Mexico's Purepecha Indigenous group welcomes the New Year with ancient 'New Fire' ceremony

A Purepechas Indigenous man carries wood and a stick as he walks with a group from Erongaricuaro, where residents kept a flame alive for one year, to Ocumicho in Michoacan state, Mexico, Tuesday evening, Jan. 30, 2024. A new flame will be lit in Ocumicho at the “New Fire†ceremony on Feb. 2 to mark the new year, after extinguishing the old fire on Feb. 1 which is considered an orphan day that belongs to no month and is used for mourning and renewal. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)

OCUMICHO, Mexico (AP) — Guided by their ancestral lunar calendar, members of Mexico’s Purepecha Indigenous group celebrated their own New Year’s Eve — a little differently than the West’s traditional New Year.

The Purepechas, who live in the western state of Michoacán, preserve the pre-Hispanic belief in the “New Fire†ceremony, a version of which was also practiced by their ancient rivals to the east, the Aztecs.

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