Mexico's Purepecha Indigenous group welcomes the New Year with ancient 'New Fire' ceremony

A Purepechas Indigenous man carries wood and a stick as he walks with a group from Erongaricuaro, where residents kept a flame alive for one year, to Ocumicho in Michoacan state, Mexico, Tuesday evening, Jan. 30, 2024. A new flame will be lit in Ocumicho at the 鈥淣ew Fire鈥 ceremony on Feb. 2 to mark the new year, after extinguishing the old fire on Feb. 1 which is considered an orphan day that belongs to no month and is used for mourning and renewal. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

OCUMICHO, Mexico (AP) 鈥 Guided by their ancestral lunar calendar, members of Mexico鈥檚 Purepecha Indigenous group celebrated their own New Year鈥檚 Eve 鈥 a little differently than the West鈥檚 traditional New Year.

The Purepechas, who live in the western state of Michoac谩n, preserve the pre-Hispanic belief in the 鈥淣ew Fire鈥 ceremony, a version of which was also practiced by their ancient rivals to the east, the Aztecs.

Because the Purepechas' lunar calendar of 18 months leaves an orphan day that belongs to no month, that day 鈥 which this year fell on Thursday 鈥 is viewed as a time for both mourning and renewal. That is when a symbolic fire is extinguished. In past generations, no fire was allowed on that day and meals were eaten cold, although the prevalence of gas and electric burners has made that obsolete.

Then at midnight, a new fire is lit and not allowed to go out until the new year.

That ancient ceremony was carried on this week by Antonio Tinoco, 35, who served as the guardian of last year鈥檚 New Fire.

For a year, Tinoco tended the symbolic flame in Erongar铆cuaro, a village on the shore of P谩tzcuaro Lake. 鈥淵ou care for it like a child, and you feed it,鈥 he said.

鈥淚t is both sad and happy at the same time,鈥 Tinoco said of Thursday's ceremony in which his old flame was celebrated and then extinguished; a new one was lit in its ashes and will be handed on to a new guardian in another town.

鈥淲e are closing a cycle. Last year we lit a flame, and yesterday we handed it over, and putting it out signified the end of this cycle, and today a new cycle begins,鈥 Tinoco said.

Each year the guardianship of the fire is passed to a different town, so Tinoco physically carried a portion of last year's fire in a small brazier during a three-day walk over mountain trails to the town of Ocumicho, 50 miles (80 kilometers) to the west.

The metal brazier is suspended on poles between four men. It can be a taxing and risky task.

鈥淚t can be tricky, like children are,鈥 Tinoco said. 鈥淚f you are not careful, it can burn you. Yesterday I felt like it was burning my shirt, so I said to myself 鈥榠t seems like it鈥檚 hungry,' so I fed it and it calmed down.鈥

Ocumicho is where the New Fire ceremony is being held this year. There, a new guardian will be selected to tend it and pass it on Friday.

But first, on Wednesday night, the old fire was celebrated and then extinguished. The women of Ocumicho ascended a small pyramid made of adobe bricks and poured copal incense on the old fire, before it was extinguished.

That spot is where the new fire was finally lit again around midnight.

The ceremony is part of an effort to preserve ancestral customs among the Pur茅pecha, many of whom Many of them have also spent years that target the pine and fir forests of the mountainous region where they live.

Loggers often clear cut trees to plant avocados, a highly lucrative export crop in Michoac谩n.

Though he acknowledges that Michoac谩n has its problems, Tinoco says he feels good about carrying on the tradition.

鈥淚 feel happy, I feel satisfied with everything that we have achieved,鈥 he said.

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