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dianna
25th January 2014, 14:25
Borderland Devotions - Santa Muerte and the margins of faith

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While the media in the U.S., Mexico and beyond often focuses on an inflated image of Santa Muerte as a so-called 'narco-saint,' her devotees come from a broad spectrum of those who have stepped beyond, or been pushed outside of, the status quo. She stands as a loving matron for those who accept lives lived in the liminal areas of social identity. As violence, economic disparity and often haphazard social engineering tear apart traditional boundaries, those left unattended by official support and recognition must seek solidarity within spiritual spaces that provide for their needs. In the Americas, Santa Muerte has come forward as a powerful patroness of those whose devotion occurs in the borderlands of social upheaval and her presence has become one of the most potent images of the drastic changes occurring in contemporary culture.

When we take a closer look at her position within the narco-culture we find that she does not appear here due to some preference for cartels or drug gangs, but rather because she does not judge those who come to her for help. At Dona Queta's shrine in Tepito, a neighborhood that the media has branded as one of Mexico DF's most notoriously violent, petitions are more often heard for health and well being than the media's reports of ill repute would have us believe. Despite the image of Santa Muerte as a criminal saint, Dona Queta is often seen aggressively pushing away "****ing thieves" and those who seek to petition the Bony Lady for what she feels are untoward ends.

Introducing Tepito for a recent article, Judith Matloff, a Columbia University professor writing for Al Jazerra America, highlights how establishment media frames the social margins that Santa Muerte oversees:


"Even for many city residents, the neighborhood of Tepito is a no-go zone, 72 blocks of Latin America's biggest black market, a labyrinth of stalls that serve as refuge and home for outcasts: drug dealers, pickpockets, transvestites, thieves and sellers of contraband."
Here we have a strange incongruity, amid a list of those active in illegal activities Matloff includes transgender individuals, whose only 'crime' would be not fitting within a naive status quo vision of gender and sexuality. In creating this false association, however, the article gives us a key as to why Santa Muerte has become one of the fastest growing devotional traditions in the Americas. She vividly represents the growing disparity that exists not only on an economic level, but also on the level of social understanding between those who exist within the official comfort of privilege and those that exist outside of protection of mainstream institutions. In a very real way, she also represents the growing realization of the majority (for the dispossessed far outnumber the privileged few) forced to the margins by the establishment structure to say -

"We have no need of you, la Madrina, our Godmother, will take care of us."

An academic article titled Devotional Crossings co-authored by Cymene Howe, Susanna Zaraysky, and Lois Ann Lorentzen provides a more nuanced sense for this in its discussion of transgender sex workers who migrate between Guadalajara and San Francisco, providing us with a deeper understanding of the ability that Santa Muerte has to reassert individual empowerment for those that are considered cast offs by the small percentage of those within the mediated norms of social privilege:


"Transgender sex workers, who feel ostracized or unwelcome attending church, respond to their spiritual needs by crafting their own devotional practices among themselves. These religious rites are eminently portable, and knowledge about them is shared among friends. While not necessarily sanctioned by the Church, these practices are sacrosanct to those who perform them. Religious practices in Mexico, as in many places, rotate around the repetition of particular rites: going to church every week, saying prayers, making pilgrimages to significant churches, shrines, and sites, and performing specific rituals at celebrations and for the saints' holy days. Likewise, sex workers say their daily prayers, wear pendants and religious symbols, and construct altars to the Virgin of Guadalupe, St. Jude, and Santisima Muerte. Though the objects of their devotion may differ from those found in the churches of their childhoods, they nonetheless continue the practice of worship by maintaining a spiritual' element of their lives and looking to each other for guidance on prayer and devotion."

Yet, even here we are faced with the disturbing reality that gender and sexuality remain taboo subjects, where sex work and transgender identity find themselves conflated into an area of curiosity and marginality for scholarly inquiry. While the piece is sensitive in its depiction, the cold eye of academia does not fully capture the very human relationships being put under the microscope.

