Mexico apologizes to native Maya on 120th anniversary of battle that ended Caste War

A Zapaptista delegation says goodbye as they depart to Europe from Isla Mujeres on Sunday as Mexico marks the 500th anniversary of the Spanish Conquest. Photo: AP

Mexico marked the anniversary of a 1901 battle that ended one of the last Indigenous rebellions in North America by issuing an apology.

The government on Monday asked forgiveness for centuries of brutal exploitation and discrimination before and after the Caste War.

To mark the occasion, a ceremony was held in the Quintana Roo hamlet of Tihosuco in the township of Felipe Carrillo Puerto, the headquarters of the rebellion.

It comes amid broader commemorations of the 500th anniversary of the 1519-1521 Spanish Conquest of Mexico and 200 years of Mexico’s 1821 independence from Spain.

Mexico’s president and other federal officials apologize to the Maya people, acknowledging centuries of unfair treatment. Photo: Courtesy

“For centuries, these people have suffered exploitation and abuse,” said Interior Secretary Olga Sánchez Cordero. “Today we recognize something which we have denied for a long time, the wrongs and injustices committed against the Mayan people.”

“Today, we ask forgiveness in the name of the Mexican government for the injustices committed against you throughout our history and for the discrimination which even now you are victims of,” she said.

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador was accompanied by President Alejandro Giammattei of Guatemala, the neighboring country that has a majority Mayan population.

The Maya of Quintana Roo — who fought an 1847-1901 rebellion against Mexican settlers and the government known as “the War of the Castes” — still live on the Caribbean coast. The rebellion was finally ended when Mexican troops captured Felipe Carrillo Puerto between May 4-5, 1901.

While Mexico’s Maya have survived, they have been largely locked out of the rich tourism industry that has sprung up at coastal resorts like Cancún and Playa del Carmen since 1974. Most eke out livings as small-scale farmers or fruit growers, or as construction or cleaning workers at resorts.

“We realize that we have a great history, that we are held up as an example, and people make a lot of money off our name, but that money never shows up in our communities,” said Mayan activist Alfaro Yam Canul.

While the coast south of Cancún is known as the Riviera Maya, and aquatic parks often have so-called Mayan attractions, the vast majority of Maya live in poverty.

Yam Canul asked López Obrador to give the Maya the right to promote tourism on a long stretch of mangrove-studded coast that has been designated a nature reserve. He said the Sian Ka’an nature reserve — which occupies 75 miles / 120 kilometers of coast and 1.3 million acres / 530,000 hectares of mangrove, wetlands and shallow bays and lagoons — had been “taken, stolen from us in a bad way, without our knowledge or consulting us.”

The reserve currently offers small day trips to visitors, but there are no hotels. Experts say the lagoon and mangrove ecosystems are extremely delicate, and that any significant fishing or tourism activities would threaten them.

Yam Canul asked the president to revise the nature reserve’s rules “so that we Maya, followers of the cross, can enter and develop community ecological tourism, in which we do not want really big buildings.” He said “all the tourism infrastructure and hotels should be in the Maya capital” of Felipe Carrillo Puerto.

Felipe Carrillo Puerto, once known as Chan Santa Cruz, is considered the Maya capital because it was the center of the rebellion. It held the temple of the “Speaking Cross,” an apparent ventriloquist’s trick that counseled the Maya to rise up against their oppressors.

During the 1800s, Maya people were forced to work in serf-like conditions on sisal plantations. Sisal and henequen were fibers used in making rope. Some were even tricked into virtual slavery in sugar cane fields in Cuba.

The Associated Press

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