Current:Home > NewsIn Mexico, piñatas are not just child’s play. They’re a 400-year-old tradition -PrimeFinance
In Mexico, piñatas are not just child’s play. They’re a 400-year-old tradition
View
Date:2025-04-25 19:18:30
ACOLMAN, Mexico (AP) — María de Lourdes Ortiz Zacarías swiftly cuts hundreds of strips of newsprint and colored crepe paper needed to make a piñata, soothed by Norteño music on the radio while measuring pieces by feel.
“The measurement is already in my fingers,” Ortiz Zacarías says with a laugh.
She has been doing this since she was a child, in the family-run business alongside her late mother, who learned the craft from her father. Piñatas haven’t been displaced by more modern customs, and her family has been making a living off them into its fourth generation.
Ortiz Zacarías calls it “my legacy, handed down by my parents and grandparents.”
Business is steady all year, mainly with birthday parties, but it really picks up around Christmas. That’s because piñatas are interwoven with Christian traditions in Mexico.
There are countless designs these days, based on everything from Disney characters to political figures. But the most traditional style of piñata is a sphere with seven spiky cones, which has a religious origin.
Each cone represents one of the seven deadly sins: lust, gluttony, greed, sloth, wrath, envy and pride. Hitting the paper-mache globe with a stick is a symbolic blow against sin, with the added advantage of releasing the candy within.
Piñatas weren’t originally filled with candy, nor made mainly of paper. Grandparents in Mexico can remember a time a few decades ago when piñatas were clay pots covered with paper and filled with hunks of sugar cane, fruits and peanuts. The treats were received quite gladly, though falling pieces of the clay pot posed a bit of a hazard.
But the tradition goes back even further. Some say piñatas can be traced back to China, where paper-making originated.
In Mexico, they were apparently brought by the Spanish conquerors, but may also replicate pre-Hispanic traditions.
Spanish chronicler Juan de Grijalva wrote that piñatas were used by Augustine monks in the early 1500s at a convent in the town of Acolman, just north of Mexico City. The monks received written permission from Pope Sixtus V for holding a year-end Mass as part of the celebration of the birth of Christ.
But the Indigenous population already celebrated a holiday around the same time to honor the god of war, Huitzilopochtli. And they used something similar to piñatas in those rites.
The pre-Hispanic rite involved filling clay jars with precious cocoa seeds — the stuff from which chocolate is made — and then ceremonially breaking the jars.
“This was the meeting of two worlds,” said Walther Boelsterly, director of Mexico City’s Museum of Popular Art. “The piñata and the celebration were used as a mechanism to convert the native populations to Catholicism.”
Piñatas are also used in Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Chile, Peru, Puerto Rico and Venezuela, mainly at children’s parties.
The piñata hasn’t stood still. Popular figures this year range from Barbie to Spider-Man. Ortiz Zacarías’ family makes some new designs most of the year, but around Christmas they return to the seven-pointed style, because of its longstanding association with the holiday.
The family started their business in Acolman, where Ortiz Zacarías’ mother, Romana Zacarías Camacho, was known as “the queen of the piñatas” before her death.
Ortiz Zacarías’ 18-year-old son, Jairo Alberto Hernández Ortiz, is the fourth generation to take up the centuriesold craft.
“This is a family tradition that has a lot of sentimental value for me,” he said.
____
Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america
veryGood! (5)
Related
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Social media content creator Aanvi Kamdar dies in fall at India's poplar Kumbhe waterfall
- Canada wants 12 new submarines to bolster Arctic defense as NATO watches Russia and China move in
- El Paso man sentenced to 19 years for shooting at border patrol agent
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- RHOC's Tamra Reveals How John's Relationship With Alexis Is Different Than Ex Shannon
- Soccer Star Neymar Welcomes Baby No. 3 Less Than 9 Months After Daughter With Bruna Biancardi
- Missouri Supreme Court clears way for release of woman imprisoned for library worker's 1980 murder
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- 6 people, including a boy, shot dead in Mexico as mass killings of families persist
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- New judge sets ground rules for long-running gang and racketeering case against rapper Young Thug
- A man kills a grizzly bear in Montana after it attacks while he is picking berries
- Kylie Kelce Shares Past Miscarriage Story While Addressing Insensitive Pregnancy Speculation
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Cincinnati Reds sign No. 2 pick Chase Burns to draft-record $9.25 million bonus
- Last finalist ends bid to lead East Baton Rouge Parish Schools
- Your flight was canceled by the technology outage. What do you do next?
Recommendation
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Alabama names Bryant-Denny Stadium field after Nick Saban
Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp journeys to Italy in eighth overseas trip
Alabama names Bryant-Denny Stadium field after Nick Saban
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Christina Hall's HGTV Show Moving Forward Without Josh Hall Amid Breakup
Some convictions overturned in terrorism case against Muslim scholar from Virginia
As the Rio Grande runs dry, South Texas cities look to alternatives for water