While still largely under the radar in the United States, Santa Muerte's tradition as it relates to the LGBT community in Mexico is highlighted in the fact that one of the largest public shrines in the U.S. is overseen by Arely Gonzalez, who, as a piece from Faith in the Five Burroughs explains, "is an immigrant and transsexual. In Mexico, she suffered discrimination and was kicked out of Catholic churches. In the U.S., she has become a leader in the community of devotees to Santa Muerte. Each August, she organizes a large celebration for her saint. This year, she expects over 500 attendees, and has already booked one of New York’s most prominent mariachi bands. Devotees at Arely’s celebration come from all walks of New York’s Latino immigrant community—proof that Santa Muerte’s reach has expanded." Here we see that rather than illegality, Santa Muerte is a patroness to all of those who find themselves ostracized by official organizations, whether due to their marginal status as individuals pushed to the side by U.S. immigration policy, or those who have for one reason or another found themselves unsupported by the structures that are assumed to uphold our society.

http://realitysandwich.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/01/1524881_783166168364448_1312901963_n-290x300.jpg

Santisima MuerteIt is a very telling feature of reportage regarding Santa Muertistas that the media is unable to separate those involved in criminality from regular immigrant families, transgender individuals and other groups not recognized by privileged ideas of social acceptability. In a way Santa Muerte herself, as she is misunderstood and criminalized by sensationalist stories, becomes a sign for what those who follow her face in their everyday lives. As a patroness of the dispossessed she herself exists on the border of acceptability, a devotional figure whose tradition, at its best, represents one of the most inclusive and open to all petitioners, yet she is seen as a satanic force by those more comfortable within the safety provided by corporate powers, authoritarian governance and fear based religious norms.

One of the most nuanced Christian theologians of the 20th century, William Stringfellow, wrote extensively on the role of marginality in faith. For him, the powers and principalities mentioned in the Christian New Testament were the driving force behind society's ills, yet his exposition of this fact goes far beyond the considerations of mainstream Evangelicals or Catholics, both of which he saw as themselves representations of demonic powers. In his book An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land, he observes that:

According to the Bible, the principalities are legion in species, number, variety and name. They are designated by such multifarious titles as powers, virtues, thrones, authorities, dominions, demons, princes, strongholds, lords, angels, gods, elements, spirits…

Terms that characterize are frequently used biblically in naming the principalities: “tempter,” “mocker,” “foul spirit,” “destroyer,” “adversary,” “the enemy.” And the privity of the principalities to the power of death incarnate is shown in mention of their agency to Beelzebub or Satan or the Devil or the Antichrist…

And if some of these seem quaint, transposed into contemporary language they lose quaintness and the principalities become recognizable and all too familiar: they include all institutions, all ideologies, all images, all movements, all causes, all corporations, all bureaucracies, all traditions, all methods and routines, all conglomerates, all races, all nations, all idols. Thus, the Pentagon or the Ford Motor Company or Harvard University or the Hudson Institute or Consolidated Edison or the Diners Club or the Olympics or the Methodist Church or the Teamsters Union are principalities. So are capitalism, Maoism, humanism, Mormonism, astrology, the Puritan work ethic, science and scientism, white supremacy, patriotism, plus many, many more—sports, sex, any profession or discipline, technology, money, the family—beyond any prospect of full enumeration. The principalities and powers are legion.

He continues with:

"Corporations and nations and other demonic powers restrict, control, and consume human life or order to sustain and extend and prosper their own survival.


The principalities have great resilience; the death game which they play continues, adapting its means of dominating human beings to the sole morality which governs all demonic powers so long as they exist--survival."
No stranger to the realities of these powers and principalities, Stringfellow himself was a civil defense lawyer in Harlem during the Civil Rights era. His theological ideas come directly from his involvement with the struggles of those marginalized by the system who were caught in the midst of social systems they had no power to change or defend themselves against. Within this matrix Stringfellow identifies the source of this demonic power as death itself, as he puts it:

"[H]istory discloses that the actual meaning of such human idolatry of nations, institutions, or other principalities is death. Death is the only moral significance that a principality proffers human beings. That is to say, whatever intrinsic moral power is embodied in a principality—for a great corporation, profit, for example; or for a nation, hegemony; or for an ideology, conformity—that is sooner or later suspended by the greater moral power of death. Corporations die. Nations die. Ideologies die. Death survives them all. Death is—apart from God—the greatest moral power in this world, outlasting and subduing all other powers no matter how marvelous they may seem for the time being. This means, theologically speaking, that the object of allegiance and servitude, the real idol secreted within all idolatries, the power above all principalities and powers—the idol of all idols—is death."

It is important to reflect on these ideas here, in the context of Santisima Muerte, or Most Holy Death, and of Santa Muerte, Saint Death, for in her emergence as a prolific and potent patroness in the Americas she represents a very real enemy to the power of death as a negative force. Perhaps more than any other theological exploration of Christianity, Stringfellow's work provides a very direct context for seeing the threat that Santa Muerte poses to the current social structure, and gives insight into why mainstream media, orthodoxies and officials all react with such disgust and abhorence to her presence in the world.

