Hoy México celebra el Día del Mariachi

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Mariachi Vargas de Tecalitlan

Today Mexico celebrates Mariachi Day. I didn’t know this until this morning when I tuned in to “La Ranchera”, my favorite Mexican radio station. Local national mariachi bands are also being honored. Yay! I love to sing and listen to that music!

Celebrating Martin Luther King

Martin Luther King Jr.

Martin Luther King Jr.

Born: January 15, 1929 Died: April 4, 1968.

Martin Luther King Jr. was the most important voice of the American civil rights movement, which worked for equal rights for all. He was famous for using nonviolent resistance to overcome injustice, and he never got tired of trying to end segregation laws (laws that prevented blacks from entering certain places, such as restaurants, hotels, and public schools). He also did all he could to make people realize that “all men are created equal.” Because of his great work, in 1964 King received the Nobel Peace Prize — the youngest person ever to receive this high honor. King was also a Baptist minister. He was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, when he was just 39 years old. His birthday is now observed as a national holiday on the third Monday in January.

Note: The Library of Congress is the source of this information.

Feast of the Wise Men

Wise Men Visiting The Baby Jesus

Every year on January 6, Christians and Catholics celebrate the feast of the Wise Men. In some Catholic communities, children are often the recipients of more gifts. Sometimes tradition calls for making and eating  “La Rosca de Reyes” which contains a figurine of the baby Jesus. The person who has the baby Jesus in their portion gets to prepare dinner for friends and relatives. I didn’t know about this tradition until my sister told me.

The following excerpt from Wikipedia provides more information.

The Rosca de reyes is traditionally eaten on January 6,[1] during the celebration of the Día de Reyes (literally “Kings’ Day”), which commemorates the arrival of the three Magi or Wise Men. In most of Spain, Spanish America, and sometimes, Hispanic communities in the United States, this is the day when children traditionally get presents, which are attributed to the Three Wise Men (and not Santa Claus orFather Christmas). In Spain before children go to bed, they leave a dish filled with biscuits and a few glasses of water for the three wise men and the camels they ride on.[citation needed] The baby Jesus hidden in the bread represents the flight of the Holy Family, fleeing from King Herod‘s Massacre of the Innocents. Whoever finds the baby Jesus figurine is blessed and must take the figurine to the nearest church on February 2 (Candlemas Day, Día de la Candelaria). In the Mexican culture, this person has the responsibility of hosting a dinner and providing tamales and atole to the guests. In U.S. communities with large Mexican and Mexican-American populations, such as Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, Dallas and Chicago, the celebration includes the Mexican hominystew pozole, which is made for all one’s neighbors.

Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!/www.memurray.com/wordpress.com

Happy New Year!

2018 was full of surprises, some good, others not so good.

I finally became a published author, in spite of having the severe form of fibromyalgia! I won’t quit writing! It’s in my veins! Creativity is a gift! Thank you, Lord!

Yay! It’s 2019!

I am more than happy to see another year. I will use every minute it has to offer, wisely. Quitting is not my style. I pray to see my sister and talk to her about old times and recent times on the phone or in person.  I pray that her dementia will reverse. I pray for good health for my husband, friends, relatives, myself, and my pets.  May 2019 be a joyful and prosperous year for all of us. May it also be the year when a cure for any dreadful illness is discovered.