Posts tagged San Miguel de Allende

Pilgrims

Pilgrims line up for breakfast in the campo outside San Miguel de Allende on the first day of their 9-day Caminito de San Juan de Los Lagos

The pilgrims who began their 9-day walk, or Caminito, to San Juan de Los Lagos, should be arriving today, to receive the blessing and miracles of Our Lady of San Juan de Los Lagos.

Nine days ago, in the pre-dawn darkness, in front of Harry’s Bar in el Centro de San Miguel de Allende, a few hundred San Miguelitos, like myself, gathered to join them on the first leg of this centuries-old journey.

While the pilgrims come from all over Mexico to participate in what is considered among the most significant and grueling pilgrimages, leading to the miraculous image of Our Lady of San Juan de Los Lagos, us locals were raising funds for the Domestic Violence Prevention program at C.A.S.A., a organization serving poor adolescents and rural women and their families since 1981.

Trish Mar, San Miguel Walk Coordinator
The annual San Miguel Walk raises funds to end domestic violence. Shown is a banner of Our Lady of San Juan de Los Lagos, known for miracles helping women and children.

Domestic violence crosses all cultural and socio-economic boundaries; it is reported in 60% of Mexican households. C.A.S.A., housed at a beautiful facility west of centro, provides education and training, focusing on early intervention and building knowledge and skills so individuals are better prepared to manage their own lives. Additionally, the organization offers a community center for young people, maternity hospital and family health clinic (free HIV testing, pap smears, birth control, etc.), Mexico’s only government accredited school of midwifery, child development center, library, counseling, anti-violence program and a number of outreach, advocacy and school-based programs. Indeed, a worthy organization to support!

Young people support C.A.S.A. and Mariposas San Miguel with their butterfly wings and a banner proclaiming: "No More Beating""

Also participating in the 8th Annual San Miguel Walk were supporters of Mariposas San Miguel, the slogan of which is: imagine a world without violence. Former Santa Fean and well-known artist, Lena Batula, founded Mariposas and is devoted to empowering indigenous women, from rural areas in the region, to produce colorful and functional hand-crafted products, thereby taking charge of their lives and supporting their families.  If you’re looking for a beautiful, unique gift for your self or a friend, you’ll find it at Mariposas online store and support the vitality and independence of these talented women.

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As I was standing in the field, snapping photos, a slight and seemingly shy young man of maybe 20, approached and asked in Spanish if I were a “peregrino,” a pilgrim. “No, I am sorry but I am only here to see the beginning.” “Too bad,” he replied. “Have you walked this before?” I asked. “Oh yes, many times. This will be my fifth.” “Are you walking alone?”  “No, I’m with my parents,” he said, pointing to an elderly couple walking slowly arm and arm across the grass, his father using a cane. “They have done it 12 times.” “How can you take off for nine days and walk?” “How could we not? It is our faith.”

San Miguel walkers, against domestic violence and for C.A.S.A., cross a make shift bridge to join the Pilgrims
The sun rose as we walked through the dusty outskirts of San Miguel and into the countryside. While the Pilgrims continued on their journey of faith, we returned to C.A.S.A. in the hope that our small effort will make a difference in the lives of women and children served by this exceptional organization.

Acts of Love – Take 1

Along the cobblestone streets of Miguel de Allende, I am struck by the kindness I see – between parents and children, lovers, friends, old and young. I know there is no panacea, and there are angry and thoughtless, wounded people everywhere, but it seems that the more I notice acts of love, the more I see of them. I plan to continue capturing photos of people reaching out to one another, touching, caring, connecting. I hope you too will start noticing this wherever you are, and be inspired to share these stories of human decency.

Colores de San Miguel de Allende

Some of you have asked for more photos of picturesque San Miguel de Allende, so here are a few … enjoy!

view from my rooftop
The neighbor's bird
along Francisco Gonzales Bocanegra, Colonia Guadalupe, San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico

San Miguel de Allende: First Impressions

The full moon hovered large and bright above the mesas, accompanying my pre-dawn shuttle van from Santa Fe to Albuquerque, like a friendly blessing to my farewell to winter and the start of my trip to San Miguel de Allende, in the central “Bajio” region of Mexico.

I had visited San Miguel 37 years ago when living for six months in another nearby Spanish Colonial city, Guanajuato. While I knew that  it and I had changed, I was eager to discover how.

