The Callejón del Aguacate (Avocado Alley) in the Coyoacán borough of Mexico City has a dark reputation as a site of esoteric and occult rituals. The narrow alley, lined with old walls and overhanging trees, has been associated with witchcraft, Satanic ceremonies, and dark spiritual practices. Testimonies from local residents describe seeing hooded figures conducting rituals in the alley at night, hearing chanting in an unknown language, and encountering aggressive supernatural entities that seem to pursue people who witness the ceremonies. Some passersby have reported being suddenly overcome with terror and an inability to move while in the alley. The Callejón del Aguacate's reputation is embedded in the broader supernatural landscape of Coyoacán, one of Mexico City's oldest neighbourhoods and historically associated with the bohemian and the occult. Coyoacán was home to Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, and Leon Trotsky, and its cobblestoned streets and colonial plazas have attracted artists, intellectuals, and spiritual seekers for over a century. The alley's haunted reputation may be connected to genuine occult practices, or it may reflect the neighbourhood's appetite for the mysterious and transgressive.
