Title: The Catholic Revival and the Cristero Rebellion
1The Catholic Revival and the Cristero Rebellion
- Modern Mexico,
- Lecture, Week 4, spring Term
2La Cristiada
3Church-State Conflict
- Given the strength of Catholicism in Mexico, why
did President Calles take on the Church in 1926
and lead Mexico into civil war ? - The Cristero War La Cristiada
- -lasted for three years 1926-29
- -claimed lives of some 90,000 people 56,882 on
the federal side, 30,000 Cristeros, plus numerous
civilians and Cristeros who were killed in
anticlerical raids after the war's end - -resulted in a stalemate and peace accord
brokered by US Ambassador Dwight Morrow -
4- Armed conflict broke out again in 1934 in
response to Narciso Bassols programme of
Socialist Education - By the 1930s Mexico was infamous in the Catholic
world for state persecution of the clergy and
Catholic religious belief - Graham Greene, The Lawless Road and The Power
and the Glory) -
5Catholic Rebels
6Cristeros-Sinarquismo-PAN
- Later 1930s Catholic movement morphed into the
proto-fascist Sinarquista movement that
influenced the Revolutions move to the Right,
and relaxation of the more stringent
anti-clerical laws after 1938. - Yet, until the PANs defeat of PRI in 2000 , RC
clergy and religion were invisible beyond church
buildings and atria, a measure of Jacobin
Mexicos fear of the Church in a Catholic
Nation
7Sinarquismo
8Religion and Revolution
- - Revolutions especially in the 20th C
aspire to replace established religion with a
secular political religion. Cultural
caudillos sought to De-sacralise traditional
spaces and de-fanaticise citizens, before
sacralising the secular in revolutionary
festivals, parades, etc.. - - Liberal and Catholic Mexico had clashed in the
mid 19th C . - - Jacobin Bolshevik - Mexico would
surely therefore clash with resurgent Catholic
Mexico during the 20th ?
9Ruiz, Mexican Patriotic School Children, c.1930
10Lecture
- - the Revolution, anti-clericalism and Catholic
identity - - Church-State conflict and precipitants of war
- - Cristero insurgency
11 Revolutionary anti-clericalism
-
- Sonoran Dynasty
- - Church much less powerful in the North
Obregon and Calles saw their mission as bringing
Centre and South into the modern, secular world,
like the US - - Sense of social exclusion Obregon, Calles
and Adolfo de la Huerta all from lower-middle
class, sons of schoolteachers, bar and pool hall
owners.... -
-
-
12Revolutionary anti-clericalism
- - resented hold of R Catholicism over minds of
most Mexicans, especially the "common people",
over whom they craved more direct control. - Catholic ritual...(is)...a seductive trick
designed to exploit ignorant peasants
hallucinated by floats, adorned with clouds,
little angles, chalices and all the artifices the
clergy uses to cheat them out of their last
penny. Guanajuato petition, December 1934, - in Adrian Bantjes, Adrian, Idolatry and
Iconoclasm, Mexican Studies Vol.13, 1997.
13Revolutionary anti-clericalism
- - Revolutionaries not necessarily atheistic
or anti-religious. Many were Spiritualists or
had converted to Protestantism, a cause which
they aspired to promote as a counterpoise to the
Catholics. And many were practicing
Catholics..... - Letter from General Vargas, signed Free man of
the North, to Cristero leader, Pedro Quintanar
, Zacatecas, 1927, - I should be very much in favour of the
Catholic sect if it were national, that is to
say, if you appointed your own pope, a Mexican,
and got rid of that immoral institution,
confession, and of the celibacy of the clergy.
Im from the frontier, and in my village the
Catholic Church is hardly known. -
14Revolutionary anti-clericalism
- - Some revolutionaries, however, such as
Governors Rodolfo Calles in Sonora and Tomás
Garrido Canabal of Tabasco, were aggressively
antireligious and iconoclastic - - saint burning and the destruction of altars
and confessionals, were necessary first acts in
freeing the minds of the poor and ignorant from
the clergys superstitious hold. - See Adrian Bantjes, Burning Saints, Moulding
Minds Iconoclasm, Civic Ritual, and the Failed
Cultural Revolution, in William Beezley ed.
