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Elton John's Mexico concert angers Mayans
Saturday, April 3 2010

Even after the stage collapsed injuring three workers, indigenous Mayans complained on April 2, 2010 that Elton John's upcoming concert in the ruins of Chichen Itza was irreverent and out of place.

The concert amid the majestic pyramids in southern Mexico is going ahead on April 3, 2010 as planned, organizers said, despite the accident caused by a collapsing 80-meter (262-foot) metal tower which left one worker with serious leg injuries. The announcement rankled local Mayan leaders and officials, who pointed out that perhaps the accident was the work of "aluxes," the Mayan culture's equivalent of fairies, who were upset because their gods' permission for the concert was lacking.

"With each concert, in the early morning, a ritual is performed to ask for permission, and this time it was not done," Yucatan state public works secretary Francisco Torres told the Reforma daily. As with previous concerts by Spanish tenor Placido Domingo in 2008 and British soprano Sarah Brightman in 2009, Mayan leaders, archaeologists and some say even the local gods, resent the sacred ruins being used for profit-seeking entertainment.

Forty researchers from the National Institute of Anthropology and History, which takes cares of the Chichen Itza complex, recently published their complaints about the musical event in local media. Chichen Itza "is no scenery for an artist to show off, for the enjoyment of an elite or for the political and economic benefit of a small group of people, as well as powerful multinationals," wrote the scientists. The concert venue near Merida has a 6,000-seat capacity that is 90 percent booked, with ticket prices ranging from $80 to $800 – putting it clearly out of range of the local Maya population.

Valerio Canche, a Mayan priest who heads the "Mayao'b" religious group, told Agence France-Presse he regretted "the great discrimination the authorities are inflicting on our brothers of the Maya race." Meanwhile, local authorities earlier this week announced they had purchased the land on which the Chichen Itza ruins stand from private individuals for $17.6 million. And without missing a beat, they announced that former Beatle Paul McCartney was next in line to hold a concert at the Mayan ruins.

Related News

  • Elton's stage collapses in Mexico
    Friday, April 2 2010 at 21:03:33

  • Elton on collision course with Archaeology at Chichen Itza?
    Saturday, December 19 2009 at 13:03:48

  • Elton John and Paul McCartney will sing at Chichen Itza
    Tuesday, November 17 2009 at 18:14:29


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