Ghostly Doll’s Island. So cute :)))))))))

Welcome to Doll's Island by © Juan C. Hamparzumian
Entrance to Doll's Island, Xochimilco, Mexico City. © Juan C.

The Island of the Dolls, "La Isla de la Munecas" in Mexico is a renowned tourist destination with thousands of mutilated ugly dolls hanging from every tree.

Don Julian Santana, renouncing the world and his family to inhabit this island, dedicated his life to create the island of the Dolls which is believed to please the spirit of his drowned little girl. He is thought to scare off inquisitive onlookers by scary dolls. He was discovered drowned in 2001. His death did not take his eerie disturbed vision away.

Tourists will be attracted by a ghostly sight of dead childish faces of dolls which always graze at them as if they had to be in charged of dolls' death.
Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Don Julian Santana, a hermit renounced the world to inhabit this island

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Strange world of mutilated dolls

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Thousands of mutilated ugly dolls hanging from every tree

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
A mutilated doll

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Lifeless dolls were mutilated and hung in the worst forms of human torture and punishment

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Old dolls were scavenged from the garbage dump or bought in exchange for Don Julian's homegrown fruits and vegetables

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Don Julian made the "La Isla de la Munecas" to please his drowned little girl's spirit.

Travel, Ghostly Doll,  island, Ghostly Doll’s Island
Eerie eyes of mutilated dolls haunt your every move


Source: ezine9.com


About this place:

Located in the heart of the Xochimico's canals, Doll's Island has a history totally unique. Sometime in the 1950’s Julián Santana Barrera begun collecting dolls found in the trash. He lived in this tiny island in Xochimilco and according to his family, these dolls kept the bad spirits away. The family also says that a young girl drowned at the island and he brought the dolls to keep her spirit happy. The island was for many years forgotten, but then in the 1990’s a program to clean up the canals gave again way for the Mexican style gondolas (trajineras) to pass by the island. Julian drowned at the island on April 17th, 2001. His family keeps the place by visitor’s donations; the place has no electricity, no running water or any other kind of utilities. Cellular phones do get a signal, as Xochimilco is inside the limits of Mexico City’s Federal District.
To get there, you take a “trajinera” from the Cuemanco Pier and ask to be taken there. It’s a 2 hour trip each way, and during the trip you can enjoy beautiful views of Xochimico’s scenery.
© Juan C. Hamparzumian 2008
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2 comments:

Juan C. H. said...
April 6, 2012 at 9:11 AM

Hello:
I would like to know why you use my pictures and do not give me credit for it? I visited the place and took the pictures myself. I posted the pictures, with my story, at the following address:

http://www.everywheremag.com/places/5452/26788

Please excuse your behavior and credit my pictures!

Juan C. Hamparzumian

I'm Me said...
April 6, 2012 at 11:19 PM

Dear Juan C. Hamparzumian,
I really apologize for this omission.
My post collected in Internet, they don't credit your picture. so I really don't know you took the pictures yourself.
i'M SORRY again.
I wish that we could be friends!

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