Rituals of Rule Rituals of Resistance
15Revolutionary anti-clericalism
- Tomás Garrido Canabal, Governor of Tabasco,
referred in 1925 to the clergy - ...the cassocked vultures have seized their
prey, digging their talons into the heart of the
Indian, who is less prepared than any other race
to resist the seduction of the whole ritual
farce.
16Tomás Garrido Canabal, Agrarian cacique of Tabasco
17Tomás Garrido Canabal, Agrarian cacique of Tabasco
- Feria Municipal de Tenosique, Tabasco, 1935
18Competing Nationalisms Catholics
- Catholics claimed to be more Mexican than the
Revolutionaries - revered Virgin of Guadalupe, Iturbide and Hidalgo
(who was anti-French Revolution) - pointed to invasion of US Protestant missionaries
(and to Prots and Masons in Calless Cabinet) - government agraristas carried the Black and Red
Anarchist flag, Cristeros carried National colors
(Green, White and Red) Virgin of Guadalupe - Church made more rapid headway in the symbolic
representation of a national culture and in the
occupation of public space flags,monuments,
union and lay associations, demonstrations
(purposeful processions/pilgrimages)
19Cristero Flag
20Pilgrimage from Cocota to San Martin Hidalgo,
Jalisco
21Reading on Catholic lay associations and
pilgrimages
- For modern Catholic lay associations see
chapters/article on reading list by Robert Curley
and Kristina Boylan on the seminar reading list
for week 5 - For modern and traditional Catholic
associational life in Oaxaca see - Edward Wright-Rios, Revolutions in Mexican
Catholicism Reform and Revelation in Oaxaca,
18871934 2009
22Anti-clericalism and gender
- The Revolution - and the future - were male
creations by Freemasons, military leaders,
agraristas, workers..... - Heroic males were aided by women teachers and
ligas feminas.... (see Rivera mural of rural
teacher) - Clergy feminised priests lambasted as skirted,
laden with lace, surrounded by women and
children...
23Anti-clericalism and gender
- Church capitalised on the popular perception of
the Revolution as male, violent, corrupt and
opposed to the teachings of Christ - Wright-Rios writes
- Churchmen and laywomen frequently gendered
modern error as male p.33 - Catholicism spoke to women at a time when
secular elite at best talked about how to control
them. p.34 - Massive growth of Catholic womens lay
associations suggest womens empowerment or at
least growing presence in the public sphere.
24Reading on anti-clericalism
- The articles in the 2009 issue of The Americas
are all dedicated to anti-clericalism in Mexico - For example Robert Curley, Anticlericalism and
public space in revolutionary Jalisco, The
Americas 65, 4, 2009, 511-33.
25Timing of conflict
- Heightened Church-State conflict coincided in
late 20s and early 30s with decline in radical
programmes of the Revolution. - Improved relations coincided with phases of
radicalism late 1910s, early 1920s, mid to late
1930s. - Hence, was religion targeted as a substitute for
social reform ? ... Church scape-goated as the
Governments chief political rival ?
26Timing of conflict
- 1919-1925 Sonorans were busy elsewhere beating
Constitutionalists, pacifying Zapatistas,
Villistas and agraristas, developing close ties
with labour, holding radicals at bay, gaining
recognition from the US - 1925-26, mounting confrontation with the Church
27Church provocation or insecure government ?
- In 1920s govt. felt politically weak in the
face of - Catholic revival had been going on since the
1870s following Leo XIIIs 1890 Rerum Novarum
Diazs conciliation policy. - Maderos revolution provided improved conditions
for Catholic action and politics National
Catholic Party (PNC), approved by Madero, does
well in 1912 election. Church coping with
modern politics more successfully than the
state (see Robert Curleys chapter/article on
Jalisco) - Catholic revival continues during the later 1910s
and 20s Catholics support National Democratic
Party (PND), 353 Catholic Unions representing
80,000 workers by 1925. -
28Church provocation or insecure government ?
- In 1920s govt. also felt politically weak in
the face of - - strength of radical regional agrarian
cacicazgos Carrillo Puerto Yucatan), Saturnino
Cedillo (San Luis Potosi), Adalberto Tejeda
(Veracruz) , Francisco Mujica (Michoacan), Emilio
Portes Gil (Tamaulipas), Jose Guadalupe Zuno
(Jalisco) - - politics becoming more polarised revolutionary
ligas campesinas ligas femininas faced
their Catholic counterparts daily, in the streets
and fields. - Calles sought order and central control
29(No Transcript)
30Church provocation ?