The most marked difference (besides the increase in cars, technology and availability of U.S. goods) is being a Baby Boomer in a city that attracts my ex-pat contemporaries. Instead of being footloose college-age kids, passing through hostels and swapping stories of cheap eats and travel plans, there is an extraordinary community of accomplished, creative people (heavy on the female gender) who have made San Miguel their home, full or part time.

My Santa Fe friend, sculptor and jeweler Karen Wight, has made her full-time home here for five years and invited me to stay in her spacious house/studio in Colonia Guadalupe, a traditional neighborhood in easy walking distance of everything in the city.

Having a local friend always enhances the experience of a new place, but Karen’s many established connections, interests and community engagement, rocketed me into the middle of a vibrant movable feast of food, friends, music, dance, literature, art and general socializing.

While Santa Fe is renowned for many of the same attributes as San Miguel – art, culture, architecture, fiestas, markets, alternative therapies – the difference for me is the genuine openness and welcome I have received here; unlike anywhere I’ve been.

In just four days, I have attended to two private parties and several cantina meet-ups where conversation and tequila flow freely; met almost every vendor at the Saturday organic market at Parque Benito Juarez, and numerous shop and gallery owners (ex-pats who have created businesses here); added more than a dozen personal contacts to my address book of people I want to know; and participated in an annual 10k walk – at the beginning of the 9-day pilgrimage of the faithful to San Juan de Los Lagos – to raise awareness and support for ending domestic violence.

I have visited the baroque-gothic cathedral, La Parroquia de San Miguel Archangel (the tall spires in this photo) and found a favorite food stall at the Jardin across the street with tasty chicken tacos and fries for less than $2. I have walked many of the cobblestone streets and sat in cafes, danced to live music, watched the sun set over the distant arid hills from rooftop decks; visited the public library (“biblioteca”) with its mural-rich rooms and elegant stone courtyard; and taken many photos of the colorful buildings for which San Miguel is famous. I have stayed out late and risen early to the adamant crowing of neighboring roosters. So far, I have found nothing disappointing and am enjoying every minute.

As fund-raising expert, tour guide and botanical illustrator Dianne Aigaki confirmed for me at a small gathering last night, “There is a plethora of phenomenal people in San Miguel.” Her decades-long experience in and out of San Miguel is that it attracts those who want to get back on track from wherever they may have gotten off years ago, or those who are following their creative dreams, or women of a certain age for whom San Miguel offers close friendships and a safe, ready-made social scene.

No doubt, being in a foreign country offers a sense of solidarity and potential for deeper expression or reinvention, but I suspect there is much more… and I intend to find out.

I am trusting in La Luna, which sent me off from Santa Fe in the fullness of the feminine, to guide me in this adventure. Please stay tuned!

San Miguel de Allende offers women a safe, supportive, friendship-oriented environment and ready-made social scene. Patricia Barakat and Karen Wight pose in front of one of many colorful stores.

How To Plan A Trip

The planning process, and the trip itself, should be fun and exhilarating, or why bother? (All photos on this site by Aysha Griffin, unless otherwise noted)

When planning a trip, do you: spending years pouring over guidebooks and reading relevant books and articles? Hire a travel agent or book a tour? Spend countless hours online researching? Or, simply taking off without a plan?  There is no right way.It’s a matter of what works for you, the destination, and available time and budget. But no matter how you plan (or don’t), the important  thing is to, finally, GO!

As an independent traveler, I like to think I am spontaneous and, for short vacations to a singular destination, I usually am – just book flight, lodging (and, sometimes, rental car or other transportation) and see what and who shows up. But when it comes to prolonged travel with numerous destinations and/or involving others, I do considerable research for best deals on flights, places to stay; gaining familiarity with places I hope to visit, and attempting to make local contacts beforehand. This is a time consuming process that I enjoy, enriching the anticipation as well as appreciation once I am under way.

Whether ponderous or spontaneous, I find a great trip requires planning enough for peace of mind and accomplishing some goals, while leaving lots of time and space for chance encounters and Serendipity to surprise and delight. Having been a traveler since my teens, when I first started hitchhiking across the U.S., I’ve developed a certain confidence and ease in the pleasure of the way I travel, alone or with others.  Since many of you are also travel aficionados, and a few have been kind enough to ask,”How do you do it?” I will chronicle my upcoming trip to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, slated for January 20-March 22, 2011.  READ MORE >>>>