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The
History of Mexican Independence
Within hours, Hidalgo, a Catholic priest in the village of Dolores, ordered
the arrest of Dolores native Spaniards. Then Hidalgo rang the church
bell as he customarily did to call the indians to mass. The message that
Hidalgo gave to the indians and mestizos called them to retaliate against
the hated gachupines or native Spaniards who had exploited and oppressed
Mexicans for ten generations.
Although a movement toward Mexican independence had already been in progress
since Napoleons conquest of Spain, Hidalgos passionate declaration
was a swift, unpremeditated decision. "Mexicanos, Viva México!"
Hidalgo told the Mexicans who were the members of New Spains lowest
caste. He urged the exploited and embittered Mexicans to recover the lands
that was stolen from their forefathers. That he was calling these people
to revolution was a radical change in the original revolution plot devised
by the criollos (Mexican-born Spaniards).

Groups of criollos across Mexico had been plotting to overthrow the authority
of gachupines who, because of their Spanish nativity, had legal and social
priority over the criollos. When Joseph Bonaparte replaced King Ferdinand
as the leader of Spain, the criollos recognized a prime opportunity for
Mexican sovereignity. The nucleus of this movement was a group of intellectuals
in Querétaro led by the corregidor of Querétaro, his wife
and a group of army officers distinguished by the adventurous Ignacio
Allende.
The criollos plan for revolution did not originally focus on the manpower
of the Mexicans. Rather, the criollos sought to avoid military confrontation
by convincing criollo army officers to sever their allegiance to the gachupines.
By claiming loyalty to the defeated King Ferdinand, the criollos aimed
to establish Mexico as an independent nation within King Ferdinands
Spanish empire. The gachupines who claimed authority under Bonapartes
rule would be driven out of Mexico.
Hidalgo had close ties with this group. Approaching sixty years of age,
Hidalgo was beloved and greatly respected by Mexicans. Once the dean of
the College of San Nicolas at Valladolid in Michoacan (now Morelia), Hidalgo
was a well-educated, courageous humanitarian. He was sympathetic to the
Indians, which was unusual amongst Mexican clergymen. Against gachupin
law, Hidalgo taught Indians to plant olives, mulberries and grapevines
and to manufacture pottery and leather. His actions irritated the Spanish
viceroy who, as a punitive measure, cut down Hidalgos trees and
vines.
Gachupines were alerted to the criollos independence movement bycriollo
officers who had refused to join the revolutionary movement and by a priest
who had learned of the plot through a confessional. Hidalgo was among
the central figures targeted for arrest on September 13, 1810. The Querétaro
corregidors wife informed the criollos of the gachupines plan. Allende
immediately departed from Quértaro to inform Hidalgo.

Allende arrived in Dolores in the early morning hours of September 16.
His message forced Hidalgo to make the most signficant decision of his
life, a decision which marked the first struggle for Mexican independence
and that would distinguish Hidalgo as the national hero of the revolution.
The criollos had not gained enough military alliance to forfeit the gachupines
rule, as the plot had leaked three months before the criollos target date
of December 8.
Hidalgo had three possible options. He could await arrest, flee Dolores
or call on the Indian and mestizo forces. His decision to call the exploited
groups to revolution completely changed the character of the revolution.
The movement became a bloody class struggle instead of a shrewd political
maneuver. When Hidalgo called the Indians to action, he tapped into powerful
forces that had been simmering for over three hundred years. With clubs,
slings, axes, knives, machetes and intense hatred, the Indians took on
the challenge of the Spanish artillery.
When the indian and mestizo forces, led by Hidalgo and Allende, reached
the next village en route to Mexico city, they acquired a picture of the
Virgin of Guadalupe, the patron saint whose image was of a woman of color.
The Virgin of Guadalupe, who was indigenous to Mexico, became the banner
of the revolutionary forces as Hidalgo and Allende led the path toward
Mexico City and the expulsion of the gachupines.
Hidalgo later regretted the bloodbath he had incited with his fateful
cry of Dolores. When he made his hasty decision in the pre-dawn hours
of September 16, he had not foreseen the mass slaughter of Spaniards.
Before the revolutionary troops descended upon Mexico City, Hidalgo retreated
with only a few associates to Dolores, where he would be executed by the
gachupines only a year later. Despite his ambiguity toward the violent
class struggle that was the Mexican revolution, Hidalgo is still revered
as the father of Mexican independence.
Eleven years of war, decades of despotic Mexican rulers and political
unrest proceeded Hidalgo's cry of Dolores. Yet throughout the years of
turmoil, El Grito de Dolores, "Mexicanos, viva México,"
has persevered. Every year at midnight on September 15, Mexicans shout
the grito, honoring the crucial, impulsive action that was the catalyst
for the country's bloody struggle for independence from Spain.
The
History of Benito Juarez
Benito Juarez is considered one of Mexico's greatest and most beloved
leaders. During his political career he helped to institute a series of
liberal reforms that were embodied into the new constitution of 1857.
During the French occupation of Mexico, Juarez refused to accept the rule
of the Monarchy or any other foreign nation, and helped to establish Mexico
as a constitutional democracy. He also promoted equal rights for the Indian
population, better access to health care and education, lessening the
political and financial power of the Roman Catholic church, and championed
the raising of the living standards for the rural poor.

