Saturday, September 29, 2012
A 1914 Letter from Emiliano Zapata to the US President
Letter from Emiliano Zapata to Woodrow Wilson,
President of the United States.
General Headquarters of Yautepec, Morelos
August 23, 1914.
Mr. Woodrow Wilson,
President of the USA. UU. of America. Washington.
Dear Esteemed Sir:
I have seen in the press statements you made regarding the agrarian
revolution which for four years has been developing in this Republic, and
with great surprise I became aware that in spite of the distance you have
accurately understood the causes and aims of the revolution which has
increased especially in the South of Mexico, a region which has had to
suffer the most from acts of dispossession and extortion by the large
landholders.
That conviction that you sympathize with, the agrarian emancipation
movement, leads me to explain to you regarding the facts and background of
the press in Mexico City, which being dedicated to serving the interests of
the rich and powerful, has always worked to deface with infamous calumnies
before the rest of America and the world in order that the deep
significance of this great proletarian movement would never become known.
I'll start by pointing out to you the causes of the revolution that I lead.
Mexico is still today is a country in full feudal epoch, or so it was at
the outbreak of the 1910 revolution.
A few hundred landowners have monopolized all the arable land of the
Republic, from year to year they have been increasing their domains, which
in order to accomplish they have had to strip the people of their ejidos or
communal fields, and their modest parcels of individual inheritance. There
are cities in the State of Morelos, for example
Cuautla,
which are lacking even land needed to dispose of their garbage, land which
is rightly required for the development of the population.
So it is that the landowners, by dispossession upon dispossession, today
with this pretext, tomorrow with another, have been absorbing all
properties that rightfully belong to and from time immemorial have belonged
to the Indigenous Peoples ,
lands from whose livelihood and culture the Indigenous Peoples have drawn
sustenance for themselves and their families.
To realize this extortion, the land barons have used legislation which has
been elaborated under their influence that has allowed them to take over
vast tracts of land, with the
pretextthat
these lands are idle, or not protected by legally correct titles.
In this manner, aided by the complicity of the courts and even worse acts
of the sort, such as false imprisonment or forced consignment into the
military, the small landholders are robbed, and the great land barons have
become sole owners of the entire country. The Indigenous
Peoplesnow disposed of
their lands, have been forced to work on plantations for
low wages and are forced to endure the extreme mistreatment of the
landowners and their stewards or overseers, many of whom, being Spanish or
the children of Spanish parents, consider that they are entitled to conduct
themselves as if they live at the time of Hernán Cortés, in other words as
if they were still the conquerors and masters, and that we the "peons" were
mere slaves, subject to the brutal law of
conquest
.
The landowner's position regarding the
“peons”
is exactly equal to that held by the feudal lord, the earl or baron of the
Middle Ages, in regards to their servants and vassals.
The Hacendado (Squire) in Mexico
has at his will the complete person of “his peon". He may reduce him to
prison if he likes, he may forbid the “peon” to leave the ranch with the
pretext that there is debt that can never be repaid, being so ordered by
judges whom the hacendado bribes, and then there are the prefects or
"political bosses" who are always their allies. The landlord is truly the
complete Lord of Life and Property without doubt, within their vast domains.
This unbearable situation is from whence originated the Revolution of 1910
and
which as primary principle and direction has intention to destroy the
feudal regime and fight against the monopoly of land in the hands of a few.
But unfortunately, Francisco I. Madero who coming from a wealthy and
powerful family which owns large tracts of land in the north of the
Republic, Madero naturally quickly joined with other landowners, and
invoking the power of legislation (laws for the rich and favoring the rich)
as an excuse, chose not to fulfill the promises he had made to restore the
stolen lands to their rightful owners and destroy the overwhelming monopoly
of the landowners, through the expropriation of these lands in the name of
public interest and with corresponding compensation, if possession was
legitimate.
Madero failed in his promises and the revolution continued, mainly in the
regions that had seen the greatest abuses and assaults by the hacendados,
such as in the states of Morelos, Guerrero, Michoacan, Puebla, Durango,
Chihuahua, Zacatecas, etc., etc.
Then came the Coup of the Citadel, that is the effort made by the ancient
Porfiristas and conservative elements of all shades to seize power again,
for they feared that Madero would be forced one day to have to keep his
promises. At that juncture, the campesino population became justly alarmed
and revolutionary ferment spread with more force than ever, since the coup,
followed the assassination of Madero, was a challenge - a true threat to
the revolution of 1910.
