Thursday, October 29, 2020

100 Turning Points in American History by Alan Axelrod

 


BOOK REVIEW - FIVE STARS

100 Turning Points in American History by Alan Axelrod

Fascinating, enlightening. and well-written. The fast moving book takes you across the wide spectrum of eventful happenings that brought the world to where it is.

I loved the engrossing presentation of facts which complemented historical pivotal points making this a pleasant and memorable reading experience.

EXCERPTS:

America had declared its independence, a turning point in the history of the world itself. Within it, however, was a turn not taken. For the “unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America” proclaimed those states, commitment to liberty and the inalienable human rights for everyone” with the exception of those they chose to enslave.

The electric light gave birth to a whole new utility, and Edison invented every part of the system. It transformed America, the world, and civilization itself. Thanks to Edison, the United States was at the core of this great transformation.

Crown’s acknowledgment of the full and absolute independence from the British Empire of its lower thirteen American colonies. On November 30, 1782, a provisional treaty was ready to be ratified by the belligerents, and, on September 3, 1783, the Treaty of Paris was concluded. The United States, bloodied, took its place among the world’s family of nations.

1914. Most historians of technology credit the Highland Park facility as the first fully developed moving line ever installed. The idea was to move the work-in-progress from one worker to another until it emerged as a complete assembled dramatically decreased costs of production brought the price of a Model T to within the range of the working class. In 1908, Ford had turned out 10,607 cars. In 1916, 730,041, priced at $360 each. By 1927, the last year the Model T was made, Ford had produced fifteen million of them. Mass assembly line production transformed America into a consumer society, but it profoundly altered the relation of labor and management by changing the very nature of industrial work.

To Shake the Sleeping Self by Jedidiah Jenkins, Book Review Five Stars

BOOK REVIEW - FIVE STARS

To Shake the Sleeping Self : A Journey from Oregon to Patagonia; and a Quest for a Life with No Regret by Jedidiah Jenkins

Much more than a bike ride or even an escape, this fast paced book reveals revaluations of human emotions interspersed with political, religious, and personal relationships. Wonderfully done and presented in a fascinating way that made it worthy of more than five stars.

Excerpts:

The pace of biking, even these few days in, was having the intended effect: time crawled. Days were eternal. When it would rain, it rained forever. When the sun came out, it would be hot forever. I was a kid again. It was incredible, too, to watch the land change in slow motion. Riding a bicycle gives the land a realistic scale. You notice every seam and crease. The distances between towns and farms and the height of hills, and the way a road will follow a river or instead cut straight over a hill you experience it all viscerally. You feel it all fitting together.

With the Internet connecting us all, the rest of the world feels closer, less alien. But I think that’s only true in our minds. The Internet does not bring Argentina one inch closer to me than before. That’s part of why I craved this trip. Knowledge alone is like an unearned memory, mostly forgotten. Just facts and two-dimensional images. I wanted to physically discover the world, the old-fashioned way. To cross over mountains to see what was on the other side. To hear languages I’d never heard. To take the photographs from National Geographic and put them out in the weather of human imagination.

You could say I was saved from misdirection by not being too handsome or too talented or too ambitious. 

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors: Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism


Recommended Reading

Notable five-star authors who visited Cozumel and the Peninsula of Yucatán

1842, explorer, author, and anthropologist John L. Stephens arrived in Cozumel on a small coastal sailing vessel from Yucatán shortly after Mexican independence and before the protracted Caste War. He became the first to chronicle Cozumel, Tulum, the Mayan temples, and wild jungle in the days of pirates in his 1843 two-volume publication Incidents of Travel in Yucatan. This excellent book is still in print and also available in the digital addition free from Gutenberg Press.

1947 Lilo Lenke, a German author arrived in Mérida, Yucatán and wrote a marvelously fascinating and factual book, Magic Yucatán, before the days of railroad or highways opened Yucatán to tourism and the outside world.

1958, Michel Peissel traveling by himself embarked on an adventuresome and audacious journey into uncharted wild and dangerous places on the recommendation of Germans he met near Mexico city. Each leg of his dauntless journey contained enough chancy astounding thrills to warrant a book by themselves. Crossing to Yucatán, getting through the uncharted jungle of Quintana Roo, surviving pirate attacks, living out of the jungle, discovering Mayan ruins, and trekking the Caribbean Sea coast relentlessly to Belize, formerly known as British Honduras, only to be jailed and extorted are a few of his exhilarating experiences.

Excepts for his book The Lost World of Quintana Roo:

“But the smuggling is now very much reduced, and as an islander told me sadly, "One hardly lives on smuggling today." Occasionally a few small boats dump whisky and perfumes from British Honduras on the islands. In the old days Isla Mujeres and Cozumel had been thriving pirate stations; here the buccaneers would wait in ambush as slowly the Spanish galleons, weighted down with Peruvian gold, would beat their way up along the coast and through the Yucatan Straits on their way to Cuba and Spain from Panama.”

Michel Peissel arriving at Cozumel on a 45 foot sailing schooner wrote:

“Judging from the rough weather that is characteristic of the straits between Cozumel and the coast, the dugout canoes of the Mayas must have been seaworthy craft and the oarsmen good sailors. From the summit of the waves I could catch a glimpse of the island which now appeared as a low gray streak on the horizon … At three o'clock we were up against the flat coastline of Cozumel and the small village of San Miguel came into sight. I was quite disappointed, for the village looked ugly, composed of an odd assortment of stone, cement, and wooden houses of various styles that were stretched along the waterfront.


Yucatán for Travelers, Side Trips from Valladolid and Tulum by John M. Grimsrud. A current look at the Caribbean Sea coast and the points of interest that tourists miss most. Narrated in philosophical short stories available in paper or digital editions.





Yucatán's Magic-Mérida Side Trips: Treasures of Mayab by John M. Grimsrud looks beyond the obvious tourist attractions to discover the unique Yucatán. 

The Caste War of Yucatan by Nelson Reed

Yucatan, A World Apart by Edward H. Mosley and Edward D. Terry

Time Among the Maya by Ronald Wright (Highly recommended

The Folk-Lore of Yucatan by Daniel G. Brinton

The Mayan Elites of the Nineteenth-Century Yucatan by Charlotte Zimmerman

The Cult of the Holy Cross by Charlotte Zimmerman

Yucatan’s Maya Peasantry and the Origins of the Caste War by Terry Rugeley

Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.




Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Lázaro Cárdenas Years, Chapter 6, Yucatán, the Maya, and Mexico and Spanish Colonialism

 

Lázaro Cárdenas Years, Chapter 6


Gift shop souvenir of El Pensamiento. 
Protracted political upheaval and instability made for a socialist turn by 1934 when México elected the social minded Lázaro Cárdenas president. He took immediate steps beginning with the establishment of the Territory of Quintana Roo and social oriented reforms including the nationalization of Mexico’s petroleum industry that became known as Pemex. Unfortunately the oil money that could have had a huge beneficial impact for the citizens such as Norway’s state-owned petroleum company, didn’t happen. Mexico’s unchecked corruption channeled the money to a select few and has kept Mexico a third world country burdened by poverty and inequality.



