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January
  • New Year's Day (January 1)
    National Holiday.

  • Three Kings Day (January 6)
    Christmas continues on through Epiphany, which is called Dia de Los Reyes or Three Kings Day and in the eyes of Mexico's children is far more important than December 25. On the eve of Kings Day, little ones leave their shoes out in the hopes that they will awake to find them filled with toys and other treasures, just as the magi came bearing gifts for the newborn infant so long ago.

    Children and adults alike gather on January 6 to partake of a traditional treat called Rosca de Reyes or kings' bread which is a crown-shaped sweet bread decorated with "jewels" of candied fruit. Tiny plastic dolls representing baby Jesus are hidden in the dough before baking and custom dictates that whoever gets a piece of bread containing a plastic doll is obligated to host another party for everyone on Candlemas, February 2.
February
  • Constitution Day (February 5)
    Speeches and ceremonies commemorating this National Holiday.

  • Election Cozumel (First Tuesday every 4 years, sometimes affects Carnaval dates)
    Cozumel's local Presidente (equivalent to the City Mayor) is elected this day and serves for four years.

  • Carnaval (See Carnaval Section for actual dates which vary annually)
    To celebrate the approaching of Lent with parades, fireworks, food, music and dancing.
    Click Here to view our Carnaval Photo Archive
    Click Here to view the latest Carnaval Calendar of Events

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March
  • Benito Juarez's Birthday (March 21)
    National Holiday honoring president and leader of the 19th-Century Reform movement. Vernal Equinox.

  • Late March (Spring Equinox)
    Visitors come to the main temple at Chichen Itza to see the descent of the serpent Kukulkan. History has it that the Maya constructed the temple in a way that during equinox a beam of sunlight creates a shadow moving down towards earth resembling a slithering snake. This occurrence is supposed to bring out a good harvest. 
April
May
  • El Cedral Festival (Late April, Early May)
    Feast in honor of the founding of Cozumel. See above.


  • Cinco de Mayo (May 5)
    National holiday commemorating Mexico's defeat of the French in the Battle of Puebla in 1862. 


    The holiday of Cinco De Mayo, The 5th Of May, commemorates the victory of the Mexican militia over the French army at The Battle Of Puebla in 1862 at a violent and chaotic time in Mexico's history. Mexico had finally gained independence from Spain in 1821 after a difficult and bloody struggle, and a number of internal political takeovers and wars, including the Mexican-American War (1846-1848) and the Mexican Civil War of 1858, had ruined the national economy.

    During this period of struggle Mexico had accumulated heavy debts to several nations, including Spain, England and France, who were demanding repayment. Similar debt to the U.S. was previously settled after the Mexican-American War. France was eager to expand its empire at that time, and used the debt issue to move forward with goals of establishing its own leadership in Mexico. Realizing France's intent of empire expansion, Spain and England withdrew their support. When Mexico finally stopped making any loan payments, France took action on its own to install Napoleon III's relative, Archduke Maximilian of Austria, as ruler of Mexico.

    France invaded at the gulf coast of Mexico along the state of Veracruz and began to march toward Mexico City. The French army encountered strong resistance near Puebla at the Mexican forts of Loreto and Guadalupe. Lead by Mexican General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguin, a smaller and poorly armed militia estimated at 4,500 men was able to stop and defeat a well-outfitted French army of 6,500 soldiers, which stopped the invasion of the country.

    Unfortunately, the victory was short lived. Upon hearing the bad news, Napoleon III had found an excuse to send more troops overseas to try and invade Mexico again, even against the wishes of the French populace. A full year later, the French were eventually able to depose the Mexican army, take over Mexico City and install Maximilian as the ruler of Mexico.

    Maximilian's rule of Mexico was also short lived, from 1864 to 1867. With the American Civil War now over, the U.S. began to provide more political and military assistance to Mexico to expel the French. The Mexicans executed Maximilian and his bullet-riddled shirt is kept at a museum in Mexico City. So despite the eventual French invasion of Mexico City, Cinco de Mayo honors the bravery and victory of General Zaragoza's smaller, outnumbered militia at the Battle of Puebla in 1862. The victory was a glorious moment for Mexican patriots and helped to develop a needed sense of national unity, and is the cause for the historical date's celebration.


  • Cozumel's International Billfish Tournament (Dates Vary Annually)
    Competitors from around the world compete in the waters of the Gulf. 



September
  • Mexico's Independance Day (September 16)
    Viva Mexico! Mexico celebrates its independance from Spain in 1821. This national celebration is observed here in Cozumel with a grand fireworks display in front of the Municipal Building on Raphael Melgar.  There will be countless types of local cuisine in the nearby food court as well as games and rides for the kids.

    In the early nineteenth century, Mexico began talking about a revolt against Spain and a priest by the name of Miguel Hidalgo from Delores was a leader of one of the rallying groups. Hidalgo and his officers were planning a revolt for late fall of 1910.

    The Spaniards found out about the revolt and their government retaliated by ordering the arrest of Hidalgo and his officers. Hidalgo in turn called a meeting at his church on the evening of September 15, ringing the bell to call his parishioners to mass. He then rallied the congregation to fight, giving a speech known as the "Grito de Delores" or the "Cry of Delores", and the crowd responded with bursts of "Viva Mexico" and Viva La Independencia". These famous words are still remembered and are said each year as towns and cities across Mexico celebrate independence day.

