Mexico's president posted a photo on his social media accounts Saturday showing what he said appeared to be a mythological woodland spirit similar to an elf. President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador didn't seem to be joking when he posted the photo of an "aluxe," a mischievous woodland spirit in Mayan folklore. Lopez Obrador wrote the photo "was taken three days ago by an engineer, it appears to be an aluxe," adding "everything is mystical," per the AP.
The nighttime photo shows a tree with a branch forming what looks like a halo of hair, and what may be stars forming the figure’s eyes. Engineers and workers are in the Yucatan Peninsula, constructing a tourist train that's the president's pet project. Lopez Obrador has long expressed reverence for Indigenous cultures and beliefs. According to traditional Mayan belief, aluxes are small, mischievous creatures that inhabit forests and fields and are prone to playing tricks on people, like hiding things. Some people leave small offerings to appease them.
The ancient Mayan civilization reached its height from AD300 to AD900 on the Yucatan Peninsula and in adjacent parts of Central America, but the Mayas' descendants continue to live on the peninsula. Many continue speaking the Mayan language and wearing traditional clothing, while also conserving traditional foods, crops, religion, and medicinal practices, despite the conquest of the region by the Spanish between 1527 and 1546.
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