Graves in Mexico that are better than many houses (6 photos + 1 video)
There is something mysterious and enigmatic about cemeteries, you can wander in silence between the graves and think about the frailty of existence and the transience of life. But there are some cemeteries that really make you feel uneasy.
In Mexico, in the state of Sinaloa, there is a wonderful city of Culiacan. So, next to it there is an equally wonderful cemetery Jardines del Humaya. Those who come to its territory for the first time can really decide that this is an area of elite real estate.
And it's no surprise, the streets are not filled with mansions and villas, but with mausoleums on the graves of local gangsters from the Sinaloa drug cartel. Many of these structures cost millions of dollars, but the cartel spares no expense for its barons who died fighting the state or their competitors. You can get an idea of the size of their revenue and the turnover of drugs they sell from this cemetery.
You might think that this is pathetic pathos, but it's not. It turns out that everything is much more complicated.
"It's an expression of the power they once had and a manifestation of their desire for eternity, which is natural for any human being," says Juan Carlos Ayala, a professor of philosophy at the Autonomous University of Sinaloa who specializes in "narcoculture."

And what's most interesting is that many of the luxurious tombs don't have signatures, but what can you do, such humble people are buried there.

Only those close to them know whose mortal body is peacefully resting there.
Between the ethical mausoleums, you can occasionally find ordinary graves, which looks extremely strange.

At the same time, even after death, the mafia members are heavily guarded. Some tombs are equipped with surveillance cameras aimed at the entrance, as well as bulletproof glass.