Under Mexico’s President Lázaro Cárdenas isolated Chetumal in the extreme southern end of the Territory of Quintana Roo became the capital of the Territory and received its first modern infrastructure. The population of Chetumal was then 2,790, and the only way to get there was by open boat south down the Caribbean coast from Cozumel Island or on horseback through the dense jungle which took five days from the end of the Mérida railroad line at Peto in the State of Yucatán. A paved road into Chetumal would not materialize for nearly forty years.

Big things began to happen in little Chetumal in 1937 when newly elected Méxican President Lázaro Cárdenas together with the socialist governor of Quintana Roo, Rafael E. Melgar, consummated public works projects.. Schools, a hospital, and a capitol building materialized with more on the way.

The elegantly ornamented and sculpted constructions stand to this day as a testimonial to successful social reform. The world famous artist and sculptor Rómulo Rozo made it a sensation.*

The Territory of Quintana Roo predominantly consisted of native Mayan who possessed and practiced as a collective community policing themselves from within where none ever went hungry unless all were hungry. With this political system they lived in peace and harmony with nature while maintaining their territory ecologically pristine.

In all of the Americas Quintana Roo was the last hold out against the intrusion of Spanish colonialism.

*Note; a truncated story about creative Rómulo Rozo in Mexico’s years of reform:

Born and raised in Columbia, South America, Rómulo Rozo took to art at an early age and went on to become an internationally acclaimed sculptor. At Seville, Spain, attending an art exhibition Rómulo met Manuel Amábilis Domínguez an iconic Yucatecan character of neo-Mayan architecture who lured Rómulo Rozo to Mexico to participate in the new socialist movement spearheaded by President Lázaro Cárdenas. This lasting friendship next lured Rómulo Rozo to Chetumal, Quintana Roo territory where he has become memorialized by his sensational artistic works of stone sculpture.

After completion of his work in Chetumal he was again lured onward by his friend Manuel Amábilis. Next it would be to the State of Yucatán at Mérida in the 1940s to work his sculpture art in the Park of The Americas that covered two square blocks near the city center designed by Manuel Amábilis.

In Mérida Rómulo took up the Yucatecan attire of a sombrero, white Guayabera shirt, long white trousers, sandals with Mayan style x-canche hule sandals that had thick heavy stacked leather soles that made a distinctive che-che-che sound and are still worn by the dancers of the Mérida Mayan folkloric ballet to this day. His greatest claim to fame in Mérida, the Monumento de la Patria on Paseo de Montejo is the centerpiece of a traffic circle on the avenue.

It took eleven years to complete this intricately detailed memorial depicting Mexican history, and the last two years Rómulo Rozo received no governmental financial support completing the Monumento de la Patria work by financing it out of his own pocket...a thankless endeavor.

Rómulo Rozo also left a lasting impression of Mexico with his sculpture El Pensamiento (the thinker). 

Photo from Wikipedia
Sculpture by Rómulo Rozo originally displayed in the Museum of Art in La Paz, Bolivia.

This is the image that was plagiarized after it was shown in an exhibition in the National Library in Mexico City in 1932. When it was on exhibition, somebody placed a bottle of tequila in front of it, took a photo, and it was widely circulated in newspapers around the world as the drunken or sleeping Mexican…an image still thought of today.

It is hard to find a Mexican gift shop that does not have a knockoff for sale. Few ever get to know the real story behind this eye-catching Mexican icon.

Monuments carved in stone leave a lasting memory and are difficult to eradicate.

Back to the story of Chetumal and what happened to social reform:

Here is what happened next after Juan Batista Vega paved the way to open up the territory of Quintana Roo to the non-Mayan. The spark of expansionism was ignited with Cancun as rich Spanish developers rushed in to build mega resorts. Construction cranes littered the landscape and it looked like the sky was the limit as resorts marched their way south along the beautiful Caribbean coast.

A surprise came in 1985 when a flood of refugees resulting from a catastrophic earthquake in Mexico City sent nearly 50,000 displaced persons into Yucatán. All needed housing and employment.

Three years later in 1988 a category five hurricane named Gilberto came ashore at Cancan driving ocean-going freighters into the downtown, flattening all the tall construction cranes like an angry giant whipping them frantically to the earth and completely removing windows, doors and furnishings including inlaid carpet from the already finished resorts up to the third floor. The storm didn’t quit here and flattened every electrical pole, tower, and wire from Cancun to Mérida. The hurricane also eroded the Gulf of Mexico beach front inland for two or three hundred meters, washed out the coastal road in thirteen places and wiped out all the coconut palm plantations along the Coconut Coast from Dzlam de Bravo to Sisal. Some coastal places along this north coast of the Yucatán peninsula would be without electric service for six months.

The devastation appeared at first glance like a golden opportunity for construction workers. Anyone wanting work got it. After six weeks with no pay the disgruntled workers became aware of the word shyster. We did have, however, one acquaintance that made millions on the disaster. The supplier of plate glass and mirrors from Mérida.

Now with the collapse of the tourist industry due to the Covid 19 virus we see that these resort owners to this day are also shysters of the very worst kind. Absolutely no social benefits are available to displaced workers. Rich resort developers have found that it is much cheaper to buy politicians than to pay employees.

My wife Jane and I have two Mexican children, Grisel,  36, and Guero, 45, both were working in the tourist related economy. Now they are desperately struggling to survive with no workers compensation or commodity assistance. Grisel had nine years employment with an all inclusive mega resort and they paid no unemployment or medical benefits after layoff. She has painfully became aware of the shyster. Guero on the other hand was a tourist guide and holds certification as a scuba diver. He lost two restaurants and a small hostel hotel due to Covid 19. He now ekes out a meager amount fishing off of the Caribbean beach where he had a jungle fishing camp.

Mexico has the very best politicians that money can buy.

Social justice and governmental integrity mix like oil and water.

There you have a brief overview of where colonialism has taken Mexico and the Maya from the Inquisition to capitalistic takeover. The last hold out, the Maya. are mostly overwhelmed.

Next read Notable visitors to Cozumel, and my recommended reading list.   Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.

Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5, Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism

 

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5

 Monument to Juan Bautista Vega, Av. Benito Juarez and Calle 120.
 A subdivision in Cozumel bears his name.
Juan Bautista Vega became a crucial link in the ultimate opening of Quintana Roo allowing non-Mayan to enter.

The protracted Caste War would still continue to smolder on but this would open up one of the most scandalized land grabs since the arrival of the Conquistadors nearly four centuries earlier.

The opening soon brought about paved roads, land developers, mega resorts, and a crescendo of eager capitalistic investment in numerous money making enterprises.

The Mayan Talking Cross, a relic of the Caste War era, was a Mayan attempt to keep their brand of spirituality alive and is still continuously active occupied with manned temples and festive ceremonies at Tulum, Felipe Carrillo Puerto, and Xocèn, home of the church La Iglesia Santa Cruz Tún of the Holy Cross Tún. Read more of this fascinating story in the book Yucatán for Travelers by John M. Grimsrud.

Juan Bautista Vega was born on Cozumel island off the Caribbean coast of the Yucatán Peninsula in 1884.

In 1896 Dr. Fábregas an adventurer and treasure hunter arrived in Cozumel with the intention of crossing to Tulum on Yucatán's mainland of Quintana Roo.

