Visiting a Cemetery on All Souls’ Day? Here Are Some Recommendations
‘Prayer for the faithful departed’ is what is most important, priest explains.

As part of commemorating the faithful departed on All Souls’ Day, Nov. 2 — traditionally known in countries like Mexico as the Day of the Dead — it’s common for people to go to cemeteries to spend time at the graves of their loved ones.
In Mexico, families typically visit the graves of their loved ones to clean them, light candles and bring food, drinks and objects that the deceased enjoyed in life. Many people also bring flowers and, in some cases, even hire musicians to pay tribute to their deceased.
Father Vicente Eliamar Vega Carrales, head of life ministry for the Diocese of Saltillo in the Mexican state of Coahuila, said in an interview with ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, that these days “prayer for the faithful departed” is what is most important.
Father Vega emphasized the value of visiting the final resting place of loved ones, since “it helps us meditate on our own death” and because “it can help us pray more intensely for the faithful departed.”
For All Souls’ Day, the priest especially recommended offering Masses, prayers, the Rosary, sacrifices, alms and good works on behalf of “the souls of our loved ones and all the souls in purgatory.”
This, he pointed out, “is what is authentically Christian and offers a true benefit to those who have died.”
The priest also noted that a plenary indulgence can be obtained for the soul of a loved one, family member or friend.
Laura Vanessa Villafán Velázquez, a consulting psychologist at the Listening Center located in the Plaza Mariana of the Guadalupe Basilica in Mexico City, shared in the weekly publication Desde la Fe (From the Viewpoint of Faith) of the Archdiocese of Mexico City that the tradition of visiting the graves of the deceased “allows us to make the pain of our loss more bearable and even able to adjust to it.”
She noted that this tradition offers “a time to connect with one’s spiritual life and with prayer.”
The psychologist assured that “it’s healthy to continue visiting our dead at their graves,” since this practice “allows us to understand death, our losses and gives a different meaning to our lives.”
Finally, Villafán pointed out that mourning is a process that varies with each loss and that relying on commemorations such as Nov. 2 “are actions that, as mourners, will help us to keep the memory of our dead forever and in a different way, without pain.”
“It is therefore a proper and holy disposition to pray for those who have died and may well be undergoing purification. Many of the saints speak of our prayers for the dead as being something they really need and can benefit from. Tradition says, though the dead in purgatory can pray for us, they cannot pray for themselves, and they very much need our prayers,” Register contributor Msgr. Charles Pope explained, adding: “Throughout this month of November, and throughout our lives, we owe the deceased our prayers and the wish for each of them: ‘that He who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion at the day of Christ Jesus’ (Philippians 1:4-6).”
This story was first published by ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner. It has been translated and adapted by CNA and added to by the Register.