NY 10115
(Enter at 61 Claremont Avenue)

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Mano a Mano: Mexican Culture Without Borders programs are made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.

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