The Chan Santa Cruz Mayas controlled the region of Tulum and the entire Caribbean Sea coast. They had been in a bloody conflict with the Yucatecan Mexicans even before the Caste War in 1847. That war would continually smoldering on.

The Mayan “talking cross” had dictated that no whites should be allowed to enter their sphere of dominance. This edict was rigorously enforced.

In 1896, with money as the lure, Dr. Fábregas succeeded in finding a boat and crew to make the crossing to the Tulum shore from Cozumel Island. The then twelve year old Juan Bautista Vega was one of the crew along with his stepfather and one other “white” from Cozumel.

The Chan Santa Cruz Maya, known as the Cruzoob, were on hand to welcome the visitors. Upon disembarking on the beach at Tulum all were killed by the Cruzoob Mayan except twelve year old Juan who was taken prisoner. When the Maya discovered that Juan could read and write Spanish, they decided he would be useful to them in negotiations with the Mexican government.

Juan was taught Maya and endeared himself to his Mayan captors. He lived among the Cruzoob, became a general in their militia learning the war tactics handed down for three and a half centuries by the father of the first Mestizo, Gonzalo Guerrero who had married a Mayan woman, and became a tribal chief.

The mainland of Quintana Roo had remained an isolated and unexplored land because of the presence of the Cruzoob Maya. For over four hundred years the Mayas of Quintana Roo successfully repelled the Spanish and Mexican conquistadors until the last shots of the Caste War of 1847 rang out at Dzula, territory of Quintana Roo in 1935.

This became the longest lasting insurrection in the history of the Americas because of two unique and important people, Gonzalo Guerrero father of the first Mestizo and Juan Bautista Vega, both of Spanish descent, whose stories coincidentally coincide.

The Juan Bautista Vega story continues when as an old man he encounters a very rich and politically well-connected auto dealer from Mexico City who was always looking for more opportunities to expand his financial empire and was not adverse to land grabs. Befriending Juan Bautista Vega, he sent him off to a Mexican military hospital to give him medical rehabilitation from dental, eye, parasite eradication, and everything else that could put the old man back into the very best of health. A fattened, indebted, and healthy Juan Bautista Vega was sent back to his jungle home three months later.

The rich opportunist businessman went one step further and gave as a gift a paved road onto Juan Bautista Vega’s remote jungle village home. This gracious gift would turn out to be a can of worms for the Mayan people who had been living in peace and harmony with nature in their jungle home for a centuries.

Thus began the opening up of the Quintana Roo jungle with roads and settlements that came with intensity in the 1970s when the sleepy little fishing village of Cancún opened as a resort mecca would soon became the worlds number one tourist destination. The name Cancún in the Mayan language ironically means, rattle snake nest.

Juan Bautista Vega had been instrumental in brokering a lasting peace between the Mexican government and the Cruzoob Maya with coercive prodding by the rich enterprising entrepreneurial businessman.

Back in 1926 Juan visited his “white” family in Cozumel, but then returned to his Mayan home on the mainland and lived the rest of his life among the Maya. Gen. Juan Bautista Vega died in 1969 not living long enough to witness the explosive growth that tourism brought to the Costa Maya beginning with Cancún fueled by international corporate conglomerates who like the conquistadors of old were not looking for employment but only plunder to extrapolate. Money was their god and motivator.

The environment would be indiscriminately exterminated. The world’s second longest corral reef was just one of many natural resources to fall victim. Water, air, and soil contamination made this paradise into an unhealthy place to live. It was said about Mexico the correct phonetic pronunciation should be; “make-sick-oo!”

Next we look back at social reform era beginning in the 1930s. Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6

Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.

Sunday, October 25, 2020

While the Caste War Still Smoldered the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4, Yucatán, the Maya,

 

While the Caste War Still Smoldered the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4


Photo: Mérida, Yucatán, Cemetery. Governor Felipe Carrillo Puerto was shot, along with his brothers, by firing squad at this site, Janurary 1924.

It took an invasion of Mexican federal troops to cool the Caste War, and then the capital city of Chetumal was created at the extreme south of the territory adjacent to British Honduras, known now as Belize with an undefined border. The population of isolated Chetumal in 1910 was 1,112.

After México’s nearly three hundred years of slavery, the Mexican-American War, the Yucatán fight for sovereignty, the protracted Caste War that begun in 1847, and simultaneously the turbulent revolutionary war that began in 1910 and went on nearly ten years, social reform began.

A synopsis of the Mexican Revolutionary War:
Not until Porfirio Dias brought stability to Mexico, beginning in 1876 that lasting until 1910, did the Mexican economy prosper. President Porfirio Dias however had a conspiratorial capitalist game plan for Mexico that ruthlessly exploited the Ingenious while enriching the richest using an iron fist plan of attack.

When the Mexican revolutionary war broke out in 1910 Americans owned more of Mexico than the Mexicans did. If that is not imperialistic it would be interesting to hear what they called their land grab shell game.

The Mexican Revolution, which began in 1910, ended the authoritarianism of Porfirio Diaz in Mexico and establishing a flimsy and fragile constitutional republic.

A word about José de la Cruz Porfirio Dias: He was born September 15, 1830, and died in exile July 2, 1915. He was a Mexican general and despotic politician serving seven consecutive terms as President, 1877-1910.

Dias’s military/political carrier included War of the Reform 1858–60, French intervention in Mexico 1862–67, where he became General of his republican troops against the puppet government of French backed Emperor Maximilian. He subsequently revolted against presidents Benito Juárez and Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada, on the principle of no re-election to the presidency. Dias succeeded in seizing power, ousting Lerdo in a coup in 1876 with the help of his political supporters. Dias was elected in 1877. Dias then abandoned the idea of no re-election and held office continuously until 1911.

Dias has been a controversial figure in Mexican history. His regime brought "order and progress," ending political turmoil and promoting economic development. Dias and his allies comprised a group of technocrats known as Los Científicos, "the scientists." His policies benefited his cronies and foreign corporations. Bankrolling wealthy hacienda owners to acquire more and more land at giveaway prices, leaving small family farmers destitute. Shortly these augmentations became very unpopular causing conflicts. The peasantry were not going to share in any prosperity.

Dias ran for election in 1910, he was by then 80 years old. His failure caused a political crisis.

Dias declared himself the winner of an eighth term in office in 1910, his electoral opponent Francisco I. Madero called for armed rebellion against Dias and thus initiating the Mexican Revolution. Dias resigned by 1911 and went into exile in Paris, where he died four years later.

Back to the Mexican Revolutionary War story:

Revolutionaries jumped into the bloody battle with guns blazing and Francisco Madero, Pascual Orozco, Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata all stepped up to the plate exterminating their land grabbing Mexican countrymen in this anxiety enhanced prolonged and deadly conflict. The life expectancy of presidents was abbreviated.

This turned out to be a very unhealthy period in Mexican history when assassinations were carried out indiscriminately. The infamous revolutionary general Poncho Villa had ninety women in his traveling entourage semiyearly shot to death because one of them didn’t show due respect to one of his officers.

A constitution was drafted in 1917 initiating reforms but violence continued into the 1930s.
Isolated Yucatán avoided much of the conflict of the revolutionary war.

