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To honor victims of transfemicides, a community in Mexico City celebrates Día de Muertos

A woman walks on a street
Josue Pena walks in costume in the La Casilda neighborhood for Dia de Muertos at Casa Hogar “Paola Buenrostro” in Mexico City on Thursday.
(Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los)
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In the early morning Thursday, families arrived at San Lorenzo Tezonco Cemetery in Iztapalapa, east of Mexico City, with brooms, flowers and candles to spend the Day of the Dead with their dead loved ones. Cempasúchil and celosia flowers surrounded graves on Calle 7 as families swept the dust, hung strips of papel picado and sat together at grave sites.

Near the end of Calle 7, a gray and red building stands in a secluded silence. Protected by a black door with stained glass circles, the Mausoleum Tiresias is the first burial site for trans women in Mexico. Inaugurated in mid-September, it is named after Casa de las Muñecas Tiresias, an organization that aids trans people and sex workers, and also founded the mausoleum.

Kenya Cuevas, founder of Casa de las Muñecas and a transgender rights activist, fought for years to offer a dignified resting place for trans women. She became an activist in 2016 after her friend, Paola Buenrostro, a transgender sex worker, was killed in front of her by a male client. Since then, Cuevas has used the organization to help trans women who were victims of violence. She is working with Mexico City’s attorney general’s office to exhume bodies of victims of hate crimes and move them to the mausoleum.

“It is a space where we will be able to dignify them, recognize identities, but also to remember their memories as we all deserve,” Cuevas said.

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Two people in the bed of a pickup truck
A pickup truck passes in front of a mausoleum for transgender women whose bodies were never claimed in Mexico City.
(Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los)

The mausoleum has space for 149 women, but so far only the remains of three women who died of illness have been transferred. Many of the women who will rest at this site were victims of hate crimes. Regardless of the cause of death, the mausoleum is now a dignified place for them and an act of reparation.

“I think this space is going to be a place for denunciation, a place of visibility, but also a place of learning,” Cuevas said.

Around noon, residents of Casa Hogar “Paola Buenrostro” start to get ready for Day of the Dead. Standing in front of the mirror, Daniela, who asked that her last name not be used for safety reasons, paints a black line from her forehead to her chin, dividing her face. On one side, her face looks natural with orange and purple glitter over her eyelids. On the other, white paint covers her face.

Día de Muertos is a time to celebrate and honor the dead. From ofrendas to James Bond, De Los explored the origins and evolution of the holiday.

Next to her, Darian Gasca is drawing black circles around his eyes to turn into a catrín as Carin León’s “Primera Cita” plays loudly. In the table next to Daniela and Gasca, Dannia Manrique, a social worker, draws on Kenny Briceño, an LGBTQ migrant from Venezuela, a horizontal black line past the edges of their mouth. They all are in the second floor of the shelter, in Cuautepec, a neighborhood north of Mexico City. Tonight they will attend the collective ofrenda in honor of victims of hate crimes that will take place downtown where Buenrostro was killed.

With makeup ready, Daniela goes to her dorm and puts her legs inside a long navy blue dress with gold embroidery. Using both hands, she carefully lifts it up. Little by little the renaissance-inspired dress covers the scars from several gunshots she received after a group of men tried to kill her in her hometown, far from Mexico City.

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“They wanted me dead, but I’m still alive,” Daniela explained about her choice of makeup. “I may be dead inside, but outside, I’m still alive.”

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A man gets skeleton makeup put on

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A woman applies skeleton makeup

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A group of people applying makeup

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Three people sit at a table

1. Kenny Briceño gets makeup on as he prepares for Día de Muertos. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 2. Luisa Martínez Galdámez puts makeup on as she prepares for Día de Muertos. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 3. A group puts on their final touches as they prepare for Día de Muertos. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 4. Josue Pena, left, Kimberly Hernandez and Kenny Briceño sit at a dinner table at Casa Hogar “Paola Buenrostro” after finalizing their makeup. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los)

One of the main objectives of Casa Paola is to prevent the killings of trans women. It has become a safe place for trans women, but also for other vulnerable populations such as LGBTQ+ migrants and refugees. Luisa Martínez Galdámez, coordinator of the Casa, explains that besides offering housing and emergency shelter, it provides healthcare for people living with HIV/AIDS and reintegration opportunities for people struggling with homelessness or for those released from prison.

