Amongst the Kachiquel mayan people here, it's traditional to make giant kites to fly on 1st November. People go to the cemeteries where their ancestors are buried, and clean and put new flowers on the graves / tombs (there's been extra flower markets all over the place for the last week.) And they fly kites from the cemeteries, symbolically attracting the spirits to earth - for this day when they believe that the dead and living are reunited.
It's a bit of a village fayre atmosphere, with competitions in different size and age groups.
The kites can take months to plan and make, and many are put together on the day. They have a bamboo frame, and are made of tissue paper in intricate designs.
For the really large ones, there is then a complicated arrangement of pullies etc to stand the kite up ready to fly.
Some have political messages...
(From the heart of the earth, to the whisper of the wind, to the rediscovery of our identity)
Others with designs depicting the natural environment in Guatemala, or the traditions of the people.
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