This is a special year for Tradicion por Siempre, the non-profit organization behind "El Grito," festival on Alisal St., in ...
It is the dramatisation of the scene on September 15, 1810 when a priest, Miguel Hildago y Costilla in the poor town of Dolores, rang the parish bell to summon the town flock to mass. But ...
Early on the morning of Sept. 16, 1810, Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla summoned the largely Indian and mestizo congregation ...
This cry honors the "Grito de Dolores", the Cry of Dolores, that the catholic priest Miguel Hidalgo gave in the early morning of Sep. 16, 1810, when he called on all Mexicans to take up arms ...
The "Grito" — "the Cry of Dolores" or "Cry of Independence" — commemorates Mexican Independence Day, which will be celebrated on Sept. 15. In Mexico City, the president reenacts "El Grito" by ...
Hundreds of thousands of people gathered in Mexico City on Sunday and Monday to commemorate the anniversary of Mexico’s independence from Spain. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador presided ...
The moment is known as El Grito – the cry of Dolores – and it was heard throughout downtown San Jose on Sunday. Earlier in the day, San Jose hosted Fiestas Patrias filled with music ...
This cry honors the "Grito de Dolores", the Cry of Dolores, that Miguel Hidalgo gave in the early morning of Sep. 16, 1810, when he called on all Mexicans to take up arms against the Spanish army ...
“El Grito means ‘the cry,’ and it refers to the Cry of Dolores in 1810, when Mexicans sought to end Spanish rule, achieve racial equality, and distribute land,” he said. He likened the ...