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The AztecsWhen the Spanish landed on their shores, the Aztecs were rulers of a vast empire of more than ten million people. They controlled the territories of many conquered tribes with an iron hand. They were also a highly skilled people who built roads, palaces, magnificent temples and great cities. Their calendar was the most accurate in the world. Religion was all important to the Aztecs. It was woven into the very fabric of their lives. Ceremonies marked every occasion, and idols were worshipped in the temples of every city and town. This worship required human sacrifice and many thousands died each year on the altars of the gods, their still-beating hearts torn from their bodies. According to the Aztec religion, the gods had sacrificed themselves to give life to the sun. Now it was their sacred duty to offer human blood and hearts as food for the gods. If they did this, the gods would look after them. Only through these sacrificial deaths would the people live and prosper. The end of an ageAztec prophets had predicted that the year 1519 would mark the beginning of the end for their civilization, and indeed for ten years before that date there had been many unusual signs. A temple had burst into flames all by itself, and water boiled in the middle of the lake. In the sky, a comet had appeared, and a woman's voice could be heard weeping at night. Strange dreams were reported everywhere. On Good Friday 1519, a band of Spanish adventurers arrived on the Mexican coast. Their leader was a remarkable and daring man named Hernando Cortes. Lured by gold and glory, they marched inland to meet the Aztec Emperor. Fighting broke out. The oppressed tribes rose in rebellion and joined the small Spanish army against their hated Aztec masters. There followed months of fierce fighting, and by August 1521, the great capital city of the Aztecs and their empire were destroyed. The Spanish pulled down the idols and replaced them with the cross of Christ. The missionaries who followed the conquerors did their best to preach the Gospel, but with little success. The disruption of their age-old way of life had left the indigenous tribes of Mexico confused and uncertain. They had trusted in their ancient gods to look after them, and now their gods had been defeated. But the new religion of Christ which the missionaries preached seemed foreign and hard to grasp. The differences between their cultures made real understanding difficult, and on top of that, the cruelty of the Spanish soldiers had created an atmosphere of deep mistrust. Conversions were few.The Mother of MercyThen in 1531, an Indian convert named Juan Diego approached the bishop of Mexico with a strange story. He said that the Mother of God had appeared to him and given him a message for the bishop. The Lady asked that a temple be built on Tepayac hill, a place of prayer and healing. The bishop was not about to believe such a story and sent him on his way. When Juan Diego came back again the next day with the same story, the bishop asked for some proof. The Lady must send a sign. Two days later Juan was back. The Lady had indeed sent a sign. In his cloak he carried Spanish roses somehow blooming in winter. The bishop and those with him were amazed, but what they saw on his cloak was more astonishing yet. There had appeared on his cloak (or tilma) a full length portrait of the Lady. She was just as Juan had described her. The bishop was convinced beyond all doubt. He ordered a small shrine to be built on Tepayac hill where the sacred image was given a place of honor. News of the event spread like wild fire. Soon people from every tribe came to see this marvel, and to hear from Juan Diego's own lips the story of what had happened. The sacred imageThe image itself is truly amazing. It seems to be somehow imprinted into the fabric, rather than painted. Modern science has revealed that there are no brush strokes on the original, no outline or sizing underneath. Also surprising is the fact that its colors remain vivid and intact despite centuries of exposure. The tilma upon which the image is imprinted is made of rough cactus cloth like burlap. Such tilmas were worn by poorer people. They were large cloaks that served both for warmth and for carrying bundles. This kind of cloth rarely lasts more than fifty years before falling apart. That the tilma of Guadalupe has survived more that four centuries is a wonder in itself.
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