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OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE
A legend well known in Mexico tells
how it came to be. In 1531, the Spanish had been occupying Mexico for about ten years. An indigenous peasant,
Juan Diego, was walking in what is now Mexico City when he saw the glowing figure of a teenage girl on a hill
called Tepeyac. She identified herself as the Virgin Mary, and asked him to build her a church on that spot.
Diego recounted this to the Archbishop of Mexico, Juan de Zumárraga (1468-1548). Zumárraga was skeptical and
told Diego to return and ask her to prove her identity with a miracle. Diego did return, and encountered the
apparition again. She told him to climb to the top of the hill and pick some flowers to present to the
Bishop. Although it was winter and no flowers should have been in bloom, Juan Diego found an abundance of
flowers of a type he'd never seen before. The Virgin Mary bundled the flowers into Diego's cloak, woven from
common cactus fiber and called a tilma. When Juan Diego presented the tilma to Zumárraga, the flowers fell
out and he recognized them as Castilian roses, not found in Mexico; but more significantly, the tilma had
been miraculously imprinted with a colorful image of the Virgin herself. This actual tilma, preserved since
that date and showing the familiar image of the Virgin Mary with her head bowed and hands together in prayer,
is the Virgin of Guadalupe. It remains perhaps the most sacred object in all of
Mexico.