    Everyone fought together, including the Criollos (wealthy Mexicans of Spanish descent), Mestizos (children born from the marriage of a Spaniard and an Indian), and Indians. Armed with clubs, knives, stone slings, and ancient guns, they fought as they marched to Mexico City. A battle took place in Guanajuato between the Spanish soldiers and Hidalgo's followers. The army sacked the town, killing the Spaniards. They continued to fight on their way to the capital. When they finally reached Mexico City, the army hesitated before going in to fight and some of them even deserted the army. Before the year was over, Father Hidalgo was captured and executed. Some continued to fight for the cause and Father Hidalgo's Grito de Delores became the battle cry of the Mexican War of Independence. The people fought for eleven years before they finally won their freedom.

    In modern-day Mexico, Independence Day is a major celebration and is given far more historical importance than Cinco de Mayo. The party begins on September 15, the eve of independence day, when crowds gather in zocalos and plazas all across Mexico. The villages are decorated with red, white and green flags and colorful flowers, and music fills the air. But when the clock begins to strike eleven, silence falls over the citizens and the village mayor steps forward to ring the symbolic liberty bell and give the "Grito de Delores" as the crowd responds with "Viva Mexico".

    The actual day of September 16 is similar to July Fourth in the United States, featuring rodeos, parades, bullfights, dances and grand feasts.

  • Autumnal Equinox (Late September)
    Visitors come to the main temple at Chichen Itza to see the descent of the serpent Kukulkan. History has it that the Maya constructed the temple in a way that during equinox a beam of sunlight creates a shadow moving down towards earth resembling a slithering snake. This ocurrence is supposed to bring out a good harvest.
     
  • Feast of San Miguel (September 29)
    Feast of San Miguel, patron saint of the island. 
November
December
  • Festival de Guadelupe - The Virgin of Guadalupe (December 12)
    December 12 is arguably the most important day of the year for millions of Catholics across Mexico as they honor a figure that is considered to be the centerpiece of the Catholic faith in their country.

    According to tradition, the Virgin first appeared to a peasant by the name of Juan Diego in a rural area not far from what is now Mexico City. The story says that she identified herself as the "mother of God" and told Diego to ask the archbishop of Mexico to build a shrine on that very hillside from which she would preside over those "who love me and trust in me."

    Some who question the legend believe that it is more than coincidence that this particular spot was also the place where the hard-to-convert Aztecs worshipped Tonantzin, the mother of all gods. In any event, the Indians of Mexico responded enthusiastically to the arrival of the brown-skinned goddess who spoke their language and they were content to have found a replacement for objects of worship that had been taken away by the Spaniards.

    Over hundreds of years, the Virgin of Guadalupe has evolved into much more than a symbol of the Catholic Church. It is the icon that led the country's revolution and gave birth to Mexico's independence, becoming a symbol of national pride and strength.

    Veneration of the Virgin came to Cozumel via the Yucatecans who were introduced to a similar image known as Our Lady if the Immaculate Conception by the Franciscan order of the Catholic church in the state of Yucatan. Ceremonies honoring the Virgin were cleverly designed to complement the pagan rituals that were part of Yucatecan culture at that time.

    Today Cozumelenos worship through in-home services and novenas consisting of traditional songs and recitation of the rosary, beginning December 1 and continuing through December 12. During this period the ever-present statues and shrines built as integral parts of most Cozumel homes are decorated with flowers, lights and candles. On these twelve days many followers organize street processions where participants dressed in white are often accompanied by sound systems so that neighbors and bystanders can join them in song and prayer.

    On the eve of the feast day, thousands gather at Cozumel's Virgin of Guadalupe church for prayers and blessings before beginning a pilgrimage that will last far into the night, taking them to the east side of the island, then to the southern tip and back again to San Miguel and Corpus Christi church. The majority of the participants are organized groups consisting of families, service clubs, unions and company employees. While the route is generally covered on foot in a relay fashion, others make the journey in decorated cars or trucks as well as the occasional bicycle.

    While the main purpose of the pilgrimage is to honor the mother of God, in most cases the passage also serves as an opportunity to formally offer promises and petitions to the Virgin of Guadalupe for the coming year.

  • Las Posadas - Christmas (December 16)
    Christmas festivities begin December 16 with Las Posadas (the inns) and continue for nine days, symbolizing the nine months that Mary carried the baby Jesus in her womb.

    In colonias throughout Cozumel, neighbors, families and church groups gather to reenact the journey of the holy family as they traveled from Nazareth to Bethlehem, seeking shelter on the eve of the savior's birth. The modern-day parade of pilgrims stop at designated houses to sing their request for shelter while those waiting behind the closed door respond with a musical refrain, telling them they have no room.
    The tradition of Las Posadas most likely evolved through the teaching methods employed by the Catholic conquistadors and their clergy. Because the Spaniards didn't speak the local language, they created plays that would convey the story of the birth of Jesus to the pagan natives. The people responded enthusiastically to this form of theater and added their own cultural touches including traditional dishes and the ruthless smashing of piñatas.

  • La Rama (December 16)
    As with most customs in Mexico, La Rama was born out of Indian ritual and in this case is an extension of an Aztec ceremony commemorating the rebirth of nature. The tradition of singing La Rama (the branch) is believe to have started in the state of Vera Cruz, eventually making it's way to the Yucatan and then Cozumel.

    Officially starting December 16, it generally involves self-organized groups of children who decorate a branch from a tree or plant and then go from door to door shouting "cantamos la rama?" (can we sing the branch?). Carrying homemade lanterns and accompanied by a rhythm section of kitchen utensils, the groups launch into a very lengthy song with an ever-changing melody, always including some verses that ask the audience to give them their aguinaldo (a sort of Christmas bonus) if they are pleased with the performance.

    The same group of children may take to the streets night after night until just before Christmas eve, generally entrusting their winnings to one of the children's mothers, at which time the merry band will use their stash to buy piñatas and treats for their very own Christmas party.
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