- Activities of Church activists, even if not
directly related to politics, appeared
threatening - - 1922, Cubilete monument to Christ the King!
in Guanajuato attracted thousands of pilgrims - -1924, flamboyant Eucharistic conference
organised by the Conference of Mexican Bishops - - 1924, Church support for the De La Huerta
military revolt against Calles.
31Cubilete shrine to Cristo Rey, Guanajuato, 1922
32State provocation ? Schismatic Church
- February 1925, supported by Luis Morones and the
CROM, ten Catholic priests established the
Mexican Catholic Apostolic Church, a schismatic
Church, receiving Calless approval. - A Morones construction, or something deeper ?
- Matthew Butler, Sotanas Rojinegras Catholic
Anticlericalism and Mexicos revolutionary
Schism, The Americas 65,4, 2009, 535-58. - Mathew Butler, ,Gods Campesinos ? Mexicos
Revolutionary Church in the Countryside,
Bulletin of Latin American Research 28, 2, 2009,
165-184.
33Showdown the Calles Law
- June 1926 Calles decides to reform Article 130
of the Constitution of 1917. - Article 130
- - required "churches and religious groupings" to
register with the state - - placed restrictions on priests and ministers of
all religions cannot hold public office, canvas
on behalf of political parties or candidates,
inherit property from persons other than close
blood relatives. - In June 1926 Calles signed the "Law for Reforming
the Penal Code providing specific penalties for
priests and individuals who violated Article 130
34The Calles Law
- - wearing clerical garb in public was punishable
by a fine of 500 pesos (250 U.S. dollars) - - a priest who criticized the government could be
imprisoned for five years. - - some states enacted further measures
Chihuahua enacted a law permitting only a single
priest to serve the entire Catholic congregation
of the state. - - using 19th C laws, Calles appropriated
church property, expelled all foreign priests,
and closed monasteries, convents, and religious
schools.
35Plutarco Elias Calles, 1924-28 (Maximato-1934)
36Suspension of public worship, July 31 1926
- 31 July 1926 Church suspends public worship in
an attempt to put the sacraments and the clergy
beyond the reach of the law (Butler) - Government replies by commandeering many churches
for secular use - Mathew Butler, The Church in Red Mexico
Michoacán Catholics and the Mexican Revolution,
1920-1929, Journal of Ecclesiastical History
55(3), July 2004, 531.
37Catholic economic boycott
- Catholics boycott government schools, stores,
newspapers... - Particularly effective in west-central Mexico
(Jalisco, Guanajuato, Aguscalientes and
Zacatecas) where Catholics stopped attending
movies and plays, using public transportation,
while Catholic teachers stopped teaching in
secular schools. - Boycott collapsed in October when Catholic elite,
feeling the punch, withdrew support.
38Church boycott LNDLR banners
39LNDLR (National League for the Defence of
Religious Liberty)
- 1925 LNDLR established (in absence of a party) to
coordinate Catholic Youth, Women and Social
Catholic associations. - 1 million members by Sept 1926, 200,000 in
Mexico City - Mobilised Catholics in the US Europe
- Attracted politicians, journalists, intellectuals
- middle class made up rank and file, appealed
especially to the young.
40René Capistrán Garza, Mexican Association of
Catholic Youth
41Unión Popular (UP)
- -Unión Popular (UP) established in 1923 by
Anacleto González Flores of Tepatitlán, Los Altos
de Jalisco. - - led campaign of peaceful civil disobedience
against the anti-clerical laws led by lay
organization - inspired by Gandhi and the German Volksbund that
opposed Bismarks campaign against the RC Church
in Germany - Much more popular and rural than LNRLR
42Anacleto González Flores
43Union Popular Catholic Employers Union of
Guadalajara
- Luis Flores, founder, 1922
- First Womens Brigade, 1922
44Escalation of Violence
- August 3 1926, 400 armed Catholics shut
themselves up in the Church of Our Lady of
Guadalupe in Guadalajara - involved in a shootout with federal troops
- surrendered only when they ran out of ammunition,
- resulted in 18 dead and 40 injured.
- August 4, 240 government soldiers stormed the
parish church of Sahuayo Michoacan, priest and
his vicar killed in the ensuing violence.
