Celebrating Día de los Muertos

¡Feliz Día de los Muertos!

Today’s celebration is a combination of pre-Hispanic religious rites and Christian feasts. During Día de los Muertos, it is believed that the border between the spirit world and our world dissolves, allowing souls of the dead to briefly return to the living world to feast, drink, dance, and play music with their loved ones.

Here are five things you should know about Día de los Muertos.

Origin

Dia de los Muertos’s origins are from thousands of years ago with the Aztec, Toltec and other Nahua people. For these pre-Hispanic cultures, death wasn’t something to mourn about but rather they believed that the dead were still members of the community, in spirit and memory.

When the Spanish arrived, it was intertwined with All Saints Day (November 1) and All Souls Day (November 2). Today typically November 1 is a day to remember children and November 2 is for adults.

Altars

The centerpiece of the celebration is an altar, or ofrenda, built in private homes and cemeteries. These altars are meant to welcome spirits back to the realm of the living. For this reason, the altars are loaded with offerings of food, family photos, and candles for each dead relative. If one of the spirits is a child, small toys might be added to the altar. For flowers on altars, the main flower used are marigolds. Marigold petals are scattered from the altar to the gravesite as a way to guide souls back to their place of rest.

Papel Picado

Papel Picado can be literally translated to “pierced paper.” Artisans stack layers colored tissue paper and perforate the paper with a hammer and chisel points. Papel Picado isn’t used exclusively during Day of the Dead, but it does play an important part. It is used as decorations on altars and in the streets, representing the wind and the fragility of life.

Calaveras

One of the most recognizable symbols of Day of the Dead are the calaveras or skulls. In the 18th-19th centuries, calaveras was also a type of short, humorous poems usually in the form of sarcastic tombstone epitaphs that poked fun at the living. To this day, these short poems are a part of the Day of the Dead celebrations. The most well-known calavera is calavera Catrina, an elegant female skeleton that was drawn to accompany the phrase “todos somos calaveras” which means that under everything, we are all just skeletons.

Food of the Dead

  • Pan de muerto, a sweet bread with anise seeds and decorated with bones made out of dough
  • Sugar skulls, these are made from molds and are painted with bright colors
  • Pulque, a sweet fermented beverage made from the agave sap
  • Atole, a thin warm porridge made from corn flour, with unrefined cane sugar, cinnamon, and vanilla added

Sources:

History.com Editors. “Day of the Dead (Día De Los Muertos).” History.com, A&E Television Networks, 30 Oct. 2018, www.history.com/topics/halloween/day-of-the-dead.

Ward, Logan. “Top 10 Things to Know about the Day of the Dead.” National Geographic, 29 Oct. 2019, www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/destinations/north-america/mexico/top-ten-day-of-dead-mexico/.

Congratulations to the Los Angeles Dodgers for an incredible season, not only for winning the 2020 World Series Championship title, but for rising to the moment with every challenge this year has brought. 

For those who don’t follow baseball, the game six victory marks the team’s first World Series championship since 1988 in a 3-1 win against the Tampa Bay Rays. With three World Series appearances in the last four years and eight division titles, their triumph against the Tampa Bay Rays was long-awaited.

But that’s not all that was accomplished.

Despite a tumultuous year and a shortened baseball season due to COVID-19, the team remained committed to tackling key issues including education, healthcare, homelessness and social justice for those living in Los Angeles and beyond.

The Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation (LADF), the charitable foundation for the franchise, awarded more than 900 education grants, distributed over 5,000 books and supported 9,000 kids in youth development programs. Think Together is a longtime partner of LADF and works with the foundation to provide coding and robotics, college readiness and social and emotional learning programs in Los Angeles County.

Over the season, the Dodgers made headlines stopping in hard-hit cities to help communities reeling from the impacts of COVID-19. Dodgers outfielder Mookie Betts delivered masks and sanitizer in his hometown of Nashville as well as aid to Compton residents through the nonprofit Pull Up Neighbor. 

Leading up to their series victory, LADF hosted Dodgers RBI Dodger Day Drive-Thrus, providing food and basic essentials for families in Los Angeles and the surrounding area. In total, the drive-thrus gave more than 132,000 meals and nearly $500,000 in resources.

Their community efforts earned the franchise the title of Sports Humanitarian Team of the Year during the 2020 ESPYs presented by Capital One. The award honors a sports club/team that demonstrates how teamwork can create a significant impact on a community or cause.

Overall, LADF has invested more than $30 million in programs and grants to nonprofits, including $21 million in the last five years. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Los Angeles Dodgers and LADF are providing 279,280 meals and $659,227 in in-kind donations to support vulnerable populations who are experiencing homelessness, food insecurity, lack of basic needs and significant anxiety.

“We are so incredibly proud to partner with a team that not only serves as positive role models for our youth but leads by example through the work they’re doing to support social justice work in our community and support programs like Think Together’s that truly have the potential to change the odds for kids,” said Lawrence Gustafson, Senior Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations.

For more information about our corporate donors or for ways to support Think Together, visit thinktogether.org/corporate-support.