Felipe Carrillo Puerto became governor of Yucatán backed by Salvador Alvarado. The social minded platform of workers rights, land reform and equality for the indigenous Mayan people gave the hopeful impression of equitable social justice.

Democratically elected in 1922 Felipe’s governorship was short lived, and he was assassinated by hard line corporate capitalists at the Mérida cemetery before a firing squad in January 1924. Murdered by capitalism.

Undercurrents of political upheaval smoldered into the 1930s.

Caste War hard liners were not ready to capitulate and surrender their ancestral homeland. In 1935, in a small village in Quintana Roo named Dzula, the last all out shooting battle of Caste War’s protracted conflict took place.

Dzula today.  


The precise end or the Mexican Revolutionary War became hard to distinguish with all of Mexico’s war ravaged turmoil.

Next we look at Juan Bautista Vega and his part in the opening up Quintana Roo. Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.



Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.


A Brief History of the Caste War in Yucatán, Chapter 3, Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism

 

A Brief History of the Caste War in Yucatán, Chapter 3

Mayan Leader Jacinto Pat.
The Spanish Conquistadors took 19 years to get a foothold in Yucatán and did not totally subdue the Maya.  

By 1535 the Maya had driven every last Conquistador out of the Yucatán Peninsula. The Conquistadors regrouped, enacted the clever game plan that Hernán Cortés successfully used against the Aztec. And they established the city of Mérida by 1542.

The Christian Conquistadors could not or would not conquer the eastern Yucatán Peninsula.

A word about the free Mayan people of the eastern Caribbean side of the Yucatán Peninsula: They are community-minded with a social conscience for one and all with the philosophy that those who worked the land owned the land. They were not united as a nation with the other Mayan groups and often engaged in feuds that made divide and conquer possible.

Spiritually the Mayan people established their civilization and worshiped the same gods several thousand years before the notion of Christianity was conceptualized.

The town of Felipe Carrillo Puerto has a long and tortured historical past but little remains today to tell the agonized story that I will summarize in this presentation from a Mayan point of view. Remember; peaceful places have no history.

The capitulated Indigenous Mayan of western Yucatán under the Spanish Conquistadors were beaten, tortured, degraded, brutally enslaved. and starved nutritionally and spiritually while they attempted to protect their families, homeland, and way of life.

What would it take to push these long suffering people to say; “enough is enough?”
The opportunist Yucatecan Spanish conquerors had no problem putting a gun in the hand of the Mayan people when they had a political ax to grind with the Mexicans, but could instantaneously change tactics when these cannon fodder services were no longer needed.

The eastern Yucatán Peninsula would remain in Mayan hands for more than four hundred years due to men such as Gonzalo Guerrero and Juan Bautista Vega.

Of great importance to the Maya independence was the assistance that came from their southern neighbor, British Honduras, now known as Belize. The British had been at war with the Spanish and took every opportunity to exasperate them. Thus by being a supplier of arms and ammunition to the independent Maya of eastern Yucatán a lucrative trade was developed. The Maya could supply natural rubber harvested from their jungle forests. Sapote trees were in abundance and the sap from these trees was a key ingredient in chewing gum and rubber products which they bartered with the British for guns and ammunition. Their virgin jungle forests also provided exotic lumber that the British made into a profitable enterprise.

THE CASTE WAR

The so-called “Caste War” in Yucatán cost 300,000 lives; it ended up reduced to historical ill-feelings, with no political peace, and no armistice. It is, of course, one of the bloodiest episodes in the history of the peninsula. There are many theories regarding the motives that caused the war to start, one of which is that the outbreak was due to the build up of hatred and bitterness among the Mayan faced with tyranny from whites who exploited and abused them for centuries.

The following are excerpts from Nelson Reed’s book The Caste War of Yucatán.

Yucatán’s only natural resource had been the land and the people to work it. Now the land was recovered, but not the people, and there wasn’t enough food for those that survived. Taking their chances with snipers and the machete as they harvested rebel Mayan fields, the soldiers weren’t happy to see that same corn wasted on captive savages. They didn’t take prisoners except under direct command, or occasionally for a five-peso reward.

With these facts in mind, Yucatán Governor Barbachano took a step for which his name is still bitterly remembered in Mexico. He begin selling the Maya to Cuba. There were many apparent justifications: Barbachano claimed it was to save their lives; they were rebels and thus liable to the most severe punishment (execution, or as was decreed by Congress, ten years’ banishment); they were sold on a ten year work contract; and finally the state needed money. But still, it was nonetheless slavery.
The Maya held out though the war officially ended in 1855 after 247,000 were killed. End of excerpts.

The Maya were not capitulating, they were fighting for their homeland, their freedom and their families. At their capital of Chan Santa Cruz, today known as Felipe Carrillo Puerto, Quintana Roo, a religious cult sprang to life and was organized by Venancio Puc and called The Talking Cross. Puc was judge and jury, priest, general, and absolute commander of his new religious sect, interviewing all visitors, appointing all chiefs, and ordering assassinations. Puc made it perfectly clear that there could be no treaty or compromise with the whites and ordered all prisoners brought to Chan Santa Cruz for execution.

Ultimately Puc was killed and his Talking Cross fell silent. Puc’s loyal military followers discovered the deceit of the Talking Cross and attempted to expunge the fraud of the Cross that only spoke for thirteen years and died with Puc
I don’t want to kill the intrigue of this extraordinary story by telling you all. I do however encourage you to read this history and discover a true narrative stranger than a fairy tale.

Quintana Roo territory did not become a Mexican state until 1974 and until recently was a duty free territory rift with smugglers and contraband goods.

During the years of the Caste War Mexico was a political mess of changing governments. In the 1860s and 1870s Presidents Santa Anna and Benito Juarez were in and out of office interspersed by Emperor Maximilian of the Hapsburg's. Not until Mexican President Porfirio Dias brought stability beginning in 1876 that lasted until 1910 did Mexico prosper. Porfirio Dias had a capitalist game plan for Mexico that was to ruthlessly exploit the Ingenious and enrich the richest.

The Maya continued to resist. In 1899 Mexican General Ignacio Bravo came to Yucatán to crush all of the Maya with British complicity. The British had been supplying guns and ammunition to the Maya but had a change of heart and cut off their cooperation, thus leaving the Maya nearly defenseless.
In 1901 Mexican federal troops conquered the Mayan capital city of Chan Santa Cruz, and the government established Quintana Roo as a federal territory.

During the course of the war the Maya that could be rounded up were sold off to Cuba as slaves and the city of Tihosuco was totally abandoned for the next 80 years. Read more the Caste War here: Yucatan for Travelers by John M. Grimsrud
 

In 1915 Mexican revolutionary General Salvador Alvarado was sent into the Yucatán to restore order. This was five years after Porfirio Dias fled Mexico during the bloody revolution or civil war. The war murdered thousands and dragged on for over ten years.

Yucatán had become Mexico’s most prosperous state due to the booming henequen and sugar industries.

Governor Alvarado canceled all ‘debt labor’ and freed 60,000 Mayan and their families following 350 plus years of slavery. The Caste War did not end here.

