Zozobra To Meet Another Fiery End

Zozobra in 2011 before being set on fire.
Tobias Roybal
By Tracy Greer
September 05, 2013

Fall brings many traditions to New Mexico: the smell of roasting green chile, the sounds of high school football and the burning of Zozobra in Santa Fe. 

"Old Man Gloom," a 50-foot tall puppet effigy, will be torched Thursday as part of La Fiesta de Santa Fe celebrations. The Santa Fe New Mexican describes his purpose:

As he blazes up, Zozobra takes with him hundreds, even thousands of symbols of bad luck that Santa Feans have stuffed inside him — everything from paid-off mortgages and old wedding dresses to memos of office problems or poems recalling sorrows.

 The act of burning the puppet — which in previous years had been certified by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world's largest — represents a belief in catharsis through fire.

Old Man Gloom
Tobias Roybal
'Old Man Gloom' is no match for the flames, or the belief in catharsis through fire.