Tonantzin , la virgen de Guadalupe y la llorona 🤯

What if I told you that the wail of La Llorona and the altar of the Virgin of Guadalupe share the same origin? In this video, we piece together a historical puzzle that has been before us for centuries in the work of Fray Bernardino de Sahagún. We analyze the "Sixth Ominous Omen" from the General History of the Things of New Spain, where the goddess Cihuacóatl appears moaning and crying out for her children before the fall of Tenochtitlan. We discover how Sahagún identifies this entity as Tonantzin, the same deity whose temple stood on Tepeyac Hill, precisely where the Basilica of Guadalupe now stands. Discover how the figure of the protective mother was divided into three: religious devotion (Guadalupe), tragic myth (La Llorona), and ancestral roots (Tonantzin/Cihuacóatl). Prepare for a revelation that will change the way you see our deepest traditions.