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Life and death on the 'coast of death'

Posted by Liaquat Ali Mirani on January 11, 2022 - 8:35am

Life and death on the 'coast of death'

On June 23, 2020, a 7.4 magnitude earthquake hit the coast of Oaxaca, south of Mexico, not far from the coastal city of Zapolite, where I accidentally took shelter in March after an outbreak. As I sat down to work, the room began to shake as if it were on the edge of automobiles, and in a sudden-appearing world, I had to leave the front door of my house with electric cords shining around. General Chat Chat Lounge Terribly dangerous.

Adding to the feeling of the Apocalypse, the vehicle, which then rolled out of the window with the passengers, had to cry on the sidewalk that it would have to hit the hillside or be killed in the next tsunami in some other way. This is undoubtedly a fitting end to my stay in Zapolit, I said to myself - a place whose name, so to speak, means "playa de la muerte" or "coast of death" in the Zapotec language.

There were different views on the origin of the name, the most obvious being that it was a dangerous sea, created by waves and currents that have killed countless swimmers over the years. Some observers have even claimed that regional concerns are due to Zapolite, which is located on the southern tip of Oaxaca, as a kind of underworld.

After hearing the news of the tsunami coming, I was rescued from the bullying pose I had taken at my door with a person I had never met before. Jose Luis, who is in his forties but looks great, pointed out for me to jump in his car and then escort me to his lost family plot. I spent the next few hours sitting on her mother's porch as the family laughed at every aftershock and remembered the last great earthquake of 2017 - at that time there was a tsunami alert and Zapolite residents took refuge in the cemetery the day before. General Chat Chat Lounge A mountain is dominant over the city.

This time, the beach was finally declared open and I dragged myself home - but later that night the family decided that I would probably not respond well to the 5.9 magnitude aftershock and I returned to José Louis to the landmass. send to. Let me get to it once again.

Six months later, Jose Luis was found in a terminal diabetes coma and buried himself in the hill graveyard. The funeral was accompanied by the traditional ranchera music of a singer and guitarist - along with courses in a country where funerals are often celebrated with wine, dancing, and fireworks.

However, the coronavirus pandemic has slowed things down in various parts of Mexico, as detailed in an article entitled "La Muerte ya no es una fiesta" or "Death is not a party" published in the Spanish newspaper El País in May 2020. Cemetery closures and social distance measures mean that, for example, in Mexico City, funerals arranged by a 10-man mariachi couple are no longer possible.

According to Federico Navarrete, a historian at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, referred to in the article, failure to perform burial rituals was not only a "virtue euphemism" but a "communal", "problem" for many Mexican communities. Funeral services also provided a venue for "collective events" and "endorsements of social relations."

This, of course, does not mean that death is always a pleasant event in Mexico. In addition to the outbreak of the epidemic, more than 300,000 people were killed and around 80,000 lost in the US-initiated drug war in 2006, as the country was plagued by epidemics of women's killings.

But as one Mexican friend recently advised me: As everyone dies, it is healthy for those of us who are still alive to celebrate it. For someone like me, who grew up in America, where death is nothing but a party and my brother and I hold our breath as we pass through the cemetery, this behavior is like fresh air. General Chat Chat Lounge

Of course, under America's cruel capital, there aren't many opportunities for "community" in death - much less in life. Instead, forces that actively oppose people against one another reduce existence to the matter of individual success or failure in order to maintain a system of elite oppression and institutional socioeconomic inequality. This is a dangerous rule, to say the least - check out reports like this one from the Washington, DC-based Institute for Policy Studies: "Inequality is literally killing us.

In December 2021, a year after Jose Luis's death, I entered the Zipolite Cemetery, smiling in front of the door with its large painted skeletons. Among the graves were the colorful remains of last month's Dead Celebration Day.

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Simon Keighley Heartbreaking photos after the earthquake on the coast of Oaxaca, Liaquat - thanks for breaking the news.
January 11, 2022 at 9:22am