Mexica Movement
micc2
micc2 at COX.NET
Sat Apr 15 18:36:38 UTC 2006
I agree with Frances regarding the important issues she raises. I have
been involved in the Danza Azteca movement since its beginning in 1974.
At that time we young Chicano college students wanted some tie to the
indigenous cultures of Mexico. Some of our carnales had deeply immersed
themselves in the Lakota, Hopi, Chumash, Kumeyaay, and Dine cultures as
a way to identify with their indigenous roots. But most of these first
nations did not have direct links to the indigenous heritage of Mexico
(at least from A.D. 1325 on). Also, many Chicanos who were U.S. born
and did not speak Spanish, felt a distance from the recent Spanish
speaking immigrants.
Thus when la Danza Azteca arrived through the work of the danza elders
Andres Segura and Florencio Yescas, we Chicanos quickly latched on to
what appeared to be a living link to our indigenous roots as "Aztecas".
Over time from murals, music, literature, theater, to political
ideology, the "Azteca" image, and self-identity permeated Chicano
culture, and spirituality. Even the Catholic church, for centuries the
ambivalent exterminator of precolumbian religion, readily accepted the
"tonantzin" identification of Guadalupe (to better bring in the
Mexican immigrants into the American fold).
From the 1980's on, young Chicanos, those that had maintained their
contact with the sun dance, the Native American Church, etc. began to
politicize and take their version of "Aztecaness" to the logical
extreme. Using the name of the Culhua-Tenochca-Mexi'ca of Tenochtitlan
as the ideological Ying for the Spanish Yang of Mexican identity, the
Mexihca movement was born.
I truly believe that the Mexihca movement is a logical outcome of the
American culture of bipolar identity. That is we against them, black
against white, Christian against heathen, capitalist against communist
(or whatever took its place), red state against blue state. Most of the
followers of these bipolar allegiances leave absolutely no room for the
vast middle ground (Please turn you AM dial to any talk show station for
many sad examples). It is a historic fact that, protestant
millennialism, apocalyptic writings, and messianic cults have deeply
influences the manifest destiny mindset of the U.S. This is why after
three decades of dealing with the most rabid of the follows of the MM I
call them the Mexihca Nazis. They hate anyone and anything that does
not look act, or think like them. If you question their beliefs, and
you are a Mexican/Chicano/Latino/Hispanic/Mojado/Pollo.....etc. etc.,
you are automatically a sell out a traitor and an wannabe white
person.... shades of Al-Qaeda!
I believe that the Mexihca movement is a logical continuation of this
cultural phenomenon. The inexperience I have had with traditional
people in the U.S. and Mexico has been one of acceptance of
diversity, respect for other value systems, and most importantly of all,
an understanding that we are living in the modern world, not 1491. The
kind people I can call family in Second Mesa, Hopiland, Paguate Pueblo
in Laguna, Tepecxictla in Veracruz, and many other traditional places,
have never been as dogmatic, inflexible, and idealistic as the Mexihca
movement followers I have dealt with these past 32 years.
/..."Doesn't this disenfranchise (yet again) the many other indigenous
peoples of Mexico? How can the Mixtec farm workers up and down the west
coast of the USA and those of various Mayan ethnic groups resident in
Florida, to cite but two examples,* relate to a Mexica movement?"*.../
The answer is that they do not. First of all if you ask a
macehualtlahto if he or she is Mexihca, they will say "no I am a
macehaulli" The real Mexihca fades into mestizaje centuries ago. True
someone (like myself) who was born in Mexico City could lay claim to be
a "true Mexihca" by birth. But culturally, Mexico-Tenochtitlan became
a Spanish "city of palaces" by the late 1600's. The last barrio of
Mexihca people, that of San Jose de los Naturales, no longer exists.
The modern Nahuatl (as well as Mazahua, Otomi, Mixteco, Zapoteco, etc.)
speakers of the city are immigrants from the rural states of Mexico.
