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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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El Tiradito

El Tiradito ("the little castaway") is a shrine and popular local spot located at 420 South Main Avenue in the Old Barrio area of Downtown Tucson, Arizona. Because of the site's association with pleas for supernatural intervention, it is also called the Wishing Shrine. The legends surrounding the site center around a broken-hearted man dying and, due to a sin, being unable to be buried on consecrated ground. The legends date to the 1870s, and the shrine has been present since at least 1891. Its name comes from the Spanish "tirar." The shrine was the first Arizona property to be placed on the National Register of Historic Places for its traditional cultural values. It is especially important to Tucson's Mexican and Mexican American communities.

The shrine consists of the crumbling remains of a brick building, with a large metal rack for candles and desert plants now occupying the interior. Large, glass-encased candles, frequently depicting saints of the Roman Catholic Church are lit and left burning at the shrine, both on the stand and along the ledges of the building. Small slips of paper containing prayers or messages of thanks are also often pressed into cracks in the walls or left elsewhere at the shrine, as are other memorial objects. In addition to the faithful who leave these religious objects, El Tiradito is frequented and favored by many Tucsonans, including writers, poets, and other members of the town's artistic community.

The Tucson Chamber of Commerce calls the el Tiradito "the only sinner to become a saint." The site is not sanctioned by the Catholic Church, yet has religious and cultural significance. The victim gained a reputation for being able to mediate petitions to God and grant miracles.

Every year, there is a large Day of the Dead celebration at the shrine.

Legend

The legend associated with the site varies– the University of Arizona's Southwest Folklore Center contains over twenty versions of the story. The story generally occurs in the 1870s or 1880s. It was first recorded in an 1893 newspaper article and then in a 1909 diary. The identity of the victim in the story changes based on the story: some say he was good, bad, a hapless victim, or a priest. The victim is suddenly killed and buried where they fell, on unconsecrated ground. There is often a love triangle, with one or two of the participants killed in a fit of passion. Author Stella Pope Duarte describes the story as ""the 'Romeo and Juliet' of the Latino world."

One version associates the site with a ranch hand named Juan Oliveras. This legend says that Oliveras had an affair with his mother-in-law. His father-in-law caught and killed him. His mother-in-law, unable to bury him on consecrated ground due to his sin, buried him near where he fell. Another version says Oliveras had an affair with his stepmother, and was killed by his own father. Religious neighbors brought candles to the site where he was buried.

Another story claims that a man fell in love with a beautiful woman from a far. When he learned she was betrothed to another, he committed suicide. Because of the Catholic Church's prohibition of suicide victims burial in consecrated ground at the time, he was buried where he died, and his friends and family brought candles and flowers. A third claims a man, looking for his long-lost father, met his stepmother; his father, not recognizing him, killed his son in jealousy.

Other versions include a man who was thrown from a train, a man killed by a stray bullet, a man killed by his family after he assaulted a girl, a man killed by local sheriffs who mistakenly believed him to be a criminal, a son who killed his father who did not want him to sell the family horse, and a son who killed his father to avenge his mother.

Creation of shrine

Visitors to this area light candles for the man, hoping his soul will be freed from purgatory. Some of the nooks and crannies of El Tiradito even house the notes and letters of the heartbroken, prayers asking for healing of the heart. Legend says that if a candle burns through the night at the shrine, the lighter's wish will be granted. Some locals pray there "for help where blood had been spilled and a lost soul had gone forth to confront the unknown."

The original shrine was destroyed to build a highway, but was rebuilt in 1927 on land donated for its construction by prominent Tucsan Teófilo Otero. The structure was built in 1940 as a part of the Neighborhood Youth Administration.

In 1971, Tucson announced plans a highway that would cut through Barrio Viejo, destroying the shrine and displacing around 1200 residents. Residents formed The El Tiradito Committee. They enlisted Tucson Legal Aid to argue on their behalf and campaigned to get El Tiradito listed on the National Register of Historic Places. El Tiradito was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1971. A foundation was create to maintain the shrine, promote cultural events, and support the neighborhood. It was documented in the Historic American Landscapes Survey in 2012.

