A typically culturally sensitive Cinco de Mayo promotion.... |
Note: This
is the fifth year I have run essentially the same post with a little tinkering
on the margins. And, damn it, I will continue to do it until your all get it
right!
Today is, as every hearty partier will tell you, is Cinco
de Mayo. In the U.S. in recent years it has become kind of second St.
Patrick’s Day decked out in sombreros
and serapes instead of emerald
green, toasted to with Coronas with lime
and shots of tequila instead of Guinness and Jamison’s, and
laid out with two-for-one taco deals
instead of corn beef and cabbage plates.
It is celebrated without apparent irony
even by those who write semi-literate
screeds to the newspapers cursing
those damned lazy, criminal immigrants.
Mexican-American restaurant
owners and importers of spirits and trinkets appreciate the business. Grade schools have the kids make paper
hats and sing Spanish songs for a one day lesson in Mexican culture. And immigrant communities will hold fiestas and parades, glad that for one day of the year the rest of the country
is paying attention to them in sort of a good way. If you ask most of the
revelers what they are celebrating,
they will mumble something vague about Mexican Independence Day.
Mexican-American communities try to use the occasion to show off the positive features of the culture, especially music and dance. |
Of course they are wrong. Independence Day
is Diez y Seis de
Septiembre (September 16th) celebrating the day in 1810 when
Father Miguel Hidalgo read the Gritto de Hidalgo
beginning Mexico’s War of Independence from Spain.
In Mexico Cinco de Mayo is a minor patriotic holiday observed mostly in the State of Puebla.
It celebrates the victory Mexican patriots
over a large, modern and well equipped French army in the Battle of
Puebla on May 5, 1862. It was not even the final victory of the war
against the French, who did not evacuate the country until 1866.
In 1861 the President of Mexico, Benito Juarez,
had been forced to default on
Mexico’s heavy debt to European
powers. Britain, France and
other powers all made threats to redeem their debts by force if
necessary. They were warned by the United States, which invoked
the Monroe Doctrine, not to intervene in Mexico. French Emperor
Napoleon III recognized the U.S. would be too preoccupied with its own Civil
War to take action and dispatched a large French Army to take control of
the country.
At the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862 a small Mexican army routed a French force twice its size. |
After initial success the occupying French Army
with its Mexican allies, numbering 8,000 men was met by 4,000 Mexican troops
loyal to Juarez under the command of General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguín and soundly defeated. It
was an enormous moral boost for the Mexicans, but only delayed the French march
on the capital of Mexico City.
In 1864 a plebiscite
conducted under French guns invited the Austrian Hapsburg Prince Ferdinand Maximilian to sit as Emperor of Mexico with
his wife Carlota as Empress. Maximilian did have support of
some Mexican conservatives, large
land owners and the Catholic Church, but despite his liberal bent—he
continued many of Juarez’s land reforms and even offered the former President
the post of Prime Minister—Mexican
patriots refused to recognize his rule or the French occupation that made it
possible.
Juarez and his supporters engaged in a grizzly war of attrition against French
forces. With his army slowly being bled away and the costs of occupation
far outstripping any profits from empire, Napoleon III began to withdraw his
support. When the American Civil War ended and American intervention with
a new, modern, and battle hardened army became a distinct possibility, the
French Emperor finally withdrew his troops.
Maximilian, deluding himself that he was truly
the popular Emperor of Mexico stayed behind with his loyal generals to fight it
out with the Juaristas.
Carlota made a desperate trip to Europe in which she traveled from capital to
capital begging for assistance for her husband. When she failed, she
suffered an emotional and mental
breakdown. One by one Maximilian’s loyal armies were defeated.
He was captured by republican troops
after trying to make a break-out from the besieged city of Santiago de
Querétaro on May 15, 1867. The would-be Emperor was tried by court martial and executed by firing squad on June 19.
But if you ask any reveler at the bar tonight
about any of this, all you will probably get is a blank stare and, if you’re
lucky, a Margarita.
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