According
to the legend often told among those who visit her grave at
the massive cemetery, situated just blocks from the Plaza
of the Revolution, her husband, Eduardo Adot y Lopez, was
so grief-stricken that he would come and visit as many as
three times a day. He would leave flowers and knock against
the cement burial vault with one of the four brass rings attached
to the lid, as if to let her know he was there.
As
he left, he would always back away from her grave, so as to
gaze on it for as long as possible.
According
to the legend, Amelia was exhumed some years after her burial
and her body was discovered to be uncorrupted, a sign Roman
Catholics have traditionally interpreted as being evidence
of sanctity. Moreover, the baby that had been laid at her
feet was nestled in her arms.
Her
husband commissioned a marble statue of his beloved Amelia,
leaning against a cross and holding the infant that died with
her. Eventually, as her legend spread, the lone visitor to
Amelia's grave was joined by a steady stream of pilgrims who
saw her as someone who could intercede for them before a distant
and unapproachable God.