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Mexicans turn to St. Charalambos for protection against COVID-19

Catholics in Comitán carried out a pilgrimage to ask the Greek saint to protect Mexico from coronavirus

Caralampio was a Greek priest who was executed for professing his religion in times of Emperor Severus - Photo: Fredy Martín Pérez/EL UNIVERSAL
05/04/2020 |08:33Fredy Martín Pérez / Corresponsal |
Fredy Martín Pérez
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In Chiapas , Mexico, people are turning to to prevent the spread of . People in Chiapas see St. Charalambos as the one who saved them from an epidemy in 1813.

In recent weeks, amid the COVID-19 pandemic , and despite physical distancing and the call to stay home, in Comitán carried out a pilgrimage to ask the Greek saint to protect Mexico from .

According to historians, Comitán was struck by smallpox in 1950. Years before, in 1813, there was a cholera that originated in China.

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In 1813, landowner Raymundo Solís prayed to St. Charalambos to protect the people of Comitán against the disease and when the miracle took place, the man donated a parcel of land where a church in honor of St. Charalambos was built.

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According to anthropologist Carlos Navarrete, in 1862, Governor Juan Climaco Corzo issued a decree to celebrate in the state of Chiapas .

According to sources, the image of St. Charalambo s was brought to Chiapas by a soldier.

Charalambos

was a Greek priest who was executed for professing his religion in times of Emperor Severus , who governed Ephesus , now Turkey, between 193 and 211.

Since the late 19th century, indigenous people from Comitán, La Trinitaria, Las Margaritas, La Independencia, and Altamirano carry out a pilgrimage to the temple of St. Charalambos to ask for health, rin, and good harvests.

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