/As for the million or so Nahuatl-speaking people of today, isn't
appropriating their name and aspects of their language-and-culture
complex also an act of cultural imperialism imposed on them by people
they don't recognize as fellow macehualtin/nahuatlatohqueh? /
Second of all, poetic, revisionist ideology aside, the modern indigenous
people (yes including the Nahuatl speaking people of Michoacan, Hidalgo,
Puebla, Veracruz, Guerrero, Jalisco, etc. etc.) were the enemies and
the victims of Mexihca imperialism. So we do a double insult to these
people by trying to cram them into the Mexihca movement's bipolar
identity and political world view.
Through my study of the Azteca dance tradition of which I have been a
part of for its first 30 formative years, since its arrival in 1974 to
today when we have the third generation of danzantes being born, I have
come to realize that the "Azteca Dance tradition" is NOT Aztec at all!
It is a beautiful evolution of Chichimeca, Otomi, Puhrepecha,
Tlaxcalteca, Jonaz, and yes Nahua (not Meixihca) precolumbian traditions
AND Spanish Catholicism, and African animism. That is why the
traditional name for "la Danza Azteca" is more in keeping with reality:
La danza Conchera, La danza Chichimeca, la danza de la conquista. Of
course there will be many MNs who will find offense with my epiphany of
la danza./
While the movement you describe has obvious appeal to many people of
Mexican heritage in both the USA and Mexico,* I have wondered about the
single-minded focus on the Uto-Aztecan peoples and in particular the
Aztecs. */
/
/About 1989, as part of my work with the Early Academic outreach
Program at UCSD, I went and gave a presentation to some Mixteco high
school students in Fallbrook, CA. There, they and their parents wrked
in the avocado groves that have overrun the dry semi-desert moutnains of
the area. There was at that time three prong ethinc strife at the
local high school Native Ameridcans from the local reservations against
the Chicano/Mexicano students, and both these groups against the recent
Mixteco immigrants who the Chicano students disparagingly called
"Oaxacas". A young Mexihca Nazi type was wroking with them, and I sat
and listend to his presentation where he brow beat the Mixteco students
for not following their "ancient Mexihca ways!" He put down their
language because it was not Nahuatl, and he told them that they need to
follwo the teachings of s "traditonal Azteca Elder" who lived in L.A.
and who knwe the secret and ancient wisdom that had been handed down
from Cuautemoc. His cultural imerpialsim, lack of sensitivity to the
immigrant youths struggles and their pride in the Mixteco culture was
offensive. He was more imperialistic and racist thatn the white
studentss and staff of the high school that tormented the Mixteco kids
on a daily basis./
/
One of the sad experiences I had in the summer Nahuatl Institute in
Zacatecas ( an incredible learning experience I might add:
www.idiez.org.mx ) was when I sat in to listen to the Macehual students
from Veracruz, San Luis Potosi, and Hidalgo discuss their definitions
for the upcoming Nahuatl dictionary for Nahuatl speakers.
When the definition of Macehual came up there was a discussion of who
was a macehual (an indigenous person) and who was a coyomeh (non
indigenous people)
one person said that a Macehual was a person born in Mexico who had
indigenous blood. John Sullivan pointed to me and said I was born in "el
D.F." and I obviously had indigenous blood, so way I a macehual? The
answer was a unanimous "axcana" ...no. I and all Chicanos are Coyomeh,
like whites, and blacks, and Asians, because I did not speak an
indigenous language from birth, did not live an indigenous life, and did
not understand the indigenous world view that permeates the daily lives
of the Macehualmeh. I was devastated! I had been an "Azteca" dancer for
32 years, studied Nahuatl language, thought, culture, medicine, food,
music..... and yet I was not better than the man selling T-shirts
outside the Super bowl... But the students went on to say that John and
I, as well as the other students who where their for the summer course
were "cualli coyomeh" good outsiders.... and that was the key. Coyomeh
does not mean "white" or "hated evil white devil" as I have heard some
Mexihca Nazis claim. it simply means an outsider, one who does not
belong to the local world view. Even an indigenous person can be a
coyomeh. as an example, a Maya from Palenque is a coyomeh in
Chicontepec, Veracruz.