45Escalation of Violence
- August 14, government agents purged Chalchihuites
(Zacatecas) chapter of the Association of
Catholic Youth, executing their spiritual
adviser, Father Luis Bátiz Sainz. - action prompts band of ranchers behind Pedro
Quintanar to seize the local treasury and declare
themselves in rebellion. At the height of Brigada
Quintanar held a region including the entire
northern part of Jalisco.
46Escalation of Violence
- September other armed movements launched in
Guanajuato, Durango and northern Jalisco. - Meanwhile, rebels in Jalisco (particularly the
region northeast of Guadalajara) gathered forces
behind 27-year-old Capistrán Garza, leader of the
Mexican Association of Catholic Youth. - This region became the main focal point of the
rebellion. - 1 January 1927 official startt of hostilities
with Capistrán Garzas manifesto A la Nación.
47Extension of Cristero fighting.
48Outbreak of War
- Cristero battle cry Viva Cristo Rey! Viva la
Virgen de Guadalupe! - Church hierarchy opposed the war, although
supported boycott and strike - Parish clergy also, according to Jean Meyer,
opposed the war, preaching peaceful resistance.
3,600 priests withdrew from villages to cities - Only 5 priests took up arms although over 40 died
in conflict.
49Cristero War conflict between Church and State ?
- Who then were the Cristeros ?
- Was the Cristero War a struggle between Church
and State ? - Or was this a religious crusade of the ordinary
Mexican people ? - The view favoured by influential French
historian Jean Meyer
50Jean Meyer, La Cristiada (1975)
51Jean Meyer
- The oral historical research of Jean Meyer during
the early 1970s revolutionised the historiography
of the Cristero War, confined until then to a
closed world of heroic biographies of forgotten
Cristero martyrs. - The official view of the Cristero rebellion was
that it was a reactionary, Church and great
landowner based, counter-revolutionary movement. - Meyer showed it to have been far more popular and
rural peasants and rancheros fighting to defend
their religion and way of life.. -
- Jean Meyer, The Cristero Rebellion. The Mexican
People between Church and State 19260-1929 (1975)
- Meyer was inspired by the famous local study,
Luis Gonzalez y Gonzalez, San Jose de Gracia,
published in 1968, who reaches a similar
conclusion.
52Just a religious movement ?
- But were other factors were at play ?
- Recent scholarship suggests that for many
Cristeros, religious motivations for rebellion
were reinforced by other political and material
concerns. - Participants in the uprising often came from
rural communities that had suffered from the
government's land reform policies since 1920, or
otherwise felt threatened by recent political and
economic changes. - Many agraristas and other government supporters
were also fervent Catholics
53Just a religious movement ?
- See Seminar Sheet for local studies revealing
complex motivations - - Robert Curley focuses on competing political
modernities in Guadalajara and Jalisco - - Mathew Butler focuses on local factors and
political factionalism as decisive in Michoacan
(see The Liberal Cristero, Ladislao Molina
JLAS, 1999) - - Enrique Guerra-Manzo (JLAS, 2008) considers
local power conflicts between caciques (bosses)
as a prime consideration
54Luis Gonzalez y Gonzalez, San José de Gracia,
- Story of a Catholic town formed in the 19th C on
a sub-divided hacienda in the Altos de Jalisco
region (Cristero stronghold) - Are settled by a Catholic Hispanic peasantry in
18th C - By early 20th C wealthier peasants could sent
sons to seminaries to train for priesthood - Priests were local men, factotums of community
- This area was remote from the epicentres of the
Revolution when it remained organised - Proprietary peasants and rancheros resented land
being given by the Govt. to landless agraristas
to create political clientele. - Large numbers of rancheros in this region joined
the rebellion. Women also took an active part
55Luis Gonzalez y Gonzalez, San José de Gracia
56The War
- Unusual rebel army no logistical supplies,
relied on raiding towns, trains and ranches for
supplies of money, horses, ammunition and food.
Fast moving cavalry in guerrilla units. - At first Government did not take threat
seriously. - In 1927 Federal army numbered 79,759 men. When
Jalisco federal commander General Jesús Ferreira
moved on the rebels announced that "it will be
less a campaign than a hunt. - Rebels did well against the agraristas (rural
militia recruited throughout Mexico) and the
Social Defense forces (local militia), but could
not defeated federal troops who guarded the
important cities.