Transgender issues arise from the same conflict of control, where the abandonment of gender norms takes away a very powerful weapon for maintaining the status quo which privileges those who identify with normative gender distinctions. This is why a piece like Judith Matloff's in Al Jazeera America places transgender individuals in a list related to criminality, the crime being breaking down the barriers of social control. Highlighting graffiti that says "Tepito Exists Because It Resists,'' the article admits that the discomfort here is based on a lack of official order within the space. In this light it is interesting to see that the powerful matrons of the community, the 'Cabronas' mentioned in the piece, are also placed within this criminalized marginality.

All areas of liminal resistance represent a breach in the world order, for better or worse, and those forces in place to maintain that order react with varying levels of violence towards anything that threatens their position, transgender individuals, strong women, heterodox devotional traditions and anything that unveils the illusion of normalcy through which the powers that be maintain their control.

Santa MuerteAs Most Holy Death, a representation of Christ's death on the cross, Santa Muerte fulfills the powerful words of John 15:18-21 -


"If the world hate you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not greater than his lord. If they have persecuted me, they will also persecute you; if they have kept my saying, they will keep yours also. But all these things will they do unto you for my name’s sake, because they know not him that sent me."

Standing over those demonized by the establishment she holds the scales of justice in one hand, and the scythe of judgement in the other. Those who would bring her children peace she smiles upon, for those who bring violence she bears a grimace. Her face a skull, her eyes empty, she can only be petitioned by the true heart of those that fall beneath her power. As death, this includes every living creature. How fearsome she must seem to those who have something to hide and to those who haven't found the freedom of true devotion in the borderlands beyond the safety of the status quo.

Note: The quotes taken from William Stringfellow's An Ethic for Christians and Other Strangers in a Strange Land were taken from a post on Experimental Theology blog.

http://realitysandwich.com/216283/devotion-in-the-borderlands-santa-muerte-and-faith-in-the-margins/

GreenGuy
25th January 2014, 22:43
A really fascinating post. Thank you!

dianna
26th January 2014, 14:34
I Call Her La Flaca
http://faithinthefiveboroughs.org/video/la-flaca/
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Arely Gonzalez’s bedroom in Jackson Heights, Queens, was once a garage. Occupying the wall that was the garage door is an altar, and at the center is a statue of a skeleton draped in jewelry and dressed in a sparkling jade gown. She is La Santa Muerte, the Holy Death, and she is the object of Gonzalez’s affection, a powerful ally in a precarious life, a source of comfort—even miracles—when nothing else helps.

Also known as La Flaca, the Skinny Lady, and La Huesuda, the Bony Lady, Santa Muerte has been worshipped in Mexico since the early 20th century. Her origins are murky, perhaps a merging of Aztec or Mayan death deities with European Catholic culture. Her popularity has exploded in the past ten years. Today, millions of Mexicans call themselves devotees of Santa Muerte, and her cult has crossed the border into the U.S.

“She’s seen as a powerful multi-tasker,” explains Andrew Chesnut, Professor of Religious Studies at Virginia Commonwealth University and author of Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte the Skeleton Saint. “Lots of times saints have very specific themes and miracles they can perform. Santa Muerte is for all seasons, all kinds of miracles.” Many even see her as “basically second to God. People go to her if they need their miracles to work fast.”

The Catholic Church is not happy about Santa Muerte’s rise in popularity. The Catholic hierarchy of Mexico condemns her as blasphemy or devil worship. The Mexican state and the media highlight the popularity of the “sinner’s saint” among drug-runners and in Mexican prisons. And it is true that for those living outside of official society, Santa Muerte is in their corner. “Who better to ask for more time, for a few more years, than death itself?” says Chesnut. “She’s seen as the great protectress, so for those who have so much that they need protection from, she is very powerful.”

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Arely Gonzalez is an immigrant and transsexual. In Mexico, she suffered discrimination and was kicked out of Catholic churches. In the U.S., she has become a leader in the community of devotees to Santa Muerte. Each August, she organizes a large celebration for her saint. This year, she expects over 500 attendees, and has already booked one of New York’s most prominent mariachi bands. Devotees at Arely’s celebration come from all walks of New York’s Latino immigrant community—proof that Santa Muerte’s reach has expanded.



