Molly Molloy New Mexico State University Library Las Cruces, NM 88001
505-646-6931 mmolloy@lib.nmsu.edu http://lib.nmsu.edu/staff/mmolloy
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, 1 Dec 1996 05:19:28 +0000
From: Amanecer Press <amanecer@cyberspace.com>
To: NAP <amanecer@cyberspace.com>
Cc: reg.mexico@conf.igc.apc.org
Subject: [AP] Virgin of Guadalupe has Web Site
MEXICO'S VIRGIN OF GUADALUPE HAS WEB SITE
Copyright (c) 1996 The Associated Press
MEXICO CITY (Nov 30, 1996 12:12 p.m. EST) -- Just two weeks shy of her
465th anniversary, Mexico's revered Virgin of Guadalupe -- also fondly
known as Lupe -- has stepped into the modern age with her own site on
the Internet: Interlupe.
"Nearly 500 years after she first appeared to us, we're embarking on a
new way to send her message of peace, harmony and salvation," said
Juan Homero Hernandez, a scholar and member of the Guadalupean Studies
Center in Mexico City.
The Virgin's home page serves as an example of how modern science can
advance ancient beliefs, Hernandez said Friday at the 21st annual
National Guadalupean Congress in Mexico City.
The Virgin, a dark-skinned version of the Madonna, is credited with
bringing Roman Catholicism to Mexico's indigenous population, which
resisted the religion of the invading Spaniards for decades.
Today, more than 90 percent of Mexico's 90 million citizens are
Catholic.
Worshipers believe that the patron saint of Mexico first appeared to
the peasant Juan Diego in the winter of 1531 on a hill just outside of
Mexico City. Juan Diego told the city's bishops he had seen the mother
of Jesus, but they did not believe him.
The peasant returned to the site, at which point the Virgin told him
to pick roses she had made bloom on the hillside in midwinter as proof
of her existence.
When Juan Diego opened his cloak before priests back in Mexico City,
the roses fell out, revealing a perfect image of the Virgin stamped on
the cloth. The cloak hangs today in Mexico City's Guadalupe Basilica.
The Virgin remains the country's most important religious tradition.
Some academics have doubted the existence of Juan Diego and of the
Virgin herself, arguing that she was probably an invention of the
Spaniards to convert the indigenous population to Catholicism.
Hernandez dismisses such doubts.
"The Virgin's image today holds the same power as when she first
appeared," he said. "And now, with the lights shed by modern
technology, we will be able to spread the Christian beliefs stamped on
(Juan Diego's) cloak."
The Interlupe home page greets World Wide Web-surfers with an organ
version of the Guadalupe Hymn.
Diagrams of Juan Diego's cloak, the history of the Virgin's
apparition, and historical and scientific documents on the cloak
complete the Madonna's menu. A chat room for fellow Guadalupeans also
is available.
Despite new Internet access to the Virgin, traditional forms of
worshiping Mexico's patron saint are unlikely to fade. More than a
million Mexicans are expected to make the annual pilgrimage -- many on
their knees -- to the Virgin's basilica on Guadalupe Day, Dec. 12.
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Interlupe can be accessed at http://spin.com.mx/~msalazar
An English language version of the page is under construction,
according to a notice at the main site.