Mexican Independence Day: What Blacks (& Mexicans) Should Know!

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History about Mexicans of African Descent

By W. Bill Smith

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by Mr. Smith in his blog, African-American Latino World and is re-published with his permission.

Along with Spanish explorers, Moroccan born Estevánico was one of the first native Africans to reach what later became Mexican territory before this territory was taken over by the United States after the Mexican-American war, namely Arizona and New Mexico.

Some years ago while riding a city bus in Oakland, California; I found myself lecturing a group of Mexican-American high school students (in Spanish) who apparently were not accustomed to meeting black folks, not to mention Afro-Latinos, who can speak their language. They laughed hysterically when they heard me. The little lesson that I shared with them was a brief history of “Black” Latin America, which of course, includes Mexico.

Equally frustrating were some of my fellow African Americans, again in California, who questioned my racial identity because of my Spanish and love for Afro-Latino culture, especially the music. They’d snicker and make comments, such as, “listen to this black Mexican,” facetiously implying that the existence of black Mexicans is a mythical joke.

Let me begin by sharing one, hardcore, historical fact; there is a strong black heritage stretching from south of the border all the way down to Argentina. This black heritage started a century before it started here in the United States of America. Popular Latin music sounds, such as salsa, cumbia, tango, merengue, punta, and festejo, among many other genres, share African roots.

The National Park Service of The U.S. Department of the Interior documented the following regarding some of the Spanish explorers who happened to be of African ancestry:

Africans and their descendants were a pertinent part of the settling and developing of Spanish colonial societies. The infusion of African culture into the Spanish colonies and the Americas as a whole can be seen in African techniques for fishing, farming, cooking, building construction and other trades and crafts (Deagan and MacMahon 1995:15).

Gonzalo Aguirre Beltán author of “The Black Population of Mexico.”

In 2006, the Chicago National Museum of Mexican Art opened a groundbreaking exhibition, “the African Presence in Mexico.” During the early years of Spanish colonialism, the black population was much larger in Mexico than that of the Spanish population until those black folks began intermarrying with the Spanish and the Indigenous for over a period of 500 years. Who knows, any of those Mexican-American students on that bus could unknowingly have African blood in their veins.

According to the late anthropologist and professor at Mexico’s University of Veracruz, Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán, who published in his book, “La Población Negra de México” (the Black Population of Mexico), more than 500,000 African slaves were brought in through Mexico’s Port of Veracruz from 1519, the time of Cortez’s invasion, until the day of Mexican independence in 1810. The Spanish relied on the slavery of Africans to expand their empire and increase their wealth in Mexico and stretching all the way down through Argentina.

A statue of Mexico’s rebel slave leader Gaspar Yanga.

In Mexico’s state of Veracruz, an African slave rebel named Gaspar Yanga, born in what is now known as Gabon, West Africa, joined forces with another rebel slave leader named Francisco de Matosa in battles against Spanish forces to establish Mexico’s first free town, a free Black town independent of Spanish rule, 200 years before the rest of Mexico won her independence.

After the cry for Mexican independence by Father Miguel Hidalgo on Sept. 16, 1810, Spain’s worst nightmares became reality. The first to respond to Father Hidalgo’s plea were liberal Spaniards who were born in Mexico (criollos) along with black and indigenous slaves seeking to earn their freedom as soldiers.

Father Juan Hidalgo

During the Mexican War of Independence, which lasted from 1810-1821, it is estimated that 30-40 percent of the rebel army was comprised of mixed-race Mexicans and black folks. According to writer/researcher Jameelah Muhammad, contributor to the book, “No Longer Invisible: Afro Latins Today by Minority Rights Press,” it was the Ejército Moreno (the Colored troops) who launched the independence struggle on behalf of Mexico.

When a mule driver named Vicente Guerrero, who happens to be the son of an African slave mother named María Guadalupe Saldaña, and a mestizo peasant father named Juan Pedro Guerrero,  joined the Mexican revolution, he distinguished himself in major battles achieving the rank of captain, then colonel, and finally general showing superior tactical ability and outstanding courage. With weapons and supplies captured from Spanish forces, Guerrero took his little gang of fewer than 100 men and built it into a strong, disciplined military force of over 1,000 warriors.

Vicente Guerrero, Mexico’s Liberator & First Black President

One by one leading Mexican revolutionaries such as Father Miguel Hidalgo, Ignacio Allende, Juan Aldama, Mariano Jimenez, and Javier Mina were slain or made prisoner. The rest accepted the king’s pardon. But General Vicente Guerrero remained the only major rebel leader still at large and became the “Soul” of Mexican Independence.

On April 1, 1829, Vicente Guerrero became Mexico’s second president. and at once abolished slavery. This is just one of the reasons that the Mexican state of Tejas (pronounce Tay-Hahs) became the Lone Star state of Texas and revolted against Mexico and joined the American Union.

*About the Author: W. Bill Smith is a certified professional résumé writer born in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. He has explored the black cultures in Latin America through research and travel and writes a blog, African American-Latino World.

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