Colombia government to restore Garcia Marquez’s hometown

Aracataca church (Photo: Panoramico)

Colombia’s government will invest $1.3 million into restoring Aracataca, the small pueblo near Colombia’s northern Caribbean coast where Nobel prize winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez was born in 1927.

Aracataca is widely recognized as the inspiration for ‘Macondo’, the fictional town in ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’, Marquez’s most famous novel. The restoration project is part of the Colombian government’s initiative to revitalize places related to the life and work of Marquez.

MORE: Bogota honors Gabriel Garcia Marquez with statue

The project aims to promote literary tourism throughout Colombia. This initiative began in 2013 with a number of posters, TV adverts and YouTube videos titled “Colombia: Magical Realism.”

Aracataca and the surrounding region has more than 40 tourist attractions, from banana plantations to the infamous ice factory referenced in ‘One Hundred Years of Solitude’. In the pueblo itself, visitors can enter the house where Garcia grew up, see the church he was baptized in, and wander the streets he walked through as a child and teenager.

Many of the sites have fallen into disrepair, according to 

Marquez was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982, and traveled extensively around Colombia and the rest of the world while writing his most acclaimed novels. Now aged 87, he has spent the last 50 years living in Mexico City and often visits his home in Cartagena.

Sources

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