With thick, wet snow falling down and live mariachi music to greet
them, around 400 riders on horseback rode up to the Shrine of Our Lady
of Guadalupe in Des Plaines Dec. 4 to pay homage to Mary.
Some wore ponchos bearing the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Other
riders carried their cellphones and were recording the ride. Once in
front of the outdoor shrine, each rider handed over a red rose for Mary
and was blessed with holy water by shrine rector Father Esequiel
Sanchez.
The priest himself entered the shrine on horseback and was
wearing a traditional Mexican sombrero.
It’s the fifth year for the pilgrimage, which is organized by Club
Los Vaqueros Unidos (United Cowboys Club) in Wadsworth. The horseback
pilgrimage is the unofficial kickoff of celebrations at the shrine that
culminate with 24 hours of Masses and visits to the outdoor shrine Dec.
12 for the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
The pilgrimage usually includes a three-hour ride through the forest
preserve in Lincolnshire and ends at the shrine, but this year that
portion was canceled because the forest preserve was conducting a “deer
management” program, said club member Maria Anguiano.
Despite the wet and heavy snow that soaked the riders and horses,
there were many smiles as the riders made their way past the shrine.
“What everyone really wants to do is thank the Virgin for the
blessings throughout the year and acknowledge her presence in their
lives,” Anguiano told the Catholic New World, newspaper of the
Archdiocese of Chicago.
Having the riders and horses visit the shrine is fitting to the history of the church in the United States.
“All the evangelization in America happened on horseback so as we
bless the horses today we remember that tradition,” Father Sanchez said.
“The key element in the life of a lot of people was a sturdy horse, to
be able to make a living and get around. Now it’s become a symbol of a
way of life that is very much still treasured and valued.”
In the evening of Dec. 4, a group of tractor-trailer drivers went to
the Des Plaines shrine for their own pilgrimage. The two pilgrimages are
held before the Dec. 12 feast day since more than 120,000 pilgrims
usually visit the shrine over Dec. 11 and 12 and accommodating the
horses and trailers would be difficult.
In Mexico City, it’s a tradition for groups or clubs to make a
pilgrimage to the Guadalupe shrine there on the feast day, which
commemorates Mary’s appearance to St. Juan Diego on Tepeyac Hill near
modern-day Mexico City.
Mary appeared to Diego for the first time at dawn Dec. 9, 1531, and
said she wanted a church built in her honor on that hill. Diego went to
the bishop to share this news, but was put off by the prelate. She
appeared again, and Diego — who was called by name by the lady in the
apparition — again approached the bishop. The bishop asked for a sign
from this lady of Diego’s and Mary produced enough roses in December to
fill Diego’s cloak, or “tilma.”
When he emptied them in front of the bishop, he found that she had
left her image on the tilma, which remains today in the Basilica of Our
Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City.
The local shrine in Des Plaines began in the mid-1980s.
The shrine is
officially connected to the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico
City and is the only place in the United States where pilgrims can
receive the same special indulgence that is offered to pilgrims visiting
the basilica.