Originally published via IntheKnow Traveler:
Centuries-old conquistadores’ colonial architecture
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Some kind of indigenous-inspired mural. Like the feral redheaded kid in Talladega Nights said of anarchy when he went buck-wild on the neighbor with the garden hose, “I don’t know what it means, but I like it.”
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In Chichen Itza, an ancient Maya pyramid structure that was the epicenter of the city
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Apparently, an old woman fell down the steps some years ago while touring the temple, so you’re not allowed to climb it anymore. Plus, it’s a World Heritage site now.
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The interior of a cenote, the traditional freshwater source for this region of the Yucatan Peninsula, where no rivers or lakes exist
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A curious, vaguely sadomasochistic sculpture in a conquistadors’ Catholic Church erected on the ruins of a Mayan temple that they pillaged and razed because it was the work of the devil.
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A laser art show on a 15th-century cathedral, potentially blasphemous
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Black Jesus is also potentially blasphemous, depending on whom you ask.
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A Mexican strummer on the streets of Merida. He called me a “brother from another mother,” and I gave him some pesos. Does that make me a saint, or just a solid candidate for sainthood?
Ben Bartee is an independent Bangkok-based American journalist with opposable thumbs. Follow his stuff via Armageddon Prose and/or Substack, Patreon, Gab, and Twitter. Bitcoin public address: 14gU3aHBXkNq8bDqmibfnubV7kSJqfx5LX
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