I stayed in Mexico for a year between October
of 2007 and December 2008. And during
those times, I have visited a number of historical places that Mexico could
offer its visitors. But there is this one place in Mexico that I visited which I know
would mean a lot to Filipinos. The place
is called Barra de Navidad.
I never knew that this place called Barra de Navidad
existed. But when I visited Colima in
August of 2008, which is a city located 482 kilometres west of Mexico City, my newly found Mexican friends
told me that there is a place two hours away from Colima that Filipino tourists
visit a lot. And my Mexican friends were
so enthusiastic to accompany me there. I
did not know what I will be expecting to see there, therefore, excitement crept
in all over me. And two hours after our
road trip began from Colima, I finally saw what Barra de Navidad was all
about.
Barra de Navidad (Christmas Sandbar) is
a small coastline town in the state of Jalisco that is facing the Pacific Ocean. It
is located 587 kilometres northwest of Acapulco. And at the base of its jetty, I saw a
monument that commemorated Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and Andres de Urdaneta’s
voyage to Manila.
I felt I was standing on holy grounds as
it was the jump off place of the Spanish fleet responsible for colonizing the Philippines.
Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and Andres de Urdaneta started their expedition in
Barra de Navidad towards the Philippines
on 1564 November 21 – more than forty years after Magellan was killed in Cebú, and
eventually started the Spanish Colonial Era in the Philippines that lasted for more
than three centuries. And it was Andres de Urdaneta who discovered the route
back to Nueva España or México which would eventually begin the galleon trade.
I never knew that this was the place we
will be visiting that day. I was so
excited to tell my Mexican friends who Miguel Lopez de Legazpi was to the
Filipinos. I told them that Legazpi died
in Manila and
that his remains were buried in Intramuros. I took pictures of the place, and
had my Mexican friends take pictures of me with the monument.
And now that I am back home in the
Philippines, I felt like I travelled
with Legazpi to the Philippines, my home,
the place which he chose to stay for the rest of his life.