“The Virgin of Guadalupe, Juan Diego, and the Revival of the Tilma Relic in Los Angeles,”
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Abstract
Devotion to the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe in Los Angeles has a complex and multifaceted history. This article will discuss the initial celebrations of Our Lady of Guadalupe, beginning with a procession in 1928 and developing with increasing popularity in the 1930s. By 1941, the Virgin of Guadalupe had become an important political and religious symbol for the archbishop of Los Angeles, John J. Cantwell, who conducted a pilgrimage to Mexico City, during which he reconfirmed the significance of the Guadalupe image for the Los Angeles Catholic community. In commemoration of Archbishop Cantwell's historic visit, a fragment of the tilma, the cloak on which the Virgin of Guadalupe representation had appeared, was offered to Los Angeles. As the only known piece of the tilma currently found outside of Mexico City, this relic has great devotional significance. As this article will show, the tilma relic disappeared into relative obscurity following its arrival in Los Angeles, only to become a renewed focus of devotion over sixty years later, in 2003. This article will conclude with the reasons behind the relic's revival through a discussion of Juan Diego and his canonization.
Original Publication Citation
“The Virgin of Guadalupe, Juan Diego, and the Revival of the Tilma Relic in Los Angeles,” Church History 87, n. 2 (2018): 487-514.
Digital Commons @ LMU & LLS Citation
Noreen, Kirstin, "“The Virgin of Guadalupe, Juan Diego, and the Revival of the Tilma Relic in Los Angeles,”" (2018). Art & Art History Faculty Works. 47.
https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/artarhs_fac/47