You Can Ask Her For Anything

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The Mexican folk saint La Santa Muerte has the appearance of the grim reaper, but for many marginalized Mexicans she is a source of miracles and hope — an object of intense veneration. Along with her mortal devotees, La Santa Muerte now has migrated to the U.S., finding a special place in the home of Arely Gonzalez, in Queens.
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Gonzalez’s has built an enormous bedroom shrine to Santa Muerte, and for the last five years she has organized a celebration for the saint’s feast day each August. Gonzalez is a devout Catholic and a male-to-female transsexual. Although she hasn’t been accepted in the Church, she is a leader in this community of Santa Muerte worshippers. Along with fellow devotees, she raises several thousand dollars each year to rent a hall in Jamaica, Queens where worshipers bring their own idols creating a resplendent shrine. Attendees are mostly Mexican immigrants and their children, but an increasing number are from Central and South America.

Hundreds of followers of “The Bony Lady” eat, drink and dance to mariachi music. Between the music and the dancing, the crowd gather for a solemn recitation of the rosary, specially tailored to honor their unrecognized saint. No priests preside, only the unofficial leaders of this organic spiritual community. Devotees stand before the shrine and thank their patron for another year of employment, health and security. Then the band starts up and they dance until morning.


http://faithinthefiveboroughs.org/video/you-can-ask-her-for-anything/

dianna
1st February 2014, 14:40
Santa Muerte - The Cult Of Holy Death: Documentary


The worship of Santa Muerte attracts those who are not inclined to seek the traditional Catholic Church for spiritual solace, as it is part of the "legitimate" sector of society. Many followers of Santa Muerte live on the margins of the law or outside it entirely. Many drug traffickers, street vendors, taxi drivers, vendors of pirated merchandise, street people, prostitutes, pickpockets, and gang members are not practicing Catholics or Protestants, but neither are they atheists. In essence, they have created their own new religion that reflects their realities, identity, and practices, especially since it speaks to the violence and struggles for life that many of these people face. Conversely, however, both police and military in Mexico can be counted among the faithful who ask for blessings on their weapons and ammunition.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6fBT72-hhTs



The number of believers in Santa Muerte has grown over the past ten to twenty years, to several million followers in Mexico, the United States, and parts of Central America. Santa Muerte has similar male counterparts in the Americas, such as the skeletal folk saints San La Muerte of Argentina and Rey (King) Pascual of Guatemala.
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dianna
13th February 2014, 20:49
From ModernMythology.net

A Mother’s Love and a Soldier’s Devotion – Santa Muerte in Perspective

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When you stare into the empty eyes of La Nina Blanca (the White Lady) do you feel the resonant warmth of a mother’s love? It’s there, if you look deep enough, at least for those who pay her true devotion. Even those coming from a more objective distance can’t help but notice the prevalence of motherly care that attends Her presence.

At her shrines children run forward clutching icons of Most Holy Death, apples in hand to present her with gifts for blessings She has bestowed their families. Newly weds stand ready with offerings to thank her for their opportunity at future prosperity.

Even gunmen come to her as a mother, heads bowed in respect, offering tremulous thanks to the great matron whose hand has been held another day from executing a final judgement on their actions.These are sights not easily accepted by many in the United States and Mexico, who view such passionate expressions towards an icon depicting death as aberrant and perhaps diabolical.


Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi during his a trip to Mexico City in 2012 denounced her no less than 3 times in four days, comparing Her tradition to the religiosity common among the organized crime families in Italy. In his most harsh condemnation he decried blasphemy against her devotions while continuing to conflate the entire practice with criminality:


“It’s not religion just because it’s dressed up like religion; it’s a blasphemy against religion…The mafia, drug trafficking and organised crime don’t have a religious aspect and have nothing to do with religion, even if they use the image of Santa Muerte,”

Written from a particular perspective and intent, these statements fall far afield from the silent embrace of Muerte Querida (Beloved Death) as it is known by her devotees. The social degradation inflaming his rhetoric is a systematic failure contingent on social factors beyond the controls of those who suffer its fall out, and from the shadows of this falling edifice La Rosa Blanca smiles on Her children as they overcome their daily struggles and find strength in a powerful devotion to her faithfulness.

Folk traditions like Santa Muerte have done what official organizations have consistently failed to do, giving hope to those who have none, a hope which transcends any ideas of mortality, a true defeat of death in a realization of Most Holy Death. While journalists enjoy portraying Her as a satanic seductress, Santa Muerte is espoused by Her innumerable devotees as a loving mother to Her children, a mother whose judgement is final, all embracing, and given in mercy.