Site of mourning and activism

El Tiradito is also a site of mourning. It was used for this purpose as early as 1980, when a Catholic priest organized a vigil there for the Salvadoran Organ Pipe deaths. Beginning in 2000, Tiradito has hosted a weekly vigil to memorialize migrants who die trying to cross the Sonoran Desert. This vigil is run by the immigration advocacy group Coalicion de Derechos Humanos, No More Deaths, and Interfaith Immigrant Coalition. It considers the mourned "new tiraditos, the new discarded ones." Activists leave bottles of water there in memory of those who died of hunger and thirst. The site is also used for protests against alleged abuses by immigration and local authorities.

After the Orlando nightclub shooting, a vigil was held at El Tiradito in memory of its victims.

The Sex Workers Outreach Program meets there on the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers to commemorate those who were killed.

Physical structure

The structure is about fifteen feet tall and thirty feet wide. It has two sides descending in staggered segments.

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ "Arizona's Shrine to a Sinner". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  3. ^ Van Ham, Lane (2007). "Barrio, Borderlands, and Beyond: Folk Religion and Universal Human Rights at Tucson's El Tiradito Shrine". Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies. 11: 97–111. ISSN 1096-2492. JSTOR 20641850.
  4. ^ Stewart, Polly (2003). Worldviews And The American West: The Life of the Place Itself. Logan: Utah State University Press. ISBN 978-0-87421-456-7.
  5. ^ Griffith, Carol (August 2003). "Assessing the Significance of Traditional Cultural Properties Arizona Practices" (PDF). Transportation Research Circular (E-C055).
  6. ^ Auchter, Jessica (April 2013). "Border monuments: memory, counter-memory, and (b)ordering practices along the US-Mexico border". Review of International Studies. 39 (2): 291–311. doi:10.1017/S0260210512000174. ISSN 0260-2105. S2CID 145774811.
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  9. ^ Hardesty, Donald L.; Little, Barbara J. (March 16, 2009). Assessing Site Significance : A Guide for Archaeologists and Historians (2 ed.). ISBN 9780759111264.
  10. ^ Riley, Michael (1992). "Mexican American Shrines in Southern Arizona: A Postmodern Perspective". Journal of the Southwest. 34 (2): 206–231. ISSN 0894-8410. JSTOR 40169856.
  11. ^ La Opinión. (2023, Jun 20). “El tiradito”, un santuario de latinos y migrantes en arizona con una polémica historia. La Opinión
  12. ^ Griffith, James S. (September 1, 1995). Shared Space. Utah State University Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt46nxz2. ISBN 978-0-87421-375-1. S2CID 128072648.
  13. ^ Higgins, P. (2005, Oct 27). Ghosts of tucson's past: Stories of the old pueblo's apparitions and where you can find them...if you dare. Tucson Citizen
  14. ^ Auchter, J. (2012). Ghostly politics: Statecraft, monumentalization, and a logic of haunting.
  15. ^ Martínez, Oscar Jáquez (1996). U.S.-Mexico Borderlands: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8420-2447-1.
  16. ^ Manuel Gamio. Mexican Immigration to the United States: A Study of Human Migration and Adjustment (1930).
  17. ^ Irwin, Megan. "Redemption Song". Phoenix New Times. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  18. ^ Griffith, James S. (September 2000). Hecho a Mano: The Traditional Arts of Tucson's Mexican American Community. University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-1877-7.
  19. ^ James Garrison (October 28, 1975). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: El Tiradito / Wishing Shrine". National Park Service. Retrieved December 31, 2022. With accompanying photo from 1975
  20. ^ Barry Price Steinbrecher (July 13, 2012). Historic American Landscapes Survey: El Tiradito, HALS NO. AZ-8 (PDF). Includes six photos from 2012.
  21. ^ Van Ham, L. (2006). Civil religion in tucson immigrant advocacy groups (Order No. 3207649). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global. (305349335).
  22. ^ Bregel, E. (2023, Sep 13). 'Immersive' play to honor migrants, activism at tucson's el tiradito shrine. TCA Regional News.
  23. ^ "El Tiradito: An Arizona shrine for Latinos, migrants where a sinner is venerated". La Prensa Latina Media. June 20, 2023. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
  24. ^ Reznick, Alisa. "Community, family members hold vigil for man who died in Tucson police custody". news.azpm.org. Retrieved January 18, 2024.
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  26. ^ Gomez, G. R. (2022, Jan 01). For many, tucson shrine 'helps with the grief'. Arizona Daily Star.