04042026Sat
Last updateThu, 26 Mar 2026 6pm

rectangle placeholder

Expo Te Deum debuts in Tonalá, celebrating ancestral identity

Tonalá’s Paseo de los Guardianes de la Reina became a corridor of ceremony and artisanry this weekend as dancers, healers and families gathered for the Primera Expo de Espiritualidad Te Deum—a new festival blending Catholic and Indigenous traditions in a celebration of community identity and spiritual renewal.


Think you know all about Guadalajara? Wait till you meet tour guide Alexandra

The huge bronze snake head displayed under trees near the soaring “Imolacion de Quetzalcoatl” in Guadalajara’s Plaza Tapatia actually belongs on top of the imposing, twisted snake sculpture that sits in the center of a nearby fountain. “It represents a failure,” says my guide, Alexandra Duncan.

Affidamento 2025: Women transforming communities with trust and solidarity

The applause echoed through the vaulted halls of the Centro Cultural El Refugio in Tlaquepaque as 18 women stepped onto the stage, one by one, to receive their plaques of recognition. Each name carried its own story — of perseverance, innovation, and care — together forming a living portrait of the theme chosen by the Instituto Electoral y de Participación Ciudadana (IEPC) de Jalisco for this year’s Reconocimiento al Affidamento: “Confianza que transforma, redes que sostienen” — Trust that transforms, networks that sustain.

Mr. and Ms. Rube go to IKEA-land

Go for a meal, stay for a tempting romp through minimalist home decor. That may be the marketing slogan at Guadalajara’s IKEA, the Swedish-based furniture giant that arrived here in November last year—the largest of three stores in Mexico.

Making your own Day of the Dead altar

One way to embrace the country’s unique customs is by commemorating the Day of the Dead with a traditional but personalized altar de muertos (ofrenda or altar to the deceased).