1. Why it's called a 'desert' — and why that word means something completely different here
The word desierto in the name has nothing to do with sand. In the Carmelite monastic tradition inherited from medieval Spanish theology, a 'desert' meant a remote, isolated place for spiritual retreat — somewhere a monk could withdraw from the world in the manner of the early Christian desert fathers who fled to the Egyptian and Syrian wilderness. When the Discalced Carmelites built their monastery here beginning in 1606, they named the retreat the Desierto de los Leones — the Desert of the Lions — almost certainly after Fray Pedro Leones, one of the friars involved in its founding. The name stuck through 400 years of abandonment, revival, and eventual designation as Mexico City's first national park in 1917 under President Venustiano Carranza. It's the reason first-time visitors arrive expecting dust and scrub and find themselves walking through a cathedral of pine trees instead.



