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Viva Mexico!
Friday, May 07 2010, 8:00pm
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In 2010, Mexico is slated to commemorate the centennial of its revolution and the bicentennial of its Independence movement. In a series of electrifying dance performances, ANMBF will portray the beliefs, legends, and customs of Mexican people during this pinnacle time in Mexico's history.

Click Here to Purchase Tickets

Location : Latino Cultural Center, Dallas, TX
Contact : 214-880-0202

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Folklorico Fact!

La China Poblana. The "Puebla China Girl", La China Poblana, is synonymous with this city, but few poblanos knew her true life story. Catarina de San Juan (1609-1688), originally named Mirrha, was born in Delhi, India, and kidnaped at the age of nine by pirates. The captors sold her to a Portuguese merchant in Manila, who later shipped her to Miguel de Sosa, a poblano who had commissioned the merchant to send him "a little Chinese girl." Sosa and his wife adopted eleven year-old Mirrha in 1620 and baptized her Catarina. Upon the couple's death, Catarina married Domingo Suárez, the Chinese servant of the local parish priest. Seventeenth-century poblanos admired her acts of charity and copied her picturesque costume. Twentieth-century poblanos modified the costume to incorporate the colors and insignia of the Mexican flag. Puebla's monument to La China Poblana, an enormous statue atop a tiled fountain, is located in the northern end of the city at the junction of Boulevard Heroes del 5 de Mayo and Avenida Defensores de La Republica.

Folklorico Fact!

La China Poblana. The "Puebla China Girl", La China Poblana, is synonymous with this city, but few poblanos knew her true life story. Catarina de San Juan (1609-1688), originally named Mirrha, was born in Delhi, India, and kidnaped at the age of nine by pirates. The captors sold her to a Portuguese merchant in Manila, who later shipped her to Miguel de Sosa, a poblano who had commissioned the merchant to send him "a little Chinese girl." Sosa and his wife adopted eleven year-old Mirrha in 1620 and baptized her Catarina. Upon the couple's death, Catarina married Domingo Suárez, the Chinese servant of the local parish priest. Seventeenth-century poblanos admired her acts of charity and copied her picturesque costume. Twentieth-century poblanos modified the costume to incorporate the colors and insignia of the Mexican flag. Puebla's monument to La China Poblana, an enormous statue atop a tiled fountain, is located in the northern end of the city at the junction of Boulevard Heroes del 5 de Mayo and Avenida Defensores de La Republica.