Cult of the Talking Cross

The story of the Cult of the Talking Cross (La Cruz Parlante) and the start of our journey along the route of Caste War sites begins in the seldom visited Mexican town of Felipe Carrillo Puerto, the former Chan Santa Cruz, Quintana Roo. This is where the Talking Cross prophesied victory to the Maya and told them they were the chosen race, the true Christians and the children of God. Although final victory never came, the Cross helped the Maya resist the Mexicans for fifty more years. Chan Santa Cruz was the capital of the Mayan territory during the Caste War that began in 1847. No Caucasians were safe here during the time of the conflict.

Chan Santa Cruz was invaded and overrun by Mexican federal troops in 1901, and the Chan Santa Cruz Maya retreated to the jungle to fight a guerrilla war that caused the federal troops to capitulate by 1915. The Maya only returned to their old city of Chan Santa Cruz to fill wells poisoned by federal troops and tear up the railway tracks connecting to the Caribbean Sea. The Chan Santa Cruz Maya then lived in relative peace and harmony with nature in their jungle territory.

In 1936 some of the Mayan communities signed treaties with the Mexican government. At that time, the capital of the territory of Quintana Roo was relocated by Mexican President Cardenas to its present location of Chetumal.

Today the city of Felipe Carrillo Puerto is almost too peaceful and quiet. It remains the home of one faction of the Cult of the Talking Cross, a relic of the Caste War and of the Mayan attempt to keep their brand of spirituality alive.

The Mayan church of Balam Nah where the religion of the Talking Cross was practiced was constructed during the Caste War. It is now open for business as a Catholic church.

Ironically, the large church in Chan Santa Cruz was built by slave labor. It was appropriately put up by captured Creoles (Mexicans of Spanish descent) under the Mayan whip during the Caste War. It has the distinction of being the last Mayan temple ever built. The indigenous Maya had been enslaved from the mid-1500’s under the Inquisition crazed Spanish. They had been forced to tear down their sacred temples and erect countless cathedrals and convents for the Spanish for more than three hundred oppressive years.

The Caste War had been a long time in coming and the Cult of the Talking Cross was a direct result of the Mayan attempt to regain their old religion. The Mexican government recognized the Cult of the Talking Cross as a legitimate religion in 2002. Before that time the priests of the Cult were considered by Mexican civil law and the Roman Catholic Church as practicing witchcraft. The former democratically elected governor of Yucatán, Felipe Carrillo Puerto, a Mexican of Spanish heritage, dedicated his life to rectifying many of the wrongs done to the Maya.

When the right-wing conservatives snatched power in Yucatán, the then governor Felipe Carrillo Puerto and his brothers were marched out to the Mérida cemetery and executed by firing squad as they stood before their graves. That was 1924. With the popular governor dead, the Mayan hope for social justice died, but the Caste War continued to smolder among the Maya.

Tihosuco

When author Ronald Wright arrived at the Mayan controlled church in Quintana Roo territory at Tihosuco, the priest was chasing a large pig out of the vestry. He was a Spaniard from Barcelona. “The people here are better than in Spain,” he said. “When Mayas get drunk they speak to God, when Spaniards drink, they deny him.” Ronald Wright, Time Among the Maya, 1989.

The Tihosuco church is a bizarre relic of the Spanish Conquistadors. It collapsed in 1841 and was rebuilt, and then it was partially demolished by the Maya of Chan Santa Cruz in the Caste War. After that Spanish controlled Tihosuco was abandoned for 80 years. To this day, the church remains in a state of frightful time-warp with its aged battle scars.

Looking out from the altar to the rear of this one-of-a-kind church, you are confronted by a shocking revelation. This otherwise complete structure has an entire wall missing, and it has been gone since the 1850s. If symbolic implications are intended, then this edifice conveys an almighty message.

At the time Ronald Wright visited Tihosuco, the church and the statue of Jacinto Pat were the only two points of interest, but recently the Mayan Caste War museum has opened. We were told by friends not to miss it. We were in luck in that Carlos Chan Espinosa, the administrator, was there. Carlos is the man who makes this place work. He also aids the local community by bringing such valued services as food and lodging to visitors. Area homes are opened to travelers so that they can sample the home life of the region. This was positively splendid, and Carlos located a place for us after we had bicycled in on our Caste War fact finding rote. The Mayan Caste War museum is on a side street across from the town plaza.

The Tihosuco museum has an extensive presentation on the Caste War and also a Mayan herb garden complete with many medicinal plants. Ongoing seminars and lectures plus numerous interactive community events keep the museum a vital part of the public community information exchange.

Jacinto Pat, a Mayan leader of prominence and large hacienda owner, was one of the driving forces that inspired the Mayan people to fight in what is known as the Caste War for their homeland, independence, and liberty. Jacinto Pat is perpetually remembered with a commemorative statue in the main plaza of Tihosuco.

At nearby Tepich, the town has one claim to fame, and that is their home town hero, Cecilio Chi who rallied his fellow Mayans in May of 1847 to rise up against the oppressive Mexican land owners in order to gain their freedom from subjugation.

Adjacent to the church is a forlorn graveyard where the town hero, Cecilio Chi, was buried in 1848.

The Caste War now had its first true martyr, and the long suffering Mayan people would pick up Spanish war tactics that Gonzalo Guerrero had passed on to them nearly three hundred years earlier. Enough was finally enough and this would spark the longest lasting Indigenous uprising in the history of the Americas.

At nearby Valladolid the Spanish residents forbid any Mayan people to enter the city and this is where Cecilio Chi was tortured and hanged.

The inscription on his statue reads: “Glory to Cecilio Chi, Liberator of the Mayan nation and immortal symbol of justice and liberty.” This monument is in Tepich’s small park adjoining the main highway.

Abutting the church is a forlorn graveyard where the town hero, Cecilio Chi, was buried in 1848.

The mainland of Quintana Roo had remained an isolated and unexplored land because of the presence of the Cruzoob Maya. For over four hundred years the Mayas of Quintana Roo successfully repelled the Spanish and Mexican conquistadors until the last shots of the Caste War of 1847 rang out at Dzula, territory of Quintana Roo in 1935. This became the longest lasting insurrection in the history of the Americas.

The Mexican Revolutionary War story continues this ongoing narrative. While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2, Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism

Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism 

Prelude to the Caste War,  Chapter 2

Caste War Museum, Tihosuco
By 1700 the population of the isolated Yucatán Peninsula was reduced to 150,000 due to disease, displacement, and starvation. By 1845 the Yucatán population had rebounded and risen to 580,000 including the Spanish minority.

When Mexico became independent from Spain in 1821 and Yucatán a former Spanish territory joined the Mexican Union, the following history began.

The cultivation of the henequen era in Yucatán, beginning in 1833, changed the economy politically and even climatically.

Henequen is a natural plant fiber grown in Yucatán and is used in the production of sisal rope. It was in huge demand during the two world wars making several multimillionaires among Mérida's wealthy class known as the “casta divina.”

Profitable sugarcane, prohibited under Spanish rule, was also introduced to the peninsula.

Rum produced from sugar cane known as caña became very popular and had tax free status in Yucatán which continues to this day.
These two products were extremely labor intensive so naturally the white Spanish land owners kept the Maya in an oppressed state of servitude indefinitely. Serfdom, and slavery was perpetuated.

In the book Incidents of Travel in Yucatán by John L. Stephens, Stephens in 1840 relates a remark made to him by one of the hacienda owners from Yucatán; “I am so lucky to be here and not in Cuba or Louisiana where they have to buy their slaves”.