Whatever words of vengeance can be cherry picked from her popular novenas and oraciones, often printed for mass market appeal, there are many more personal accounts expressing a tender innocence, and showing a different side of La Flaca. At least this is her image for those who practice her devotions at an organized level worthy of raising the Catholic orthodoxy’s hackles. This is even more prevalent in devotees that find themselves within the United States, where a much softer Santisima has been emerging. So why is there so much fear surrounding her tradition?

A Mother’s Love

One line of her lineage stretches back to love magic, as a Patroness of married woman whose commanding scythe could keep their errant husbands in line. Dr. R. Andrew Chesnut, author of Devoted to Death: Santa Muerte, the Skeleton Saint, found in his research for the book that this side is still the most prevalent in terms of sales at Botanicas, Yerberias, and esoteric supply shops in Mexico City and the U.S.

It is in this role of patron to mothers and wives that She emerged on All Saints Day in 2002 when Enriqueta Romero Romero, known to respectful devotees as Dona Queta, erected the first public shrine to her in Tepito. The icon that she and her family erected facing the street was a gift from her son who felt that he had been aided by Santa Muerte during a rough time involving a period of incarceration. Most Holy Death had spared him for another day, and he returned the favor with a gift that lead to his mother becoming one of the leading figures in the more public career of this much beloved Saint.

Another devotional leader, Enriqueta Vargas Ortiz, known as La Madrina, keeps a shrine in Tutilan that hosts the world’s largest statue of Santa Muerte, which measures a towering 75 feet tall. Her story is one of a mother’s love as well, but one with a more bitter beginning. Madrina Vargas’ son, Jonathan Legaria Vargas, was gunned down at 26 not far from the shrine to Santa Muerte that he had helped erect.

Her son had been an outspoken and fiery community leader in the public growth of Santa Muerte’s tradition. When he was murdered he was attempting to raise the public acceptance of Her devotions through radio programs and open public displays such as the 75 ft statue, as well as highlight some of the social problems that have lead to Her popularity:


“People are tired of looking for religion; people are tired of the priests who make off with the donations. What do they ask for now? Faith, which costs nothing more than love.”

At 3 am on July 31st, 2008 unknown assailants filled Jonathan Legaria Vargas’ car with over 150 bullets, his two passengers survived the shooting, he did not. Subsequent investigations became mired in local politics and rumors fostered by tense political relations between rival leaders in the decentralized community faith tradition. In the midst of her pain during the confusion that followed her son’s murder Vargas made a vow:


“Entonces le hice una promesa a la Santa: tú me entregas a los asesinos, y yo voy a tratar de llevarte a lo más alto que pueda.”


The once devout Catholic, who had up to this point been uncomfortable with her son’s fervor, pledged she would devote herself to tending Santa Muerte’s tradition if La Senora Poderosa would bring justice to the murderers that took her son’s life. Events over the coming months transpired such that Vargas felt La Senora had fulfilled her end of the bargain, and since then La Madrina has tended to the Tultitlan shrine with vigor, becoming a popular source for information on Santa Muerte, while continuing to build the community through regular worship services at the shrine and digital outreach on Facebook.

Perhaps it is the strength of these women that really scares authorities and orthodoxies when they come into contact with Santa Muerte’s devotional tradition. From the “degenerate” grounds of poverty and pain that draw disgust in media propaganda seeking to please the powers that be, these mothers have risen up in the full glory of their position as matriarchs and social leaders, and through the performance of their devotions to Most Holy Death, have created community bonds that go beyond all fear and division. At it’s best their ideology speaks to a universal love, as loving as Death who shows no preference in the end. They have fulfilled John 12:31-33:


“Now is the judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be cast out. And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto me. This he said, signifying what death he should die.”

Lifting up Most Holy Death these mothers bring judgment on the authorities who have played the game of creating a world to suit their vices. Mexico City is one of the most corrupt cities in the world, and the citizens are often more afraid of the misused authority of police than they are of each other. With the blood of sons and daughters they’ve watched die on their hands, these mothers raise up La Santisima Muerte for the world to see what lies at the base of the wealth, the technology, the scientific progress, and all of the other areas we take pride in as denizens of the 21st century.

These are mothers, and mothers bear children, and a mother’s pain is passed on to her children. If the mothers have begun to take a stand behind a banner of faith, a banner baptized in the blood of the loved ones and friends murdered around them, what authority can stand against them? If authority cannot stand against the mother, what of the child?

