It is home to and named after the
Basilica of the National Shrine of Our Lady of Aparecida, the
patron saint of Brazil, declared so by
Pope Pius XI in 1929.
Pope Benedict XVI delivered a speech there in May, 2007. It now depends exclusively on tourism generated by the devotees surrounding the statue of the Virgin. Aparecida receives more than 7 million tourists a year making it the most popular religious pilgrimage site in Latin America. These pilgrims come to visit the Basilica containing the statue of Our Lady of Aparecida. This statue, thought to have been found in the Paraíba River in October 1717, is made of clay and measures 40 centimeters in height. The dark colour was produced by the years of exposure to candles and lamps around the altar. In 1978 it was attacked and reduced to hundreds of fragments which were meticulously put back together by specialists from the
São Paulo Museum of Art. Aparecida was the source of a proposal endorsed by
Pope Francis in 2020 to establish a collaborative ministry among the local churches of the various South American countries in the Amazon basin, with differentiated priorities. == Media ==