| |
Mayan Life
As you travel through the Mayan villages of the Yucatan and get
a glimpse into the yards of the families, you may wonder about the
lives of the inhabitants. Here is a some insight into what goes
on in the lives of the Mayan.
The homes you see are most likely one-room, oval-shaped, thatched-roof
abodes. Most likely the floor is dirt, or if the family is more
prosperous, the floor will be cement. Furnishings are mostly simple.
During the day, this room is a living area and at night, it is the
bedroom with hammocks that hang from the rafters. The entire family
sleeps in this room.
There is most likely an altar with an interesting combination of
Mayan and Roman Catholic imagery, including pictures or statues
of saints and the Virgin of Guadalupe, as well as candles and pictures
of loved ones. Once again, if the family is prosperous, there may
be a color TV that is almost an altar!

Above: Mayan women prepare a meal.
While there may be a TV, you won't find a refrigerator. The kitchen
is in a separate building just out the back door. This lean-to type
building is most likely made of black corrugated metal. There is
probably no stove as the lady of the house uses firewood to do her
daily cooking. In the backyard, you will find a well or pozo,
probably a pig or two, turkeys, chickens and a rooster, and orange,
lime and other fruit trees.
The house probably has no bathroom, so the furthest reaches of the
back yard is where the family goes to the bathroom.
|
Above: a typical thatched Mayan home, called a na, in the Yucatan
jungle.
Life in the village begins early. Mayans tend to get up early to
get a head start on the long day ahead and to beat the heat. Hammocks
are rolled up, the fire lit (this fire will burn all day long) and
a typical breakfast of coffee and crackers is prepared.
If things are economically good there might be tortillas with lard,
beans and if the chickens laid some, there will be eggs. If things
are not too good and there is no coffee, the woman in charge of
cooking burns tortillas and sets them in water to make a tea type
drink. To this she adds sugar. If there are no crackers, she might
fry tortillas.
While the man of the house is eating this breakfast, the lady prepares
the lunch that he will take to work in the fields, or milpas.
This is usually pozole or corn meal gruel. She takes the
corn kernels she boiled yesterday with lime powder and washes them
to get rid of the lime. She then grinds it into a dough that is
formed into a tennis ball sized ball and set aside. Water is put
into a container and this along with the cornball and a gourd is
put into a bag.
Lunchtime is about 10:00 AM. Remember, the Mayans start their day
early; breakfast is light and the work is hard. The man finds some
shade and pours water into the gourd bowl, breaks off a piece of
the corn dough and makes a thick gruel soup. To this he adds salt
and chili max, pronounced "mash."
For more information about the Mayans, visit the Maya
World Studies Center located in Merida.
|