Today, we pilgrimage to Cuautitlan to visit the Santuario El Cerrito, St. Juan Diego’s birthplace, and to the Church of the Fifth Apparition - Santa Maria Tulpetlac.
Although Santa Maria Tulpetlac is a very simple building, it is considered to be one of the holiest churches in Mexico City. The Church was constructed over the ruins of the home of Juan Bernardino, St. Juan Diego's uncle who was miraculously cured of an illness, and is commonly known as the Church of the Fifth Apparition. There is a plaque in the sacristy that states that Pope Pius XII granted a plenary indulgence to those who visit this church and who meet the normal requirements necessary for a plenary indulgence. Pilgrims can get some water from the well which is beneath the church’s altar and is believed to be the healing spring of Juan Diego. St. John Paul II designated this church as the World Center of Healing.
We continue on to Tlaltelolco, where Juan Diego was baptized and received his catechetical instructions. He was heading here on that momentous Saturday morning of December 9, 1531, when he would encounter Our Lady of Guadalupe for the first time.
Located at the ancient marketplace that fed Tenochtitlán, capital of the Aztecs, this site is home to the first school of higher learning built in the Americas. Initially the primary site of evangelization from 1526 (two years after the Franciscan friars arrived), the friars learned and practiced the local lingua franca, Nahuátl at this location. Over time, it developed into the primary educational site for the entire region. It is where St. Juan Diego was traveling to receive the Sacraments when he encountered Our Lady of Guadalupe and all the important Guadalupe documents were created at this location, as well as the Cantares Mexicanos – the collection of Nahuátl songs/poems recorded in the 16th century.
Breakfast and Dinner Included.