mexico

mexico

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

The Missing Arrow

One of the landmarks along Mexico City's Paseo de la Reforma is a fountain featuring a statue of Diana, the Roman goddess of the hunt.  


The fountain was erected in 1942 during the Presidency of Manuel Avila Camacho.  The nude statue of the goddess provoked one of the most laughable controversies in the city's history.  Conservative elements, including the League of Decency, were scandalized by the nudity.  One of the members of the League was the wife of Avila Camacho, and the sculptor gave in to the pressure.  He cast a pair of bronze panties to put on the statue.  However, he astutely foresaw a less prudish future and soldered the metal clothing to the statue in only three points so that it could be easily removed.

Finally in 1967, the mayor of Mexico City ordered the panties to be removed.  However, the statue was damaged in the process, and a new statue was cast from the original mold.

I bring this up because a couple of weeks ago I saw something I had never noticed before.  Just across the street from the fountain, between the entrances to a bar and the Cine Diana (a movie theater named after the fountain) is an arrow is stuck into the wall with this plaque beneath it.


     The plaque says...
The Arrow of Diana the Huntress
It was believed lost
and was only hidden
reserving its good luck
for whomever asks for a wish here.

If you look at the photo of the fountain above, you will see that, indeed, Diana has a bow but no arrow.  I am skeptical as to whether or not this arrow really belonged to the statue, and if so, how was it lost and where was it found?  

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Women Champs

Even though Mexico is passionate about "fútbol", the men's national team has never won a World Cup or even second place.  (Twice they have reached the quarter finals, and placed sixth.)  However, in 1971 the women's championship was held in Mexico City, and Mexico's team came in second to Denmark.  The final match, held in Mexico City's Azteca Stadium, was attended by 110,000 spectators, a record for women's soccer.  It's a record which still stands today.

This sign, under a freeway overpass, honors the 1971 women's team.


 
 

The surviving members of that team are a lot older today... as are we all!

More from the Infinite City

Here are more pictures from "The Infinite City", an outdoor photographic exhibition of images of Mexico City on display along the fence of Chapultepec Park.



Cars of the "cablebus", Mexico City's newest and most unique form of public transportation



A tangled network of Mexico City highways



 
 The Olympic Stadium where the 1968 Summer Olympics were held
You can see the cauldron where the Olympic flame was lit.
The exterior is decorated with a 3-dimensional stone mural designed by Diego Rivera.



Route 3 of the "cablebus" at sunset



The Day of the Dead parade



A woman working in a market



Another market scene



Playing soccer on the campus of the National University



A "lucha libre" match



The "alebrije" parade



The Plaza of the Three Cultures
Aztec ruins, a colonial-era church, and 20th century apartment blocks



Dancing on the Zócalo



Jacaranda trees in bloom in Chapultepec Park



The Azteca Stadium, where this year's World Cup games are being played.
From the lack of development around the stadium, I would guess that this photo was taken around the time of its inauguration in 1966.
The snow-capped volcano Iztaccíhuatl is visible in the background.



The Latin American Tower



I think this photo exemplifies the exhibit's title, "The Infinite City"...
an aerial shot above an inactive volcanic crater with the city extending endlessly beyond it.



Monday, June 15, 2026

The Infinite City

Along the perimeter of Chapultepec Park there is always a photographic exhibition posted on the fence.  The current exhibit is called "Fragments of the Infinite City".  The series of pictures, both new and vintage, in color and in black and white, depicts a variety of scenes from the city, not just its landmarks but also its people and traditions.

Here are some of the photos...



Celebration of the Day of the Dead in the cemetery in the far-southern district of Mixquic



Pilgrims on their way to the Basilica of Guadalupe



Elaborately dressed dolls of the Baby Jesus for the Feast of the Candelaria on February 2nd



Overhead shot of a flat-bottomed boat loaded with marigolds plying its way through the canals of Xochimilco



Bakers in a "churrería", a shop that sells "churros", a tasty tubular treat of fried dough



A field of marigolds grown for the Day of the Dead in Xochimilco



The colorful flat-bottomed boats known as "trajineras" which take visitors through the canals of Xochimilco.



A "quinceañera" (a girl celebrating her 15th birthday) poses with an organ grinder.



An organ grinder on a Mexico City street



A vintage photo of visitors to the National Museum of Anthropology when it opened in 1964



The Fountain of the Coyotes in Coyoacán



The baroque interior of the Church of La Enseñanza in the Historic Center



Pilgrims at the Basilica of Guadalupe



A clever artist transformed the pedestrian symbol on a traffic sign into an Aztec warrior.



