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Rubén Jaramillo

Rubén Jaramillo Méndez (1900 – May 23, 1962) was a Mexican military and political leader of campesino origin who participated in the Mexican Revolution. After the Revolution, he continued to fight for the land reform promised under the Mexican Constitution.

Rubén Jaramillo in an undated photo

Mexican Revolution edit

Jaramillo was born in Tlaquiltenango, Morelos, in 1900. When he was 15 years old, he joined the Liberation Army of the South under the direct command of Emiliano Zapata.[1] By age 17, Jaramillo had been promoted to the rank of captain and commanded 75 men.[2]

During the 1920s and 1930s, Jaramillo advocated on behalf of ejidos, grants of communally owned land by the federal government to farmers. He supported the 1934 presidential campaign of Lázaro Cárdenas, who created a cooperative sugar mill in Zacatepec in 1938 at Jaramillo's urging. Jaramillo was elected by the workers to help run the mill, but his advocacy on behalf of the workers led to frequent clashes with administrators appointed by the government.[1]

Jaramillista movement edit

When workers at the Zacatepec sugar mill went on strike in 1943, Jaramillo persuaded the campesinos to stop producing cane for the mill. The state government ordered his arrest, so Jaramillo fled to the mountains and took up arms against the government. He and his followers, known as Jaramillistas, briefly took control of Tlaquiltenango.[3] In 1944, President Manuel Ávila Camacho invited Jaramillo to Mexico City to negotiate an end to the fighting. Ávila granted amnesty to the Jaramillistas and guaranteed their safety.[4]

For the next nine years, Jaramillo fought for land reform within the electoral system. He founded the Agrarian Labor Party of Morelos (Partido Agrario Obrero Morelense, or PAOM), which quickly had 15,000 members. Jaramillo ran as its candidate for governor of Morelos in 1946 and 1952.[5] Jaramillo lost both times, although he and his followers disputed the official election results.[6][7]

In 1953, Jaramillo again led an armed revolt against the government. For the next five years he and the Jaramillistas eluded the army. The army brought cavalry and artillery against the rebels, and it was assisted by the air force. Finally, amnesty was negotiated with President Adolfo López Mateos in 1958.[8][9]

López Mateos had promised Jaramillo he would support the campesinos of Morelos, but Jaramillo was soon disappointed.[9] When cattle ranchers began to take the land previously granted as ejidos, the federal government did nothing. Jaramillo led thousands of farmers in resistance.[10] Jaramillo attempted to negotiate with the government on their behalf. While the government delayed, the campesinos occupied the land illegally. The government asked Jaramillo to help remove the squatters while the legal process continued; most of the farmers agreed. When the federal government ultimately turned down the farmers' request for assistance, Jaramillo appealed to López Mateos but the president refused to meet with him. In 1961, the campesinos again occupied the land. This time, the army removed them.[11]

Death edit

On May 23, 1962, Jaramillo's home was raided by a group of Federal Judicial Police and soldiers. He, his wife Epifanía, and his three stepsons were taken to Xochicalco, Morelos, where they were killed.[12] The only surviving member of the family was a stepdaughter, who had fled to ask the town's mayor for help.[13]

A few days after the murders, Carlos Fuentes went to Xochicalco and wrote an article that was published in Siempre!, a popular magazine:[14]

They pushed him down. Jaramillo could not hold himself back, he was a lion of the field, that man.... He threw himself at the party of murderers; he was defending his wife and his stepchildren, they brought him down with their rifle butts, they knocked out an eye. Epifanía flung herself on the murderers; they tore her rebozo, they tore her dress, they threw her on the stones. [One son] cursed at them; they opened fire and he doubled over and fell beside his mother, on the stones. While he was still alive, they opened his mouth, picked up fistfuls of earth, pulled open his mouth and laughing filled it with earth. After that it went fast; [the other sons] fell riddled with bullets; the submachine guns spat on the five fallen bodies. The squad waited for them to stop breathing. But they went on living. They put their pistols to the foreheads of the woman and the four men. They fired the finishing shots.[15]