In 1839 a native of neighboring Campeche state, political activist, Miguel Barbachano moved to Mérida in Yucatán wanting to establish autonomy from Mexico.

Santiago Iman, a state militiaman, initiated a revolt of independence from Mexico beginning in the Yucatán city of Tizimin, then the third largest city in the north central part of the peninsula. Santiago armed and enlisted the Maya to battle the Mexican troops promising them an end to federal tax and church tributes. Credibility of politicians making propaganda promises was unthinkable. They were not to be trusted. 

Previously the Maya had been forbidden to serve in the military.
Next the Mayan insurrectionists captured the second largest city, Valladolid south of Tizimin and after that victory thousands of Indigenous Maya united to join Santiago Iman.
Federal troops were driven from the last city on the Yucatán Peninsula at Campeche by June of 1840, and that made Yucatán state an independent country and isolated.

By March 31, 1841, Yucatán was a fully functional entity with Santiago Mendez as president and Miguel Barbachano as his vice president.
This state of affairs irked and angered the Mexicans who immediately barricaded Yucatecan shipping.
Yucatán in turn enlisted the independent Republic of Texas to guard their ports with its navy for a monthly fee of $8,000 just to keep those Mexicans out.

To this day in Yucatán if you ask a local if they are Mexican they will emphatically say, NO! I am a Yucatecan!

Officially on October 1, 1841 Yucatán was declared its own Republic.

Mexican President Santa Anna attempted a negotiated return of Yucatán to Mexico which failed. Mexico invaded.

General Santa Anna was the president that led the battle of the Alamo in 1836 where his Mayan troops led the charge as cannon fodder. Santa Anna was defeated shortly thereafter at nearby San Jacinto, Texas, where he had attempted to slip away disguised as a women and was the solitary survivor of the battle. He was captured and shipped off to Washington, D. C.

His next political caper to save his hide was to sell away a huge portion of Mexican territory to the U.S.A. which made him grossly unpopular at home. He could have cared less, the U. S. navy would deliver him back to Mexico in style at the Port of Veracruz with stacks of gold.

In 1843 Yucatán reunited with Mexico and political balance disappeared as long time grievances of renewed resistance escalated among the poorer impoverished peasants.

1845, General Santa Anna who had no love for the quarrelsome Yucatecans but needed their money reneged on open port agreements and heavily taxed sugar and rum.

Yucatán again split off from Mexico in this ongoing shell game of political alliance.
By 1846 Yucatán voted neutrality in the war between the U. S. and Mexico. The governor, Miguel Barbachano capitulated and sold out to the Mexicans, and at the same time claimed neutrality with the U.S. and begged for annexation.

In a crafty ploy Yucatán president Menendez sent Justo Sierra O’Reilly to the U.S. to negotiate for arms to help keep the Mexicans out, lift the blockade, and end the extortionately unjust duties.
During this war Mérida armed the Mayas for the third time and promised special considerations, but as soon as the conflict ended it was back to business as usual with the Indians.

Instability, centuries of degradation and deceit, dislocations, territorial disputes and extreme economic hardships set the stage for this tit-for-tat Caste War that raged for eighty seven years and still smolders on to this day.

In 1847 the disgruntled Mayan troops rebelled in a Caste War that they started in Valladolid, machete murdering 85 people to avenge ancient wrongs.

The Maya recognized the white man as their true enemy for robbing their land, imposing slavery, whippings, and many other degrading brutalities. The Maya then resorted to gorilla war tactics, bequeathed to them by their benefactor Gonzalo Guerrero, father of the first mestizo nearly three centuries earlier. 

 In retaliation, the white Yucatecans invaded the ranch of one of the Mayan leaders and raped a 12 year old Indian girl. This drove the Mayan factions to unite against a common enemy. They pushed the white Yucatecans back to Mérida burning towns and pillaging as they went.

The Maya pushed south and east in Yucatán and Quintana Roo to Bacalar and established their capital of Chan Santa Cruz, presently known today as Felipe Carrillo Puerto.

This war became a vindictive bloody and brutal political shell game of opportunistic alliances because now independent Yucatán could not ask estranged Mexico for assistance.

In 1848 president Menendez asked U.S. president Polk for two thousand troops to save the white Yucatecans from the heathen Indian savages also known as the Indigenous Mayan.

The British supplied guns and ammunition to the Mayas through Belize in exchange for exotic hard woods such as mahogany and zapote and later formed an alliance with the Mexicans abandoning the Maya which then led to the stifling but not eradicating the Indigenous cause.

In 1848 the Mexicans exploited this unrest and divided the peninsula into to three parts, Quintana Roo territory, Campeche, and Yucatán states, leaving Yucatán to fend for itself.

In 1849 Yucatán governor Miguel Barbachano began the practice of expelling Mayan men between the age of 12 and 30 to Cuba as slaves to work on sugarcane plantations.
Barbachano’s mandate was; “All Indians will be taken from their homes who had taken up arms against the Yucatán and be deported.”

The Maya were considered inhuman savages by the white Spanish and had been since the first Inquisition driven Conquistadors set foot in the Americas.

In 1849 the first load of 140 slaves was sent off to Cuba. Self-serving Cuban merchants conspired with the Yucatecan authorities for guns and ammunition in exchange for the Mayan slaves.

There was a growing demand for slaves in Cuba due to the fact that the Spanish had outlawed slavery.
Ultimately this unscrupulous business took all Mayan regardless of whether they had been rebels or not. This despicable trade in human flesh continued until 1861.

Here is yet another example of America’s zealous enthusiasm for ridding the planet of Indians with their invasion of Yucatán. The above information is from the Caste War Museum in Tihosuco, Quintana Roo. Ironically the Caste War Museum in nearby Spanish held Valladolid, Yucatán, depicts the Maya as heathen savages who were not allowed to enter the city of Valladolid. The following is a rough translation of a sign display in th Tihosuco Caste War Museum.

“Certification of North American soldiers wounded. In 1848 at the port of Sisal, Yucatán, 938 American soldiers arrived to annihilate the Mayas. In May of 1849 the Americans returned home after suffering the loss of 70 dead and 170 wounded.

Looking out from the church in Tihosuco.

The Spanish colonial town of Tihosuco on the jungle frontier south of Valladolid was abandoned for eighty years and ultimately the Maya slowly moved in to reclaim it. The huge catholic church of Tihosuco had been literally blown apart and stood forlorn. The returning Maya left it as it was with a gaping hole in its roof as a testament to the ravages of war. They did restore the chapel end of the church and put it back into service. Read the story of Tihosuco and the incredible church in the book Yucatán for Travelers.


Excerpts from Nelson Reed’s book; The Caste War of Yucatán p.110-114;
The Thirteenth Infantry Regiment, US Army, had been mustered out of Mobile, Alabama, in the summer of 1848, following the end of the Mexican War…they accepted an offer of the Yucatecan Government-8 dollars a month for enlisted men plus 320 acres of land after peace…they were the first American filibusters…shipped from New Orleans to Sisal in several schooners, 938 of them, and were sent down to the city of Tekax in southern Yucatán. The advance party was committed in September 1848.

