Cruise through the calendar to see holidays celebrated around Latin America, in each season of the year.  

January 6

Three King's
Day

throughout Latin America
February/March (date varies each year)

Carnival

Brazil
April 8

Sealing
the Frost

Guatemala
April (date varies each year)

Vigil of
Easter

Mexico
May 3

Dia de la Cruz

Mexico, Venezuela,
El Salvador, and
Peru
May 5

Cinco de
Mayo

Mexico
August 30

Santa Rosa de
Lima Day

Peru
October 12

Dia de la Raza

throughout Latin America
November 1 - 2

El Dia de
los Muertos

throughout Latin America
December 12

Guadalupe Day

Mexico
December 16

Posadas

Mexico
December 21

St. Thomas' Day

Guatemala

December 23

Night of the
Radishes

Mexico
December 31

Ano Viejo

Ecuador

Photos: Brooklyn Children's Museum, Leon V. Kofod Slide Collection
 
		

Three Kings' Day

January 6, throughout Latin America

On this day, Christians wait for The Three Kings, who brought gifts to the baby Jesus, to bring presents for children.
 
		

Carnival

3 days during February or March (date varies each year), Brazil

This holiday's name comes from "Carne Vale," translated as "goodbye to meat." People get together and have fun before Lent, the forty days when Christians are not supposed to eat meat or rich foods. Children spend the whole year creating costumes, floats, and dances for the great Samba School Parade.
 
		

Sealing the Frost

April 8, Guatemala

This is a traditional ceremony of the Cuchumatan Indians to protect their corn from frost. Villagers follow holy men up a cliff to where the frost lives. One prayer maker is lowered over the edge of the cliff with a rope tied around his waist. He covers a crack in the rock with cement so that the frost won't be able to get out.
 
		

Vigil of Easter

2nd Sunday in April (date varies each year), Mexico

This holiday marks the day after Jesus died and before he rose from the dead with a special Easter Vigil Service. People make ugly dolls of Judas, who betrayed Jesus. They stuff them with fire crackers, hang them, and ignite them. When the Judas doll explodes, candies and gifts fall out.
 
		

Dia de la Cruz

(Day of the Cross) May 3, Mexico, Venezuela, El Salvador, and Peru
On this day in 326, St. Helena is said to have found the cross on which Jesus was crucified. Catholics mount displays around crosses in their homes and decorate them with flowers.
 
		

Cinco de Mayo

(Fifth of May) Mexico
On Cinco de Mayo, Mexicans remember the day in 1862 when Mexican general Benito Juarez and his army beat the French at the battle of Puebla, when the French were trying to take over Mexico. To celebrate, Mexicans dress up as soldiers and recreate the battle in the plaza.
 
		

Santa Rosa de Lima Day

August 30, Peru
The people of Lima take a silver statue of St. Rose covered with roses from the local church to the city cathedral. Children in white robes sing hymns and adults in purple robes carry lit candles to honor her.
 
		

Dia de la Raza

(Day of the Race) October 12, throughout Latin America

Columbus Day is celebrated in Latin America as the "Day of the Race" because many Spanish settlers who followed Columbus intermarried with the native population, creating a new race.
 
		

El Dia de los Muertos

(Day of the Dead) November 1-2, throughout Latin America

This fall festival is a time to remember dead family members and pray to their souls to return to the land of the living for just one night. Mexicans build altars decorated with cooked foods, candles, sugar skulls, and colorful flowers such as orange marigolds and purple orchids to welcome back the dead. Read more about the Day of the Dead.
 
		

Guadalupe Day

December 12, Mexico

Thousands of Mexicans come to the church at Guadalupe to commemorate the day in 1531 when the Virgin Mary appeared before an Indian woodcutter and asked him to build a church on this site.
 
		

Posadas

December 16, Mexico

On each of the eight nights before Christmas, Mexicans re-enact Joseph and Mary's search for shelter (posadas) on the night of Jesus' birth. Friends approach a house singing traditional songs, asking to be let in. At first they are refused, but finally, they are invited inside and the Posada party begins.
 
		

St. Thomas' Day

December 21, Guatemala

On St. Thomas' Day, Guatemalan Mayan Indians honor the sun god by dancing the dangerous palo voladare, the flying pole dance, in which three men climb to a platform at the top of a fifty-foot pole.
 
		

Night of the Radishes

December 23, Mexico

In some parts of Mexico, the radishes grow as large as athe length of a child's arm. On this day, there is an annual radish sculpture competition. Sculptors carve radishes in the shapes of famous and historical figures for all to see.
 
		

New Year's Eve

December 31, Ecuador

The Ano Viejo is represented by a scarecrow-like figure made from a stuffed shirt and pants and is burned at midnight. Children dress up in black as the Ano Viejo's widows, and scream as he burns.