Even Mexico's Tough-luck Saint Has Tough Year In 2020
Even Mexico's Tough-luck Saint Has Tough Year In 2020
Mexicos patron saint of lost causes and difficult cases had a tough day Wednesday, drawing only a fraction of the huge crowd he normally gets for his annual celebration.

MEXICO CITY: Mexicos patron saint of lost causes and difficult cases had a tough day Wednesday, drawing only a fraction of the huge crowd he normally gets for his annual celebration.

San Judas Tadeo, who would seem the perfect figure for a pandemic-battered 2020 when so many people have lost jobs and loved ones, is celebrated Oct. 28 in Mexico, especially by the poor or those with legal problems, who believe he stands up for the underdog.

But this years celebrations at a downtown Mexico City church were only about a tenth the size they usually are, said Mexico City’s culture secretary, Jos Alfonso Surez.

Fears of coronavirus infection reduced the throngs that normally spill out onto nearby streets to orderly lines of worshippers wearing cloth face masks. About 120 police officers were on hand to keep order.

While devotees of the saint launched fireworks throughout the day to honor him, people carrying statues of San Judas St. Jude waited patiently in line to enter the church. They had their temperatures taken and were given hand sanitizer, quickly got their San Judas figures blessed and left the building.

We welcome them, say a prayer of blessing and tell them to leave,” said Rev. Mario Gonzlez, the rector of the San Hiplito and San Casiano church. We are happy to see such devotion, but it is a serious responsibility and we want to preserve people’s welfare.

Surez said the whole process lasted only about five minutes per person, compared to the day-long festivities that mark most years, noting the procedure is working pretty well.

For many, even in a city that has already seen 157,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and almost 15,000 deaths from COIVD-19 and where the mayor recently announced she was infected, many viewed the annual homage to the saint as a date they could not miss.

Manuel Reyes, who came to the church dressed in the saints green and white robes, said he was former teacher who now sells cellphones and he become a devotee of the saint after a brush with the law.

I told San Juditas with all my faith, with all my devotion, that I would celebrate his day every year, and here I am, Reyes said.

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Associated Press journalists Gerardo Carrillo and Marco Ugarte contributed to this report

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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