Friday, August 18, 2017

TLAXOCHIMACO

The day is almost over, the sun is about to set. It seems that the strength and vitality are gone. It seems it is time to take some rest from the long journey. A time to rest physically, but also a time for the intellect to focus inward, to look at ourselves, to see what we have done and what we want to do.

Tlaxochimaco is also known as Micailhuitontli because at this time of year we remember and honor our Ancestors, our loved ones that have departed to Mictlán. Flowers are offered to the deceased. Offerings of food and drink were brought on their tombs.

Tlaxochimaco means Offering of Flowers. Though the most wide-spread Náuatl name was the name of its Ceremony Miccailhuitontli, "Little Festival of the Deceased". This veintena was coupled with the following one, called Xocotl Huetzi, with its Ceremony being called
Huey Micailhuitl, the "Great Festival of the Dead". The Otomí and Matlatzinca corresponding festivals were also coupled with the following ones and their names equally mean "Festival of the Dead".

Two days before the Ceremony, flowers of every kind, such as Yoloxoxitl, Xiloxoxitl and Tzempoalxoxitl, are gathered to create garlands to adorn the Teocaltin (house of Energy). On the eve of the feast, tamales are made; our Ancestors also prepared and killed huey-xolotl (turkeys) and itzcuintlin for the next day's banquets. The day of the feast, the first flowers are offered together with incense and food, exactly at noon, first to Huitzilopochtli, and next to the other Energies. With this offering, we appreciate and recognize everything the Sun/Huitzilopochtli gives us. Our Ancestors also used to prepare huauhtli (amaranth) sculptures depicting Huitzilopochtli. This sculpture was adorned with flowers.

There was feasting and in the afternoon the warriors and the young men performed a serpentine dance. According to the Codex Magliabechiano, Tezcatlipoca’s Teocalli was also adorned with flowers.

During this veintena, our Ancestors went looking for a big tree trunk that was to be erected in the Templo Mayor's courtyard during the following veintena or Xocotl Huetzi. When this tree called xocotl, "fruit", drew near to the city everybody went out to meet it and to offer flowers to it. The cihuame (women) came to "capture" it and an impersonator of the energy of the Toci-Teteo innan, "Our Grandmother-Mother of all Energies” came to welcome it. The ceremony was called xoconamicoyan, "where the xocotl is met"; namico is a passive form of namiqui, a verb that means "to go and meet someone" but whose compelling form namictia is translated as "to marry" and whose derived substantives namictli and namique mean "husband" or "wife". 
The planting of the xocotl during the following month symbolizes the fecundation of Earth. This is why the tree was greeted and smudged only by cihuame (women).
The illustrations of the codices Telleriano- Remensis and Vaticanus A represent a funerary bundle with a mask of Cihuacoatl-Chantico or Xochiquetzal, both earth and fertility energies. It is important to keep in mind the very position of Tlaxochimaco / Miccailhuitontli and Xocotl Huetzi / Huey Miccailhuitl in the ritual year. It is the end of the dry season and of the year. A year being assimilated to a day, it was the evening and sunset.  Soon the night would begin.

Tlaxochimaco recalls not only the second feast of the dry season, but also the veintena called Teotlehco, "Arrival of the Energies". In Teotlehco the Energies were supposed to appear on earth. Tezcatlipoca and Huitzilopochtli came first, while Yacatecuhtli and Xiuhtecutli, the Fire Energy arrived last. Now, in Tlaxochimaco / Miccailhuitl, at the end of the year, the Energies take leave: first Tezcatlipoca and Huitzilopochtli again, and this is why they were the first ones to receive flowers. Then, during the next veintena, the last ones to leave will be celebrated: Xiuhtecuhtli and Yacatecuhtli.


Together, Miccailhuitontli and Huey Miccailhuitl formed the main Ceremonies of the deceased. These veintenas correspond to the late afternoon, when the female energy accompanies the sun. They also correspond to the Tlalohcan-Tamoanchan level where the dead warriors went to rejoice by sucking flowers. It is almost the end of the day and it is mid-year, and the sun is setting.

These are lots of good reasons to remember the Dead. During Toxcatl, at the beginning of the afternoon, the veintena was dedicated to Tezcatlipoca and Huitzilopochtli; Etzalcualiztli was dedicated to Tlaloc (the energy of the rain), the two following veintenas (Tecuilhuiltontli and Huey Tecuilhuitl) were dedicated to the Tecuhltin (the Protective Energies); now in Tlaxochimaco, it is the deceased Ancestor's turn. During the preceding veintenas the harvested food had been celebrated and redistributed; now all the Energies and the deceased received their part.