トームさんのインスタグラム写真 - (トームInstagram)「No photos can do justice to the experience of visiting the local Sunday  #Tzotzil market in #Zinacantan where the indigenous folk gather to buy and sell flowers, fruit and vegetables and handwoven and embroidered traditional fabric and clothing. No photos is generally the rule for outsiders thought thanks to our friends we were obliged. Love you @samyoukilis @ottoherrero  . The mood was subdued, mostly quiet except for some 90s American hip hop and the sound of Roosters crowing. Younger women posed for photos with their wares, older women were reluctant or refused. Part of the reason for no photos is that the beauty of their traditional natural hand died and crafted cloth is often ripped off and uncredited. I can name two late 90s  #commedesgarcons collections that take directly from them, head to toe. Not to mention the endless iterations that make it into international homes and wardrobes via deritive .  No words or photos can properly capture the feeling of meeting the descendants of the ancient Maya Tzotzil and true custodians of these lands.  .  In pre-Columbian times before the conquerors' arrival, Zinacantán already had strong links with the Aztecs in the Central Zone of Mexico. Zinacantecans exchanged their products (especially salt, but by the 19th century also cacao, tobacco, and coffee) with Aztec traders.  The first missionaries who came to evangelize the native inhabitants in Zinacantán were the Dominican Friars. They settled in Zinacantan in the 16th century and built a wooden chapel to begin their mission. These missionaries left Zinacantán before they were expelled from Mexico by the government in the 17th century. They resumed their pastoral work in Zinacantan in 1976.  In pre-Columbian times before the conquerors' arrival, Zinacantán already had strong links with the Aztecs in the Central Zone of Mexico. Zinacantecans exchanged their products (especially salt, but by the 19th century also cacao, tobacco, and coffee) with Aztec traders.  This is the same open air market today」10月23日 0時10分 - tomenyc

トームのインスタグラム(tomenyc) - 10月23日 00時10分


No photos can do justice to the experience of visiting the local Sunday #Tzotzil market in #Zinacantan where the indigenous folk gather to buy and sell flowers, fruit and vegetables and handwoven and embroidered traditional fabric and clothing. No photos is generally the rule for outsiders thought thanks to our friends we were obliged. Love you @samyoukilis @ottoherrero
.
The mood was subdued, mostly quiet except for some 90s American hip hop and the sound of Roosters crowing. Younger women posed for photos with their wares, older women were reluctant or refused. Part of the reason for no photos is that the beauty of their traditional natural hand died and crafted cloth is often ripped off and uncredited. I can name two late 90s #commedesgarcons collections that take directly from them, head to toe. Not to mention the endless iterations that make it into international homes and wardrobes via deritive
.
No words or photos can properly capture the feeling of meeting the descendants of the ancient Maya Tzotzil and true custodians of these lands.
.

In pre-Columbian times before the conquerors' arrival, Zinacantán already had strong links with the Aztecs in the Central Zone of Mexico. Zinacantecans exchanged their products (especially salt, but by the 19th century also cacao, tobacco, and coffee) with Aztec traders.

The first missionaries who came to evangelize the native inhabitants in Zinacantán were the Dominican Friars. They settled in Zinacantan in the 16th century and built a wooden chapel to begin their mission. These missionaries left Zinacantán before they were expelled from Mexico by the government in the 17th century. They resumed their pastoral work in Zinacantan in 1976.

In pre-Columbian times before the conquerors' arrival, Zinacantán already had strong links with the Aztecs in the Central Zone of Mexico. Zinacantecans exchanged their products (especially salt, but by the 19th century also cacao, tobacco, and coffee) with Aztec traders.

This is the same open air market today


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