57Cristero banners
58Brigadas Feminas
- On June 21, 1927, the first brigade of female
Cristeros was formed in Zapopan Jalisco Joan of
Arc Brigade grew soon from 17 to 135 members. - mission of Brigadas Femininas was to obtain
money, weapons, provisions and information for
the combatant men they also cared for the
wounded. - By March 1928 10,000 women were involved.
- By the end of the war, women active supporters
and combatants numbered some 25,000.
59Brigadas Femininas
- Women supplying ammunition
60Brigadistas Femininas
- Imprisoned Brigadistas sowing
61Cristeras
62Government response Land for rifles
- To aid recruitment, Calles allowed regional
caciques such as Saturnillo Cedillo of San Luis
Potosi to recruit hacienda peons with promises of
land after defeating the Cristeros. - Cristero army was also largely ranchero and
peasant - Hence, often two armies faced each other across
the lines..
63Dudley Ankerson, Saturnino Cedillo, Agrarian
Warlord
64Cristero Militia
65Cristero Militia
66General Salinas and officers in campaign against
Cristeros in Michoacan
67Cristero rancheros
68Cristero Family, San Jose de Gracia, Altos de
Jalisco
69Cristero Mass
70Cristero Leadership
- The most successful rebel leaders were Jesus
Degollado (a pharmacist), Victoriano Ramirez
(alias) El Catorce (a ranch hand), and the
priests Aristeo Pedroso and Jose Reyes Vega. - Although officially episcopate never supported
the rebellion, it never condemned the rebels who
knew that their cause was legitimate. Bishop Jose
Francisco Orozco of Guadalajara remained with
the rebels. While formally rejecting armed
rebellion, he was unwilling to leave his flock.
Considered by some to have been the real head of
the movement. - knicknamed after The Fourteen members of a
police posse he hilled after escaping from jail
71Best Cristero Commanders
- Victoriano Ramirez (a) El Catorce
72Best Cristero Commanders Santos Degollado
73Continuation of the war
- 1927-8 Cristero army professionalises,
recruiting non-Cristero commanders known for
their military skill, such as Enrique Gorostieta - 1928 Assassination of Alvaro Obregon by Catholic
fanatic , Jose de Leon Toral - Federal generals hostile to government join
Cristeros - Military Rebellion in 1929
- Cristeros still had 50,000 at arms when
Acuerdos (peace accords) were signed 21 June 21
1929, with US mediation through Dwight Morrow.
74Dwight Morrow
75Peace Accords
- The arreglos allowed worship to resume in Mexico
and granted three concessions to the Catholics - only priests who were named by hierarchical
superiors would be required to register, - religious instruction in the churches (but not in
the schools) would be permitted, - all citizens, including the clergy, would be
allowed to make petitions to reform the laws. - Church would recover the right to use its
properties, and priests recovered their rights to
live on such property. - Legally speaking, the Church was not allowed to
own real estate, and its former facilities
remained federal property. But the church
effectively took control over these properties
and the government never again tried to take
these properties back.
76Many Cristeros fight on
- With the arreglos only a minority of the rebels
went home, those who felt their battle had been
won. (WP) - As the rebels themselves were not consulted in
the talks, most of them felt betrayed and some
continued to fight. (WP) - The church then threatened rebels with
excommunication, and gradually the rebellion died
out.(WP)
77Aftermath
- - Government broke many of the arreglos and
state persecution of Catholics continued into the
1930s. - -approximately 500 Cristero leaders and 5,000
other Cristeros were shot, frequently in their
homes in front of their spouses and children (WP) - - After peace in 1929, many thousands of
Cristeros and sympathisers migrated to the US. - - Others received sanctuary on the estates of
their erstwhile enemy, Saturnino Cedillo in San
Luis Potosi (proof that Cristeros and Agraristas
shared a common culture !)
78Aftermath Executions of Cristeros
79Aftermath Executions of Cristeros
- Execution wall, Zamora, Michoacan
80Aftermath
- In 1926, Mexico had 4,500 Catholic priests
- By 1934 only 334 Catholic priests were licensed
by the government to serve Mexico's 15 million
people - By 1935, 17 states were left with no priest at
all.
81Pro- Cristero Documentary
- http//video.google.co.uk/videoplay?docid-9099981
933085312554eicv1jS8_zA8rP-AaVi4HCCAqcristera
hlen