02018nas a2200229 4500000000100000000000100001000000100002008004100003653002400044653001600068653001200084653002600096653001900122100002700141700003000168245009400198856015400292300001200446490000700458520130300465022002001768 2015 d10aBinational heritage10aBorderlands10aBorders10aHeritage celebrations10aUrban heritage1 aTomas Cuevas Contreras1 aIsabel Zizaldra Hernandez00aA holiday celebration in a binational context: Easter experiences at the US-Mexico border uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84962718084&doi=10.1080%2f1743873X.2015.1013474&partnerID=40&md5=846c5fa428963a199c331bbf7c542187 a296-3010 v103 aAs part of a larger research project examining cross-border culture in a recreational and tourism context, this brief research note describes how intangible heritage melds into Easter celebrations and provides some preliminary findings of interviews with borderlanders and their experiences with Easter memories. The Paso del Norte region of the US–Mexico border is composed of the Ciudad Juárez (Mexico) and El Paso and Las Cruces (USA) conurbation. Mexican culture with strong roots at north of the border, while American culture heavily influences the cities south of the line. There are five international border ports of entry, which have facilitated the growth of crossborder tourism and the flow of culture and ideas on both sides of the boundary. In this setting, the commemoration of ‘Bunny Day’, or Easter, has become an important borderland cultural phenomenon celebrated on both sides of the border at Chamizal Park in Ciudad Juárez and Chamizal National Memorial in neighboring El Paso, and has become a mark of local borderlands culture. This is unique to the Paso del Norte borderland, which is home to a highly conservative, Catholic society. It is a manifestation of blended American and Mexican religious holiday traditions that represent the US–Mexico border community. a1743873X (ISSN)