“The challenges are that they don’t give us work, they don’t respect our gender. When we ask for work they want us to dress as men. Even having our legal ID,” Martínez said. “The challenges are many ... But it is not impossible and little by little we are in the fight.”

Ofrendas used to celebrate Día de los Muertos are made using items that have special meanings with origins dating back to Indigenous people.

Cuevas is also advocating for the legal classification of transfemicides — the killing of a trans woman because of her gender— as hate crimes. Mexico has become Latin America’s second deadliest country after Brazil for transgender people. In 2022, at least 87 violent deaths of LGBTQ+ people were recorded in the country. Trans women were victims in at least 48 of those cases, according to the organization Letra S.

Cuevas, remembering the night when her friend was killed in front of her, says she managed to hold Buenrostro’s alleged killer until police arrived. She says despite multiple witnesses and a video Cuevas managed to take with her phone, the man was released.

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A commemorative plaque in memory of Paola Buenrostro
A commemorative plaque in memory of Paola Buenrostro in Mexico City.
(Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los)

Manrique experienced a similar situation following the death of her cousin. She decided to become a social worker after her cousin was killed during a party. Now, she’s a counselor at Casa Paola three days a week.

“On the day of my cousin’s murder, I promised myself that I would really like to help trans girls and that these murders are not committed again,” said Manrique during a group talk in the living room of Casa Paola.

The barrios of La Indepe used to be the margins of the industrial city, but now they are encircled by urban development. Given the government’s initiatives, often presented as progress, these barrios are the last obstacle standing in the government’s way.

The five women sitting on the couch, and Gasca, a 19-year-old trans man, shared similar stories. They endured exclusion, social stigma and often the abandonment of their families, leaving them with little options to survive. Many of them were also physically and sexually abused by relatives, clients or even authorities.

Gasca fled his home in central Mexico a few months ago. One night, Gasca’s dad waited for him to arrive from a party. He started to question his son’s identity and warned him that he had to dress like a woman if he wanted to continue living in his house.

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A commemorative altar during Día de Muertos

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Two people stand on a stage

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Kenny Briceño combs the hair of a Venezuelan migrant child at Casa Hogar "Paola Buenrostro."

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A woman poses for a photo

1. A commemorative altar during Día de Muertos, for transgender women killed over the years, at Casa Hogar “Paola Buenrostro.” (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 2. An event for transgender people during Día de Muertos in Mexico City. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 3. Kenny Briceño combs the hair of a Venezuelan migrant child at Casa Hogar “Paola Buenrostro.” The Casa provides shelter to migrant women and their children. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 4. Kenya Cuevas poses for a portrait in Mexico City. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los)

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“He had me like that since 12 p.m. until 3 a.m., hitting me and asking me if I were a man or a woman,” Gasca recalled. “If I told him that I was a man, he threw me back to the floor and kept beating me.”

It wasn’t until Gasca was forced to say that he was a woman that his father stopped.

A few minutes before 4 p.m., the group, mainly dressed as catrinas, began the commute to Buenrostro’s memorial, near Metro Revolución.

Taking caution with each step as to not step on their long dresses, they went down the steep streets of the Cuautepec hill.

They hopped on the cable car, took the metrobus, and finally arrived at the ofrenda almost two hours later.

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Three people walk on a street

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A woman sits in a cable car

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Three people sit on a bus

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A group of people in face paint and elaborate outfits pose for a photo

1. The steep walk to the altar begins. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 2. Josue Pena sits in a cable car cabin. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 3. From the cable car to the metro bus, the journey to the altar continues. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los) 4. The members of Casa Hogar “Paola Buenrostro” pose for a group portrait. (Alejandro Cegarra / For De Los)

A wreath with pink and light blue flowers rested in front of the memorial plaque accompanied by more cempasúchil and celosia flowers.

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“What we also do is make [society] really see that a trans woman is not what they think. We just want to live,” said Martínez. “We want to enjoy life and that they leave us alone.”

Chantal Flores is an independent journalist based in Monterrey, Mexico. She covers the issue of enforced disappearance in Latin America and the Balkans, as well as gender, violence and social justice.

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