A Mexico City subway station in an uncharacteristically empty moment



A family on the subway



Traffic along Insurgentes Avenue



The lake in Chaputepec Park




The abstract statue known as "El Caballito" (The Little Horse) at an intersection along Paseo de la Reforma


More photos in the next post...



 

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Station Renovation

The closest subway station to my apartment is San Pedro de los Pinos on Line 7.  Sometimes I take that line if I want to go to the Anthropology Museum.  I get off three three stops later at the Auditorio station.  It is at the far northwestern edge of Section 1 of Chapultepec Park and a short walk from the museum.  A while ago, the station was closed for renovations, and it reopened just a short time ago.  I went through that station last week when I wanted to go to the Global Village that has been set up for the World Cup.  I got to see the renovations.



The walls of the station are covered with dark gray marble.  The ceiling has wood (or perhaps faux wood) beams.


Most of the concrete dividers between the track are painted with abstract designs.  However, some of them have semi-abstract paintings of motifs from the pre-Hispanic civilizations.


Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent



An Olmec head



A Mayan "chac mool" statue


As you head toward the exit there are large panels painted with stylized images of Coatlicue, the Aztec mother goddess.



As you leave the station, instead of the typical turnstiles, there are automatic gates.  Notice the fellow to the right.  He is obviously a visitor from South Africa.  He has a South African flag draped across his shoulders, and he was probably going to the Global Village to root on his home team.


The most distinctive feature of the renovated station are the stained glass windows which depict Mexican motifs... a hummingbird, an axolotl, a prickly pear cactus, and an ear of corn.



Saturday, June 13, 2026

The World Comes to Chapultepec

On Thursday I went to the Global Village in Chapultepec Park, a series of booths representing the nations participating in the World Cup.


The "village" extends from the "Altar de la Patria" (Altar of the Fatherland) which honors the six teenaged cadets who died in the Battle of Chapultepec defending their country against the invading U.S. army, to the Gate of the Lions, the park's main entrance at Paseo del la Reforma.




   In the background you can see Chapultepec Castle atop the hill.


Beyond the trees, far in the background, you can just make out the column of the Monument to Independence, located on Paseo de la Reforma.

The festival of nations was well attended on that opening day of the games.
Many of the Mexican visitors were wearing their team's jerseys.  A few were even waving Mexican flags.




Although the day began cloudy, the sun later came out, and it was a beautiful afternoon.
The expected rain did not arrive later after the opening match had concluded.



I was disappointed with the festival in one respect.  As you may recall, I send dolls as gifts to the daughters of one of my friends in the U.S.  I was hoping to find dolls from a variety of countries.  Although quite a few of the booths sold handicrafts, I only found two countries that had dolls for sale... Algeria and Czechia.


The Czech pavilion



"Argelia" is the Spanish word for Algeria


A couple of Algerian gentlemen in native garb (plus their team's jersey).
Many of the booths were manned largely by Mexican hires.  But most of the staff at this pavilion were Algerians.  In fact, the lady that sold me the doll spoke French not Spanish.

Quite a few of the booths sold traditional foods, and I sampled a number of items.


The "empanada" (meat-filled turnover) from Paraguay was quite tasty.



The paprika meatballs from Hungary were good, although they would have been even better if they had been heated.


The bratwurst sandwich from Germany (Alemania in Spanish) were very good.  A couple of the ladies were from Germany, and I practiced my rudimentary German with them a bit.



Unfortunately, the apple strudel from Austria was not that good.



A fellow from Argentina selling the traditional gourds and cups from which they drink "yerba mate", a type of tea which is their national drink.



A lady at Ecuador's pavilion



A couple from Colombia


The pavilion from the United States was pathetic.  There was a lady at a table, a foosball table next to her, and a booth with four corporate sponsors selling jambalaya.  That was it.





The Canadian pavilion was also disappointing.  It was nothing more than an information desk from Air Canada.  However, you could spin a wheel to win a prize.  I won an Air Canada cap.





It did not surprise me that the most beautiful pavilion was Mexico's.


The decorations were made from painted corn husks.





Mexico, from the heart

There was a display of handicrafts from the different Mexican states.






South Africa was Mexico's opponent in the opening game.


The TV inside the pavilion was turned on when the game began.  When the national anthem was played, the South Africans all sang along.  Then the Mexican national anthem was played, and an even larger home team group was singing.

As I wrote in a previous post, shortly after the game had begun I heard an enormous wave of cheering and applause from the far end of the "village".  There were two large screens set up there, and the largely Mexican crowd went crazy when the home team scored their first goal.


¡Viva México!