CORDOVA, New Mexico (AP) With congregations dwindling and villages emptying out, maintaining hundreds of historic adobe churches – made with mud and straw centuries ago – is a daunting challenge across rural New Mexico. Community leaders who are the churches’ caretakers in the absence of regular clergy are trying to save them because they represent a crucial center of faith, family and cultural traditions for their struggling hamlets. But as youth leave in droves, their ranks are thinning, putting a unique faith and social culture under threat.
Community leaders who are the churches’ caretakers are trying to save them because they represent a crucial center of faith, family and cultural traditions
Ever since missionaries started building churches out of mud 400 years ago in what was the isolated frontier of the Spanish empire, tiny mountain communities like Cordova relied on their own resources to keep the faith going.
Dust to dust? New Mexicans fight to save old adobe churches nwahomepage.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nwahomepage.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Today, threatened by depopulation, dwindling congregations and fading traditions, some of their descendants are fighting to save these historic adobe structures from literally crumbling back to the earth they were built with.