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Don Pedro Jaramillo Shrine

 

Don Pedrito Jaramillo Historical Landmark

 

 


Don Pedro Jaramillo Shrine

Don Pedro Jaramillo, was a curandero, or faith healer from the Mexico-Texas region. He is known as "the healer of Los Olmos" and "el mero jefe" (English: the real chief) of the curanderos.

Origin

Jaramillo was born in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico to Tarascan Indian parents,[3] and died at an unknown age in Starr County, Texas in 1907. Jaramillo first came to notice when he arrived at the Los Olmos ranch near Falfurrias, Texas and he announced he was a curandero and began treating the Mexican families in the region. At the height of his career, families from as far away as New York would travel to seek help from Jaramillo.
 
 
 
Jaramillo's story as a curandero begins when he was suffering from a nose ailment and as a cure, daubed his nose with mud at the edge of a pool. Three days of this self-prescribed treatment cured the ailment, however it left Jaramillo with an identifying scar on his nose. On the third night of this treatment, Jaramillo believes he heard a voice telling him God had given him the power to heal. Testing such power, he prescribed a tepid bath to his master which healed his ailment.
 
The first accounts of his cures and powers were collected and printed in 1934 in Spanish, they were later in 1951 translated to English. There is a shrine in Falfurrias at his burial site.
 

 

Themes

In many of Jaramillo's treatments the number nine plays a prominent role, such as prescribing treatments often for nine consecutive night, or in quantities of nine. The tales of such treatments include stories of people who did not follow his instructions or changed his prescription and failed to recover, leaving only those who followed his treatments exactly as prescribed as achieving complete recovery. Jaramillo's cures were often miraculous in nature, even to the point of curing paralysis.
 
Water has also been identified as a central theme in Jaramillo's cures, often requiring the ailing person to drink water for a specified length of time, or bathing in water a certain number of days.
 

Other abilities

Some of the tales portray Pedro Jaramillo as clairvoyant. He would know inherently if someone was lying about an illness or ailment. In one story he knew of a conversation that took place without him present. In Mexican culture, Jaramillo is displayed prominently in adorning homes in the form of paintings and statues.
 

 
References
  • From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Dorson, Richard M. (August 1972). Buying the Wind: Regional Folklore in the United States. University of Chicago Press. pp. 418, 419. ISBN 0-226-15862-4.
  • West, John (May 2007). Mexican-American Folklore. August House. ISBN 0-87483-059-1.
  • Silverthorne, Elizabeth (1997). Women Pioneers in TX Medicine. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 0-89096-789-X.

 

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