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THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION Tierra y Libertad

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Page 1: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION

Tierra y Libertad

Page 2: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize

By trading their raw materials and agricultural products for foreign manufactured goods and capital investments, they became economically dependent on the wealthier United States

Page 3: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

Their societies, far from fulfilling the promises of their independence, remained deeply split between wealthy landowners and desperately poor peasants

Few countries in Latin America suffered as many foreign invasions and interventions as Mexico

A Mexican saying observed wryly: “Poor Mexico: so far from God, so close to the United States”

Page 4: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

At the beginning of the twentieth century Mexican society was divided into rich and poor and into persons of Spanish, Indian, and mixed ancestry

A few very wealthy families of Spanish origin, less than 1 percent of the population, owned 85 percent of Mexico’s land, mostly in huge haciendas (estates)

Closely tied to this elite were the American’s who controlled most of Mexico’s railroads, silver mines, plantations, and other productive enterprises

Page 5: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

At the other end of the social scale were Indians, many of whom did not speak Spanish

Mestizos, people of mixed Indian and European ancestry, were only slightly better off; most of them were peasants who worked on the haciendas or farmed small communal plots near their ancestral villages

The urban middle class was small and had little political influence. Few professional and government positions were open to them, and foreigners owned most businesses

Page 6: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

During the colonial period, the Spanish government had made halfhearted efforts to defend Indians and mestizos from the land-grabbing tactics of the haciendas

After independence in 1821 wealthy Mexican families and American companies used bribery and force to acquire millions of acres of good agricultural land from villages in southern Mexico

Peasants lost not only their fields but also their access to firewood and pasture for their animals. They had little choice but to work on haciendas

Page 7: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

Despite many upheavals in Mexico in the nineteenth century, in 1910, the government seemed in control

For thirty-four years, General Porfirio Díaz had ruled Mexico under the motto “Liberty, Order, and Progress”

The government imposed order through rigged elections and a policy of pan o palo (bread or the stick) or bribes for Díaz’s supporters and summary justice for those who opposed him

Page 8: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

Though a mestizo himself, Díaz discriminated against the nonwhite majority of Mexicans

There was a devaluing of traditional Mexican culture in favor of European fashions and tastes

This devaluation of Mexican culture became a symbol of the regime’s failure to defend national interests against foreign influences

Page 9: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

The Mexican Revolution developed haphazardly, led by a series of ambitious but limited leaders, each representing a different segment of Mexican society

The first was Francisco Madero, the son of a wealthy landowning and mining family, educated in the United States

When minor uprisings broke out in 1911, the government collapsed and Díaz fled into exile

The Madero presidency was welcomed by some, but aroused opposition from peasant leaders like Emiliano Zapata

Page 10: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

In 1913, after two years as president, Madero was overthrown and murdered by one of his former supporters, General Victoriano Huerta

Woodrow Wilson, president of the United States, showed his displeasure by sending the United States Marines to occupy Veracruz

The inequities of Mexican society and foreign intervention in Mexico’s affairs angered Mexico’s middle class and industrial workers

They found leaders in Venustiano Carranza, a landowner, and in Álvaro Obregón, a school teacher

Calling themselves Constitutionalists, Carranza and Obregón organized private armies and succeeded in overthrowing Huerta in 1914

Page 11: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

By then, the revolution had spread to the countryside

As early as 1911, Emiliano Zapata, an Indian farmer, had led a revolt against the haciendas in the mountains of Morelos, south of Mexico City

His soldiers were peasants, some of them women, mounted on horseback and armed with pistols and rifles

For several years, they periodically came down from the mountains, burned hacienda buildings, and returned land to Indian villages to which it had once belonged

Page 12: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

Another leader appeared in Chihuahua, a northern state where seventeen individuals owned two-fifths of the land and 95 percent of the people had no land at all

Starting in 1913, Francisco “Pancho” Villa, a former ranch hand, mule driver, and bandit, organized an army of three thousand men, most of them cowboys

They too seized land from the large haciendas, not to rebuild traditional communities as in southern Mexico but to create family ranches

Zapata and Villa were part agrarian rebels, part social revolutionaries

Page 13: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

They enjoyed tremendous popular support but could never rise above their regional and peasant origins and lead a national revolution

The Constitutionalists had fewer soldiers than Zapata and Villa, but they held major cities, controlled the country’s exports of oil, and used the proceeds of oil sales to buy modern weapons

Fighting continued for years, and gradually the Constitutionalists took over most of Mexico

In 1919, they defeated and killed Zapata; Villa was assassinated four years later

An estimated 2 million people lost their lives in the civil war, and much of Mexico lay in ruins

Page 14: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

During their struggle to win support against Zapata and Villa, the Constitutionalists adopted many of their rivals’ agrarian reforms, such as restoring communal lands to the Indians of Morelos

The Constitutionalists also proposed social programs designed to appeal to workers and the middle class

The Constitution promised a lot but for the most part was not put into practice.

Page 15: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

In the early 1920s, after a decade of violence that exhausted all classes, the Mexican Revolution lost momentum

Nevertheless, the Revolution changed the social makeup of the governing class

For the first time in Mexico’s history, representatives of rural communities, unionized workers, and public employees were admitted to the inner circle

Page 16: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

In the arts, the Mexican Revolution sparked a surge of creativity

The political murals of José Clemente Orozco and Diego Rivera and the paintings of Frida Kahlo focused on social themes, showing peasants, workers, and soldiers in scenes from the Revolution

Page 17: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

In 1928, Obregón was assassinated His successor, Plutarco Elías Calles,

founded the National Revolutionary Party, or PNR (the abbreviation of its name in Spanish)

The establishment of the PNR gave the Mexican Revolution a second wind

Page 18: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

Lázaro Cárdenas, chosen by Calles to be president in 1934, brought peasants’ and workers’ organizations into the party, and renamed it the Mexican Revolutionary Party (PRM), and removed the generals from government positions

Page 19: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

Then he set to work implementing the reforms promised in the Constitution of 1917

Cárdenas redistributed 44 million acres (17.6 hectares) to peasant communes

He closed church-run schools He nationalized the railroads and

numerous other businesses

Page 20: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

His most dramatic move was the expropriation of foreign-owned oil companies

In the early 1920s, Mexico was the world’s leading producer of oil, but a handful of American and British companies exported almost all of it

In 1938, Cárdenas seized the foreign-owned oil industry, more as a matter of national pride than of economics

The oil companies expected the governments of the United States and Great Britain to come to their rescue, with military force

Page 21: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

But Mexico and the United States chose to resolve the issue through negotiation, and Mexico retained control of its oil industry

When Cárdenas term ended in 1940, Mexico was still a land of poor farmers with a small industrial base

The Revolution had brought great changes, however

The political system was free of both chaos and dictatorships

A small group of wealthy people no longer monopolized land and other resources

Page 22: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

The military was tamed The Catholic Church no

longer controlled education And the nationalization of oil

had demonstrated Mexico’s independence from foreign corporations and military intervention

Page 23: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

But the Revolution did not fulfill the democratic promise of Madero’s campaign, for it brought to power the political party that became the PRI, the Institutional Revolutionary Party that monopolized the government for eighty years

Page 24: Tierra y Libertad.  In the nineteenth century Mexico achieved independence from Spain but did not industrialize  By trading their raw materials and

The Revolution also promised far-reaching social reforms, such as free education, higher wages and more security for workers, and the redistribution of land to the peasants

The long-delayed reforms began to be implemented during the Cárdenas administration

Yet they fell short of the ideals expressed by the revolutionaries, but they laid the foundation for the later industrialization of Mexico