The noise of their heavy boots as they marched, the constant load talking in the ranks, the pipe smoking and flower picking, all of this was noted with uneasiness by the Yucatecan veteran Juan de Dios Novelo, who was accustomed to more cautious deportment on that ambush-laden trail. And there they met their first barricade, they laughed at Novelo’s suggestion of the usual flanking infiltration, fixing bayonets to make a frontal assault, knowing that no Mexican, much less an Indian, could face cold steel. They were wrong. The first volley caught them point blank, and Novelo had his hands full bring out forty casualties, one slung on either side of a mule.

Many of the American officers resigned after a week of such fighting, but others stayed on and gave a good account of themselves. Instead of easy loot and frightened Latins, they had suffered 70 killed and 170 wounded, and had nothing to show for it except a revised opinion of Yucatecans.”
Nelson Reeds’s well documented adventuresome book filled with real life intrigue reads like a novel and you will find it an unforgettable volume tremendously impressive and memorable.

Centuries of degradation brought this situation to the boiling point and the Caste War exploded.

When is enough finally enough?

Next A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.


Saturday, October 24, 2020

Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism: Introduction and Chapter 1


Introduction

Yucatán, the Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism: A six part report on how and why one stand alone Mayan faction was the only group of Indigenous in all of the Americas to hold out against Spanish conquistador colonialism. I start this report in Chetumal, State of Quintana Roo, Mexico, situated on the Caribbean Sea coast in extreme southeastern Mexico, a focal point of this history.

CHETUMAL, the state capital of Quintana Roo is a new city to the Americas and has the distinction of being the second least populated capital in all of México with nearly 200,000. It recently came into existence after many years of political strife and drawn-out war.

The history surrounding Chetumal reaches far back in time when Gonzalo Guerrero trained as a military combatant in the Spanish Inquisition era of King and Queen Ferdinand and Isabella. He fought in the bloody military action to drive the last of the Moors out of the Iberian Peninsula by 1492, ending eight centuries of Islamic occupation. Then courageous Gonzalo Guerrero took up his next position of soldier/sailor on Columbus’s first ocean crossing expedition, one of three ships aboard the small open caravel vessel named Niña.

He does not appear in the annals of history again until 1511 when Gonzalo on a September day set sail in good weather from the Gulf of Darien on the Colombian coast of South America north bound with looted treasure and slaves.

What happened next is one of the worst nightmare stories that could happen to anyone.

Gonzalo was forty years old at the time. Blasted by a fierce September hurricane his ship floundered, and he was plummeted into the sea. Aboard a makeshift raft with no food or water, Gonzalo and the seventeen men and two women survived the wrath of a hurricane that had dismasted and sunk their ship. They drifted to the Yucatán Peninsula. Gonzalo and his shipmates were taken as slaves by the local Maya.

Read the rest of Gonzalo Guerrero’s fascinating story that ultimately brought him to Chetumal next.

An examination of political maps of the America’s showing Spanish dominance since 1500 discloses the one exception to Spanish imperialistic colonial control. The Caribbean Sea coast of the Yucatán Peninsula was never conquered due to one exceptional individual who left a lasting legacy.
Before the prolonged Caste War, a British Admiralty chart of 1840 described the jungle area of the Caribbean coast of eastern Yucatán Peninsula as “Parts said to be very thinly populated”. This Mayan holdout against Spanish conquistador takeover endured through a multitude of conflicts you will next read about in the following six parts of this presentation.

IN SEARCH OF GONZALO GUERRERO, FATHER OF THE FIRST MESTIZO* Chapter one

This is a true story of an exceptional man who left a legacy enduring over centuries, from the 1400s until the present.
*(In Yucatán, Mexico, a mestizo is a person of mixed Spanish and Mayan parentage.)

Gonzalo Guerrero was trained as a Spanish military combatant. He fought with savagery having acquired the subversive military tactics of Inquisition motivated Spanish to drive the last of the Moors off of the Iberian Peninsula by 1492, which was a seven century undertaking. This ended the Islamic occupation of the Iberian Peninsula and countless bloody conflicts where the Spanish military honed and polished their crafty military tactics. They were then geared up for imperialistic colonialism and the American indigenous had no idea what awaited them.

Gonzalo Guerrero next took up a position of soldier/sailor on Columbus’s first ocean crossing expedition aboard one of three ships, the smallest an open caravel vessel named Niña.
This soldier of fortune’s story did not reappear again in the annals of history until 1511 when Gonzalo set sail in good weather from the Gulf of Darien on the Colombian north coast of South America with a cargo of looted treasure and slaves from the Inca Empire heading northbound back to his homeland in Spain.
What happened next is one of the worst nightmare stories that could happen to anyone.
Forty year-old Gonzalo was plummeted into the sea aboard a makeshift raft with no food or water, one of eighteen men and two women to survive a hurricane that had dismasted their ship and sunk it.
Only eight lived to make landfall, having to resort to cannibalism to survive.
Salvation did not happen.

The group of eight survivors were apprehended and enslaved by their Mayan Cocom captors on the Yucatán coast. The Cocom were one of twelve separate Mayan groups that never managed to unify among themselves into a nation.
Four of these survivors were sacrificed and eaten immediately. The others were caged and fattened for a future festival of flesh feasting. The fattening gave the remaining four the strength to escape to the Tutul Xiues tribe of Mayas who were enemies of the Cocom’s.
Tutul Xiues made slaves of these surviving Spaniards. Due to extreme hard work and exhaustion, only Gonzalo Guerrero and Geronimo de Aguilar survived.
Geronimo de Aguilar kept his Catholic religion and cultural ways, but Gonzalo Guerrero took up the Mayan ways and became a military adviser and trainer teaching the Maya the combat tactics he acquired in the Spanish military. This instruction would enable these Maya to remain out of the clutches of the Spanish Conquistadors for nearly five centuries.

It has been speculated that this Spanish combat training gave the Mayan people of the eastern jungle of the Yucatán Peninsula the ability to drive out the conquistadors. Because of this military tactical training the Mayan of the Quintana Roo region, (eastern jungle) had the advantage of never being completely subdued. It wasn’t until Méxican federal forces attempted to put down the protracted Caste War in the early 1900’s that this area became a territorial part of México.

A note: The protracted Caste War did not end here and that story is expanded upon in the next chapter.
Back to the Gonzalo Guerrero story: He left an enduring legacy with his newly adopted countrymen.
Next Gonzalo kills an alligator attacking his master and gains his freedom from slavery. He then engaged in the Mayan ritualistic custom of mutilation and tattooing that included piercing his ears and cheeks. These acts assimilated him into the Mayan way of life.
Gonzalo next took a Mayan princess named Zazil Ha as his wife, had three children and was granted temples of Ichpaatún north of Chetumal on the bay front, presently designated on maps as Oxtankah.

Chetumal Bay, Gonzalo’s newly acquired home site, had for thousands of years been a major route of commerce since the days of the ancient Chontal Maya because it linked their sea-going trade routes to rivers incorporating man-made canals. Lamanai is only one of the three most prominent Mayan settlements that remained continuously active through the post-classic period and even after European arrival that is linked by river/canal system into Chetumal Bay.

