
"Argentina's most venerated folk saint, where water bottles fill the desert and a mother's devotion outlasts death"
Difunta Correa shrine
Vallecito, San Juan, Argentina
In the desert east of San Juan, at a place called Vallecito, a shrine complex has grown from a single grave into a small city of offerings. Deolinda Correa died of thirst in the mid-nineteenth century while following her conscripted husband across the desert. Her baby was found alive at her breast. The folk devotion that grew from this story now draws over 200,000 pilgrims at peak seasons.
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Quick Facts
Location
Vallecito, San Juan, Argentina
Site Type
Coordinates
-31.7387, -67.9854
Last Updated
Mar 9, 2026
Learn More
A mid-nineteenth-century death in the desert became Argentina's most widespread folk devotion.
Origin Story
During the Argentine civil wars of the mid-nineteenth century, Deolinda Correa followed her forcibly conscripted husband across the San Juan desert, carrying their baby. She died of thirst. Muleteers found her body days later with the baby still alive at her breast. The story spread among gauchos and rural workers.
Spiritual Lineage
From gaucho oral tradition through roadside shrines to national folk devotion.
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