Very early one Saturday morning
at the beginning of December of 1531, a poor but respected Indian called Juan
Diego (born, it is said, in Cuauhtitlan and under the pastoral care of the
religious community of Tlatelolco) was on his way to Tlaltelolco on a holy
errand. When he reached the hill called Tepeyac dawn was breaking and he heard
singing coming from above the hill. The singing stopped and was not heard
again, but he heard a voice calling to him from the top of the hill. “Beloved
Juan Diego”, it said. He responded at once, bravely climbing the hill towards
the place where the voice was coming from. When he reached the top he saw a
Lady standing there, who called him to herself. When he came close to her he
was stunned with how beautiful she was: her clothes shone like the sun. Then
the Virgin gave him her command: “Know, beloved son, that I am the immaculate
ever-virgin Mary, Mother of the true God who is the Origin of all life, who
creates all things and keeps them in being, the Lord of Heaven and Earth. “I
greatly wish, I earnestly desire, that my house should be built in this very
place. I will show him to you there and praise him as I show him, my Love and
Compassion, my Help and Defense. For in truth I am your compassionate Mother,
yours and of all who live together in this land and of any others who love me,
seek me, and call on me with confidence and devotion. In that house I will
listen to their weeping and their sadness, I will give them help in their
troubles and a cure for their misfortunes. “So that this desire of mine may be
fulfilled, go to Mexico City, to the palace of the Bishop. Tell him that I have
sent you to him to tell him how much I want a house to be built here for me, a
church built here at the bottom of the hill.” When Juan Diego arrived in the
city he went immediately to the house of the Bishop, Juan Zumárraga, a
Franciscan. But when the bishop heard what he had to say, he did not believe
him completely and said “My son, come another time and I will listen to you
then. Meanwhile I will consider what should be done about your wish and your
desire.” Another day he saw the Queen of Heaven coming down from where he had
seen her. She came to meet him next to the hill, stopped him, and said “Listen,
my beloved son, have no fear or anxiety in your heart. Do not try to do
anything about your uncle’s grave illness or about any other trouble of yours.
For am I not here with you, your mother? Are you not safe in the shadow of my
protection? Am I not the source of your life and your happiness? Am I not
holding you in my lap, wrapped in my arms? What else can you possibly need? Do
not be upset or distressed. Climb again, my beloved son, to the summit of this
hill, to the place where you saw me and heard me speak. You will find flowers
growing there. Pick them and gather them and bring them down to me.” Juan Diego
came back down with the flowers he had picked. She looked at them, took them
with her blessed hands and put them in his tilma, or cape. She told him: “Most
beloved son, these flowers are the sign that you are to carry to the Bishop.
You yourself are my messenger and I entrust myself to your faithfulness. I
strictly command you not to unfold your tilma in front of anyone except the
Bishop; but to him you should show what it is you are carrying. As you do so,
tell him the story of how I asked you to climb to the top of the hill and pick
the flowers there. Tell him everything you saw and marvelled at, so that he
will believe you and undertake to build the church I wish for.” Obedient to the
command of the Queen of Heaven, he took the road to Mexico City. He went
happily, confident that all would turn out well. Coming into the palace he
prostrated himself before the Bishop and recounted all that he had seen and
told him the errand on which he had been sent. “My Lord,” he said, “I have done
as you asked. I went to my Lady, the Queen of Heaven, holy Mary, the Mother of
God, and told her that you had asked for a sign so that you might believe me
and build the church that the Virgin herself desires. I told her that I had
given my word to bring you back some sign of her wishes. She heard what you had
asked and accepted with good grace your request for some sign so that you could
fulfill her will. Today, very early, she sent me back to see you.” The whole
city came running to see the holy image. They wondered at it, accepted it as
the work of God and made prayers to him. And that day Juan Diego’s uncle, whom
the Virgin had cured, told them in what way she should be revered and said that
her image should be known as the ever-virgin Saint Mary of Guadalupe • The account of the apparition is found
in the Nican Mopohua, or Huei Tlamahuitzoltica, written in Nahuatl, the Aztec
language, by the Indian scholar Antonio Valeriano around the middle of the
sixteenth century. Unfortunately
the original of his work has not been found. A copy was first published in
Nahuatl by Luis Lasso de la Vega in 1649.
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