At this point the revolution encompassed the full extent of the Republic,
and chastened by past experience, and I chose not to await final victory
but instead began the distribution of land and the expropriation of the
large estates. Thus as has happened in Morelos, Guerrero, Michoacan,
Puebla, Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, Chihuahua, Sonora, Durango, Zacatecas, San
Luis Potosi: in such a way that it can be said that the people have done
justice for themselves, as the legislative process does not favor justice
and given that the current Constitution is a hindrance rather than a
defense or security for working peoples, and especially for the campesino
communities.
It was at this point that the Campesino Pueblos realized the need to break
the old patterns of legislation, and seeing in the *Plan de Ayala*
the
articulation of their desires and the expression of the principles that
should underpin the new legislative process, began to implement such a
plan, as required by the supremacy of law and justice, and this is how
revolutionaries throughout the Republic have restored the lands of the
dispossessed peoples. They have divided up the monstrous estates and
punished the eternal enemies of the people, the feudal lords, with
confiscation of their estates, along with the caciques and chief
accomplices of the dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz as well as the
perpetrators and accomplices of the Coup of the Citadel.
It is to be ensured, therefore, that there will be no peace in Mexico until
the Plan de Ayala is raised to the rank of law or constitutional provision,
and fulfilled across the entire country.
This position is reference not only in terms of social issues, or the need
for land redistribution, but also with regard to the political question, or
the manner of appointing the interim president who must issue the call for
elections and has to start the process of implementing land reform.
The country is tired of impositions, Mexico no longer tolerates imposed
masters or leaders, our desire is to take part in the appointment of our
governors, and since the interim government should emanate from the
revolution and in order to assure this, is logical and fair that these be
true representatives of the Revolution, or the heads of the armed movement,
who should carry out the appointment of Interim President. This is
guaranteed by article twelve of the Plan de Ayala, in spite of the wishes
of D. Venustiano Carranza and his circle of ambitious politicians, who
propose that the Carranza step into the position of President by surprise,
or rather, by a bold stroke of audacity and imposition.
The only way to wisely choose the Acting President is through the
collective conviction of the revolutionary leaders across the country.
Only so can be presented a man who by his record and his ideas provide
absolute guarantees, while with Carranza as an owner or shareholder owning
large properties in the Border States, his imposition is a threat to the
campesinos of the country, as he would opt for the same policies as
Madero. His ideas are clearly identified, with the only difference that
Madero was weak, while Carranza is man capable of exercising a most
tremendous dictatorship, which would again provoke a formidable revolution,
perhaps bloodier than those before.
Therefore you will see, being that the Revolution of the South is a revolution
of ideals,
not of revenge or retaliation, that this revolution has committed before
the country and before the civilized world, to a formal contract to provide
full guarantees for the lives and interests of nationals and foreigners,
before and after our victory, and I am happy to make you aware of this fact.
This long exposé should confirm to you in your well-illuminated mind
regarding our movement of Southern Mexico, and convince you that the vile,
banal, and corrupt press of Mexico City has maligned my personality and
that of my compatriots.
May these notes better illustrate, along with the information which Messrs.
Dr. Charles Jenkinson and Thomas W. Reilly will share with you, and who as
kind visitors of this State, we have had the pleasure to offer our modest
but gracious hospitality, and via whose kind conduct I send these lines.
For my part I can say to you that I understand and appreciate the noble and
uplifting policy that you are carrying forward, within the limits of
respect for the sovereignty of each state in this beautiful and not always
happy Continent of the Americas.
I would have you believe that, as long as this policy respects the autonomy
of the Mexican peoplein
pursuit for their own ideals [and] as they understand them, I will be
one of many of your sympathizers from this sister Republic and hopefully
not the least useful of your servants, which I reiterate now with my
particular appreciation.
General Emiliano Zapata -
Mexico
THANK YOU TO TUPAC ENRIQUE ACOSTA DE LOS COMITES DE DEFENSA DEL BARRIO & NETWORK AZTLAN FOR POSTING THIS LETTER FROM OUR GENERAL!
Translation: Tupak Huehuecoyotl
TONATIERRA
YouTube:
Corrido de la Muerte de
Zapata
YouTube:
Film
Emiliano Zapata
Una Pelicula Mexicana
*******
Los Comités de Defensa del Barrio
September 22, 2012
Declaración de Resistencia, Rebellion y
Regeneración
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