The Traditional Cathartic Rite of Burning Zozobra

Throughout human history, we have vented our anger and frustration over bad luck and injustices by destroying something or someone who has nothing to do with it. That is how the word "scapegoat" came about. The catharsis of heaping all sins on one or a few people figured in human sacrifice, witch burning, public hangings, and mob lynchings, not to mention fiction like The Wicker Man. However, this can be done in a less harmful way, with an effigy burned instead of a person, which could have easily been the case in The Wicker Man.

Every Labor Day weekend, the city of Santa Fe, New Mexico, holds that kind of ritual, when they put all their "glooms," meaning sorrows, anxieties, and negativity, inside a huge effigy called Zozobra. A play is performed to tell the legend of Zozobra, and the effigy is burned with great celebration. The ceremony kicks off the nine-day Fiesta de Santa Fe. You might assume that Zozobra is a figure from an ancient religion, and the burning is a long tradition. On the contrary, the ritual was made up by a Santa Fe artist in 1924, with a mythology to accompany it. It apparently works, as Santa Fe residents and those who travel to the festival see it as a renewal, a chance to destroy all their bad feelings and start afresh. Read how the burning of Zozobra came about, and how it's done every year, at Smithsonian. This year's 100th anniversary burning will be on August 30th, with a 50.5-foot Zozobra.    

(Image credit: Jweiss)


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