These seagoing Maya were from the Tabasco area. Tabasco has a huge extensive river system extending into the Guatemalan mountains and connecting to the Bay of Campeche in the Gulf of Mexico. The Chontal Maya developed far-reaching trade routes from their riverfront kingdoms using huge dugout cargo canoes.

An excerpt from the book The Earth Shall Weep: A History of Native America by James Wilson: Anthropologists point to the many similarities of belief, mythology and ceremony among different peoples as proof that, far from being becalmed in a kind of changeless, timeless prehistory, Native American societies were open, vital and dynamic, pragmatically accepting new cultural practices from each other. This appears to be borne out by the evidence of extensive trade networks, linking areas as far apart as present-day Mexico and Canada, which carried, presumably, not only materials and artifacts but people and ideas back and forth across the continent.

In Comalcalco, Tabasco, the land of the ancient Olmec Indians ancestors of the Mayan civilization and the cradle of American civilization is located the western most Mayan temples of the Chontal Maya, uniquely built of brick.

These Olmec ancestors of the Chontal Maya were the ones to discover chocolate, corn [maize], and the nixtamalization of it that unlocked its nutrients for human consumption and provided the abundance of sustenance that laid the foundation for this stand alone civilization to expand and excel in medicine, mathematics, and astronomy. They developed a maritime fleet of large sea going sailing canoes that ranged to all points around the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean Sea, and to South America. The Chontal were known as the “Phoenicians” of the new world. Products of their commerce included chocolate, copper, corn [maize], cinnabar, salt, rubber, and native medicines ranging from hallucinogenics to curatives uniquely discovered by them. More than twenty-five of their miraculous medications are still listed in the present Pharmacopoeia.

Their knowledge base and commerce were spread to all points of their trading territories. An example is their agricultural influence around the entire Gulf of Mexico, that flourished due to their influence. Corn, Squash, and bean, cultivation were exactly the same as that found all across Mexico. Remarkably the Indigenous surrounding the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico not only replicated Mayan agriculture but actually began building pyramids. They engaged in the trade of copper mined on far away Lake Superior. The Chontal Mayan then traded the copper across their expansive trading territory.

July 30, 1502, Christopher Columbus during his fourth voyage arrived at the Bay Islands of Honduras. While exploring he spotted a large sailing trading canoe and approached. Columbus along with his crew members boarded and discovered this vessel to be a Maya trader from Yucatán, with elegantly clothed Mayan crew members, and an impressive shipment of quality merchandise. Columbus pillaged whatever took his interest and abducted the captain for an interpreter. The vessel was set free, and this became the first recorded encounter of Europeans with Chontal Maya.

A note: Christopher Columbus never did actually set foot on the North American continent though he is credited with its discovery.

In 1519 Hernán Cortés, the Spanish conqueror who had plundered the Aztec Empire, arrived at the island of Cozumel and attempted to rescue the two Spanish survivors, Geronimo de Aguilar and Gonzalo Guerrero from the Maya. Gonzalo Guerrero replied; “I married a Mayan woman, have three children, am chief and captain, taken their ways with tattoos, pierced ears and scared face…this is my place.”

Geronimo de Aguilar went with Cortés taking a job as translator.
Gonzalo’s fate would soon be determined in battle against these disgruntled vindictive Spanish Conquistador crusaders who would go to any extreme to stamp out anything or anyone not in accordance with their Spanish Inquisition crazed mentality.

Gonzalo’s temple home north of Chetumal was plundered by the conquistador Spanish, and a Catholic chapel constructed over it. A stone fortress of similar design to those found in St. Augustine, Florida, Havana, Cuba, and Campeche was begun. The San Juan Felipe fort began construction at nearby Bacalar but it was not completed for nearly two hundred years until the 1720s when its finishing was inspired by plundering pirates. After all the Spanish went through to steal all the Indigenous gold in the first place, they certainly didn’t want any one stealing it from them. These stone monuments exist to this day as a testament to the unrelenting Spanish Inquisition.

In spite of this Spanish incursion into the Caribbean Sea coast of Mayan territory, it would be nearly five centuries before the Spanish would dare to set foot or return to present day Quintana Roo.

The Catholic chapel at Oxtankah and stone fort at nearby Bacalar north of Chetumal stand to this day, and little is currently known of this monumentally historic story.

After the independence of Mexico, a change took place. Some Mexicans descendants of the conquerors now began to feel a real passion for the Mayan culture. From the Maya, one name that symbolizes the struggle in opposition to colonial imperialist power and the struggle for independent freedom was Gonzalo Guerrero.

Ultimately Guerrero would go from villain to hero and from traitor to a champion of freedom.
The Mayan ruins and Church at Oxtankah in the jungle north of Chetumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico, have been restored and memorialize this extraordinary man and his wife, Zazil Ha, the parents of the first mestizos. An adjacent lagoon in the area of the Oxtankah ruins near Bacalar bears his name.
On the prestigious Paseo de Montéjo in Mérida a monument now commemorates his memory. On the boulevard entering Chetumal a Gonzalo Guerrero memorial depicting Gonzalo, his wife Zazil Ha, and their three children sits atop a large pedestal These bronze monuments sculpted by Raul Ayala are also found on the Island of Cozumel and at Akumal, a tourist spot north of Tulum.

Note: A word about the Maya. There are at least twelve distinct Mayan groups that occupy the Yucatán area with a common language and similar cultural attributes. A common thread that bound them was their collective rule of land ownership. There were no land titles or profiting from land sales and the land belonged to those who worked it. People in need were provided for without question or exception. The different Maya factions have never been able to get along as a united nation, and therefore were easy for the Spanish Conquistadors to divide and conquer.

Note: A word about the Spanish. The people occupying the Iberian Peninsula are united and have been for centuries under the strick dictates of the  Roman Catholic church. Their doctrine of confession of sins and simple absolution instilled a mentality of bribery and graft that is ingrained in them. Indigenous people even after conversion to Catholicism were still unable to assimilate into this discriminatory system.

Another item that the Spanish Conquistadors couldn’t resist commandeering from the Maya was the extensive salt production of the Yucatán peninsula. Due to an anomaly of nature the north and northwestern coast of the Yucatán peninsula is semiarid six months of the year, and this coast is also surrounded by low barrier islands creating shallow bays ideal for the natural evaporation of sea water making the extraction of sea salt a natural industry. The Chontal Maya developed this labor intensive salt production into a lucrative commerce that they carried on for centuries.

The Spanish conquistadors found no gold or silver in Yucatán, but the sea salt production was a great substitute especially accompanied by the availability of free labor by the Indigenous Maya. That sea salt production continues to this day, though now it has become mechanized and corporate owned. When my wife and I first took up residence in Yucatán back in the 1980s several primitive Mayan sea salt evaporation operations were still in production along what was then known as the Coconut Coast of Yucatán.

Next we will take a look at the Prelude to the Caste War. 

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2

Links to: The Maya, Mexico and Spanish Colonialism:

Introduction and Chapter 1.

Prelude to the Caste War, Chapter 2.

A Brief History of the Caste War, Chapter 3.

While the Caste War still Smoldered, the Mexican Revolutionary War Commenced, Chapter 4.

Juan Bautista Vega, Chapter 5.

Lázaro Cárdena's Years, Chapter 6.

Recommended Reading and Notable Authors.