by FHS sophomore Harpreet Walia
Students in Rebecca Watson’s Spanish I class created altars and masks to celebrate the approaching Day of the Dead on Nov. 2..
“I wanted to do [the altars and the masks] because in Spanish I we introduce the Day of the Dead,” Watson said. “I wanted to decorate the halls to show everyone, all the students who walk down the T-Wing, the creativity of my students.”
Día de Los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is a holiday celebrated in Mexico to demonstrate love and respect for deceased family members.
“It’s a pretty big holiday in Mexico,” Watson said. “To me it’s just a happy day to celebrate the lives of the deceased.”
In Mexican tradition, those celebrating will paint their faces and make sugar skulls. Families pay tribute to their loved ones with a symbolic altar.
“My students have taken a shoe box to make an altar,” Watson said. “to honor someone they know that’s deceased.”
Watson and Spanish II teacher Rebecca Henson created a space in the T-wing for students to place handmade altars.
“This is a great way to remember our loved ones,” sophomore Sheyla Hidalgo said. “I felt proud of my culture.”