The Moorish conflict extended well beyond the town of Atocha. During dire points in their journey, travelers reported that a young boy, dressed as a pilgrim, would come to them bringing food and other necessities. The boy would often travel with them until they were out of danger and then guide them to the safest roads to reach their destination. Pious legends continued to be developed and the miraculous Child later became considered to be the
Child Jesus and was given the title the
Holy Child of Atocha.
North America There is a shrine run by the Poor Clares, dedicated to Niño de Atocha at
Plateros, near the city of
Fresnillo, in the state of
Zacatecas, Mexico. In 1554, the original Mexican Niño de Atocha was brought from Atocha to Zacatecas, and installed in the church of Saint Augustine not long after a silver strike in Plateros. In those years silver was discovered in Fresnillo and mines were being opened in the mountains near the settlement. Within a few weeks of the opening of the mine of Fresnillo, there was an explosion and many miners were trapped. The wives of the miners went to the church of St. Augustine to pray for their husbands and noticed that the child on the image of Our Lady of Atocha was missing. At the same time, it was said that a child came to the trapped miners, gave them water and showed them the way out of the mine. Whenever there was a problem at the mine the child helped the miners in need. Each time this happened, the image of the child on the Virgin's arms was found to be dirty and his clothes had little holes in them. After that, the Holy Child was taken off his mother's arms and put on a glass box for everyone to see. The Holy Child of Atocha has become a symbol of
Zacatecas and the protector of miners. Many make pilgrimages to Plateros at Christmas to bring toys to the Holy Child. A number of religious sites in New Mexico US are devoted to the Santo Niño. A shrine is located in and at
Chimayo, New Mexico, US. Founded in 1911, a small church called "Santo Niño del Antocha" is located at the foot of the
Sierra Blanca Mountain Range near the
Three Rivers Petroglyph Site with an outdoor trail for the
Stations of the Cross leading up to a cross on a nearby peak. In 1998, an outdoor shrine to
El Niño de Atocha was established at
La Iglesia de Nuestra Señora la Reina de los Ángeles in downtown Los Angeles, California.
The Philippines The Holy Infant of Atocha is also popular among the
Filipino Catholics. The local variant, simply known as
Santo Niño de Palaboy (Holy Child, the Wandering Beggar), is portrayed very similarly to the Spanish Atocha, except that it is always standing rather than sitting. He bears a staff with an attached bag or basket, which is usually filled with coins or candy, and he dons a pilgrim hat resembling the Atocha image. Similar to the devotion to the Holy Child of Atocha, the devotion to the Santo Niño de Palaboy is considered a folk devotion to the Baby Jesus that is also incorporated with the other more established devotions to the Christ Child in the Philippines, such as the devotions in
Cebú and
Tondo. Like in the case of the Atocha devotion, there is a folk belief that the Santo Niño wanders about the streets just like every other
Palaboy. The current
Santo Niño found in many Filipino homes is traditionally dressed in either green or red garments. In Filipino
folk Catholicism, red garments are suited for images enshrined at home, while green ones are for those enshrined in business establishments; a common offering to the latter is a bowl filled with coins and sweets. In addition, many Filipinos customarily dress the
Santo Niño in modern attire that reflects their professional roles, such as nurses, doctors, janitors, teachers, and policemen, as a means of asking for his patronage. These customs relating to dress are also applied to replicas of the Santo Niño de Cebu, brought by
Ferdinand Magellan to the islands in 1521, and the
Infant Jesus of Prague. In recent years, the
Catholic Church in the Philippines has suppressed the usage of green colored garments for images of the Santo Niño because doing so would imply that the Child Jesus is no longer viewed as God but rather as a "good luck charm" and is against the very identity of Jesus as revealed in the Scripture. Along with this move from the Church also came the discouragement of the usage and veneration of other controversial images of the Baby Jesus. The Palaboy depiction is also discouraged in some churches in the Philippines and there is currently an ongoing debate as to whether or not the depiction of Jesus as a "Palaboy" or Beggar is acceptable in the Catholic Church. ==Pop culture and other references==