To fantasize that all indigenous people like and love each other, and
live in a uotpoia, is to negate the human natuer of indigenous poeple
and to put them on that same tired old bipolar pedestal of "noble savage"
Thus the new indigenous immigrant cannot be expected to jump in head
first into a political and idealogical movement that does not reflect
their culture back home, claims to be the ONLY TRUE path to
self-determination, AND preaches hatred and imperialism. On the
contrary, My experience has been that many recent immigrants look to
the Catholic church, and and the ever growing Latino evangelical
churches, for community, support and economic stability.
/"...The term "Meso-America"--while literally meaning the same
thing--has been used for a long time to refer to the well-defined
culture area ranging from northern Mexico through El Salvador and
Nicaragua. //Within this ancient area, into which the Nahuah were late
arrivals, there are many unrelated indigenous languages but many shared
cultural features./..."
I know several persons of Peruvian, Salvadoran, Guatemalteco, and
Costarican heritage that call themselves Chicano. Some even practice the
Azteca dance tradition can call it their "ancient heritage" I believe
that the many shared cultural features of modern Latin America, as
evolving within the U.S. have created a modern "mesoamerica" identity.
At the far left extreme are the Mexihca Nazis, who want to "take back
their land" (never mind that it was not the white Mexican elite's land
to give away, sell or lose in the first place.... it belonged to the
indigenous nations that first Spain, then Mexico, and last the U.S.
plundered and exterminated...). They sit in the same penalty box that
Al-Qaeda, the fundamentalist Jews, Christians, Hindus White/black/brown
supremicists, etc. sit in. Then on the extreme far right are the
Hispanics. They are the people who have "made it" by their own
"individual effort " (never mind the racism, and cultural genocide, and
identity theft they had to endure). They have arrived at the holy grail
of "the American dream"... the middle class, that speaks without any
"foreign accent" They see "Hispanic" culture as something to roll out
on cinco de Mayo, or Hispanic heritage month. They are not interested in
indigenous thought, culture, identity or politics, because they (at
least in their mind) have overcome, surpassed or left behind this rather
frightening (due to its dark brown skin and black hair) identity in
favor of the eminently marketable blond Shikira, J.L0 and Paulina Rubio.
It is in the great middle ground, where people of all colors,
ethnicities, religions sexual preferences, and languages, create and
evolve the dynamic realities of 21st century culture. As poeple who are
deeply interested in the legacy, development and survival of the
"mesoamerican" indigenous people, AND their cultural, spiritual and
genetic link to the modern world, we must keep in mind that any
extremist ideology, on the left or the right, ultimately leads to nihilism.
mario
www.mexicayotl.org
/I live for reasoned, enlightened spirituality./
Frances Karttunen wrote:
> I certainly agree with many points in your paper, but I also think
> your bibliography needs expansion, and the place to start would be
> with James Lockhart's big book, The Nahuas After the Conquest.
>
> While the movement you describe has obvious appeal to many people of
> Mexican heritage in both the USA and Mexico, I have wondered about the
> single-minded focus on the Uto-Aztecan peoples and in particular the
> Aztecs. Doesn't this disenfranchise (yet again) the many other
> indigenous peoples of Mexico? How can the Mixtec farm workers up and
> down the west coast of the USA and those of various Mayan ethnic
> groups resident in Florida, to cite but two examples, relate to a
> Mexica movement?
>
> As for the million or so Nahuatl-speaking people of today, isn't
> appropriating their name and aspects of their language-and-culture
> complex also an act of cultural imperialism imposed on them by people
> they don't recognize as fellow macehualtin/nahuatlatohqueh?
>
> Also, it seems that you are equating "Mexican" and "Central American"
> in your paper, but most people use "Central America" to refer to the
> countries south of Mexico through Panama. The term
> "Meso-America"--while literally meaning the same thing--has been used
> for a long time to refer to the well-defined culture area ranging from
> northern Mexico through El Salvador and Nicaragua. Within this
> ancient area, into which the Nahuah were late arrivals, there are many
> unrelated indigenous languages but many shared cultural features.
>
> Frances Karttunen
>
>
> On Apr 14, 2006, at 7:15 PM, David Becraft wrote:
>
>> I just finished a research paper for my Anthropology 301 class with
>> Dr. Anne Chambers of Southern Oregon University. Please review it
>> and critique it at:
>> http://panchobecraft.blogspot.com/
>>
>
>
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