Benito Juarez was born March 21st 1806, the child of Zapoteco
Indians. After they died when he was three, he went to live with his uncle,
but when he was 12 he joined his sister in Oaxaca. He began studying for
the priesthood, but in 1829 changed to studying for a law degree, which
he received in 1831. That year he also began his political career, with
a seat on the municipal council. In 1841 he became a judge, and the governor
of Oaxaca.
In 1853 the conservatives took power in Mexico and many liberals were
exiled, including Juarez, who spent his time of exile in New Orleans.
In 1855 the liberals won the election, and Benito Juarez returned from
his exile as the Minister of Justice. In 1857 he was elevated to preside
over the supreme court, in effect making him the Vice President. In 1858
the conservatives rebelled, and again Juarez had to leave Mexico City,
this time fleeing to Veracruz, where he created a government in exile.
In January 1861 the conservatives lost power, and Benito Juarez became
the President of Mexico. As the treasury was practically empty Juarez
made the decision to suspend payment on all foreign debts for a two year
period. After Mexican congress rejected an agreement Juarez had made with
the British Prime Minister to protect the interests of European countries
Spanish, British and French troops landed in Vera Cruz. Spain and Britain
were there to protect their financial interests, and left in April, after
it became clear that France had conquest in mind. The French troops fought
for two years, and although suffering a serious defeat on 5th May 1862,
eventually captured Mexico City in June 1863, and placed Archduke Maximilian
of Austria on the Mexican throne.
Benito Juarez and the government of Mexico were forced to retreat right
back to Ciudad Juarez, on the border with the USA. After four years with
growing pressure from America, continuing resistance from Mexicans and
criticism from the French govenrment and people, finally the Napoleonic
forces withdrew. Maximilian himself was captured and executed on 19th
June 1867.
Juarez returned to Mexico city, and the presidency even after suffering
a stroke in October 1870, and the loss of his wife in 1871. He won the
presidential election in 1871, but died on 18th July 1872, of a heart
attack.
The
Mexican Revolution of 1910
For most of Mexico's developing history, a small minority of the people
were in control of most of the country's power and wealth, while the majority
of the population worked in poverty. As the rift between the poor and
rich grew under the leadership of General Díaz, the political voice
of the lower classes was also declining. Opposition of Díaz did
surface, when Francisco I. Madero, educated in Europe and at the University
of California, led a series of strikes throughout the country.

Díaz was pressured into holding an election in 1910, in which
Madero was able to gather a significant number of the votes. Although
Díaz was at one time a strong supporter of the one-term limit,
he seemed to have changed his mind and had Madero imprisoned, feeling
that the people of Mexico just weren't ready for democracy.
Once Madero was released from prison, he continued his battle against
Díaz in an attempt to have him overthrown. During this time, several
other Mexican folk heros began to emerge, including the well known Pancho
Villa in the north, and the peasant Emiliano Zapata in the south, who
were able to harass the Mexican army and wrest control of their respective
regions. Díaz was unable to control the spread of the insurgence
and resigned in May, 1911, with the signing of the Treaty of Ciudad Juárez,
after which he fled to France.

Madero was elected president, but received opposition from Emiliano Zapata
who didn't wish to wait for the orderly implementation of Madero's desired
land reforms. In November of the same year Zapata denounced Madero as
president and took the position for himself. He controlled the state of
Morelos, where he chased out the estate owners and divided their lands
to the peasants. Later, in 1919, Zapata was assassinated by Jesus Guajardo
acting under orders from General Pablo Gonzalez.
It was during this time that the country broke into many different factions,
and guerilla units roamed across the country destroying and burning down
many large haciendas and ranchos. Madero was later taken prisoner and
executed and the entire country existed in a state of disorder for several
years, while Pancho Villa rampaged through the north, and different factions
fought for presidential control.

Eventually, Venustiano Carranza rose to the presidency, and organized
an important convention whose outcome was the Constitution of 1917, which
is still in effect today. Carranza made land reform an important part
of that constitution. This resulted in the ejido, or farm cooperative
program that redistributed much of the country's land from the wealthy
land holders to the peasants. The ejidos are still in place today and
comprise nearly half of all the farmland in Mexico.
Carranza was followed by others who would fight for political control,
and who would eventually continue with the reforms, both in education
and land distribution. During this period the PRI political party was
established, which was the dominant political power for 71 years until
Vicente Fox of the conservative PAN party was elected. The holiday itself
commemorates the day, November 20th of 1910, when Madero denounced President
Díaz, declared himself president of Mexico and called for a national
insurrection.
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