A Soldier’s Devotion

http://rlv.zcache.com/santa_muerte_and_the_soldier_c_1951_mexico_plates-r13a4b27a14bc40a2a8c631e85f16164c_ambb0_8byvr_512.jpg

An irony in all of this is that an antique icon of Bernard of Clairvaux, which depicts him as a skeleton, is seen by some as one of the original images that inspired Santa Muerte’s devotions. This is the very same man who, in the 12th century, penned the rule for the Poor Fellow-Soldiers of Christ and of the Temple of Solomon, or Knights Templar as they are better known.

One of the Virgin Mary’s most ardent devotees, who wrote an inspirational rule for Christian knighthood, now stripped of flesh becomes a spiritual father of Santa Muerte’s tradition which has become one of the most notable icons for the drug violence raging in the Americas. The same warrior ethos, based on an almost gnostic fatalism, which provided the ideological fuel for the Templar mythos, lies at the heart of Santa Muertistas who take up devotion to La Senora Negra in the midst of violence and civil war.There is no denying a portion of those devoted to Santa Muerte are every bit as dangerous as the media fears. This would be the case with or without Santa Muerte, simply based on the current social climate in the Americas.

Yet these violent adherents do not make up the tradition as a whole by any means …
While the media likes to portray grim death dealers emblazoned with skeletal iconography, the reality is that, more often than not, devotion to Santa Muerte comes passively, as something almost necessary for those living in the midst of constant violence and social unrest. Many of the stories that surround her miracle working speak of changed lives, release from substance abuse, and a renewed sense of communal responsibility. As a reminder of what is to come She is as potent, if not more so, in encouraging positive change as She is in turning an empty eye to murder. As is demonstrated in the message from the Santisima Muerte POZA RICA Facebook page there is also an active movement to identify Santa Muerte outside of traditions of violence, as a protector, and just judge, rather than violent avenger.

She acts as both Memento Mori and assurance for those that have no experience of an easy night’s rest. Authorities writing from a military and law enforcement perspective should understand this, it’s the reason for so many death’s heads on uniforms and patches, as well as the reason that the government spent millions of dollars trying to figure out how to get soldiers to actually kill people instead of missing out of guilt. It is also why many law enforcement officers, lawyers, judges and prison guards find themselves at Santa Muerte’s altar with offerings in hand.

This is a potent mixture, strong community organization, devotees who are no stranger to extreme violence or living with a lack of resources, a desperate social situation, and devotional attention to a sublime comfort with fatality in the figure of a loving mother whose final embrace is freedom from a living hell. Heightened by the fact that many of her followers come to her when they feel that more orthodox authorities have failed them, Santa Muerte has the potential to usher in a new light of hope to communities that have been failed time and again by more polite avatars of divine providence. Unfortunately for the authorities, La Hermana del Luz has no interest in their laws or money, her scythe is the final arbiter in any discussion with Lady Death, and for devotees, none but God, or Christ who became God through union with Most Holy Death, can say anything about it.

Law enforcement and military analysts are already familiar with what religiously endorsed violence can mean in Mexico, with La Familia and Los Caballeros Templarios, groups which profess a heterodox mystic Protestantism, having committed some of the most violent acts of retribution in recent times. The idea that Santa Muerte’s devotion could turn that way, especially with a lack of any strong central organization, has to fill them will absolute terror.

Santisima Muerte in Perspective

We have to note, however, that neither La Familia, nor Los Caballeros Templarios, developed their heterodox spirituality under the guidance of a mother’s tears. Women like Dona Queta and La Madrina Vargas allow us to see deeper into Santisima Muerte, and put her in perspective outside of the shrill voice of fear jockeying propaganda that is echoing through the media.

La Santisima Muerte needs to be seen in the light of a mother’s love, and a soldier’s devotion. Both of which can be deadly when turned bitter by a brutal life, or can be beautiful when they flower amid the waters of true devotion. It is up to the authorities and orthodox leadership to decide which aspect of La Nina Blanca they want to foster.

Those who would call her satantic should remember Christ’s words: “Who do you say I am?” If they continue to cry blasphemy, and ignore the real message behind Santa Muerte’s emergence, they might find that they’ve sparked a fire kindled in the slow vengeance of mothers who have watched for decades as officials look on with greed and lust while their children are slaughtered in the streets and taken advantage of by immoral authorities. In the end, Santisima Muerte's scythe awaits every mortal who passes through the veil, and her devotees know that justice is not something that we can never truly escape in the end.


http://realitysandwich.com/216115/a-mothers-love-and-a-soldiers-devotion-santa-muerte-in-perspective/