Jaramillo's death was news around the world.[16] He became a folk hero. Villages and schools were named after him.[17] The article by Fuentes was widely reprinted. U.S. singer-songwriter Phil Ochs wrote a song about Jaramillo.[18] Nobody was charged with the killings.[1]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Joseph, Gilbert M.; Henderson, Timothy J., eds. (2002). The Mexico Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press. p. 482. ISBN 0-8223-3042-3.
  2. ^ Hodges, Donald Clark; Gandy, Ross (2002). Mexico Under Siege: Popular Resistance to Presidential Despotism. London: Zed Books. p. 40. ISBN 1-84277-124-8.
  3. ^ Weinberg, Bill (2000). Homage to Chiapas: The New Indigenous Struggles in Mexico. London: Verso. p. 241. ISBN 1-85984-719-6.
  4. ^ Hodges; Gandy (August 2002). Mexico Under Siege. Zed Books. p. 45. ISBN 9781842771259.
  5. ^ Hodges; Gandy (August 2002). Mexico Under Siege. Zed Books. pp. 45–46. ISBN 9781842771259.
  6. ^ Cadena-Roa, Jorge (2003). "State Pacts, Elites, and Social Movements in Mexico's Transition to Democracy". In Goldstone, Jack A. (ed.). States, Parties, and Social Movements. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 115. ISBN 0-521-81679-3.
  7. ^ Hodges; Gandy (August 2002). Mexico Under Siege. Zed Books. p. 46. ISBN 9781842771259.
  8. ^ Hodges, Donald Clark; Gandy, Ross (2002). Mexico: The End of the Revolution. Westport, Conn.: Praeger. p. 92. ISBN 0-275-97330-1.
  9. ^ a b Hodges; Gandy (August 2002). Mexico Under Siege. Zed Books. p. 49. ISBN 9781842771259.
  10. ^ Weinberg (2002). Homage to Chiapas. Verso. p. 242. ISBN 9781859843727.
  11. ^ Hodges; Gandy (August 2002). Mexico Under Siege. Zed Books. pp. 51–52. ISBN 9781842771259.
  12. ^ Harms, Patricia (Winter 2009). "Rural Resistance in the Land of Zapata: The Jaramillista Movement and the Myth of the Pax Priísta, 1940–1962 (Book review)". Canadian Journal of History. 44 (3). doi:10.3138/cjh.44.3.568. Retrieved March 5, 2010.
  13. ^ Hodges; Gandy (August 2002). Mexico Under Siege. Zed Books. p. 55. ISBN 9781842771259.
  14. ^ Shorris, Earl (2004). The Life and Times of Mexico. New York: W. W. Norton and Company. p. 335. ISBN 0-393-05926-X.
  15. ^ Krauze, Enrique (1997). Mexico: Biography of Power : A History of Modern Mexico, 1810–1996. Hank Heifetz, trans. New York: HarperCollins. p. 642. ISBN 0-06-016325-9.
  16. ^ Hodges; Gandy (2002). Mexico. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 103. ISBN 9780275973308.
  17. ^ "A 41 años de la fundación de la Rubén Jaramillo – Conurbados Morelos". conurbados.com. April 11, 2014. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
  18. ^ Shorris (2004). The Life and Times of Mexico. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 336. ISBN 9780393059267.

Further reading edit

  • Fuentes, Carlos (1997) [1996]. "Agrarian Mexico: The Death of Rubén Jaramillo". A New Time for Mexico. Marina Gutman Castañeda and Carlos Fuentes, trans. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21183-9.
  • Jaramillo, Rubén; Manjarrez, Froylán (1967). Autobiografía (in Spanish). Mexico City: Editorial Nuestro Tiempo. OCLC 1301556.
  • Macín, Raúl (1970). Jaramillo: Un Profeta Olvidado (in Spanish). Montevideo: Tierra Nueva. OCLC 1684221.
  • McCormick, Gladys I. (2002). Heroes, Myths, and Citizens in Mexico: The Case of Rubén Jaramillo (Thesis). University of Wisconsin–Madison.
  • Padilla, Tanalís (2008). Rural Resistance in the Land of Zapata: The Jaramillista Movement and the Myth of the Pax Priísta, 1940–1962. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-4337-0.

rubén, jaramillo, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, jaramillo, second, maternal, family, name, méndez, méndez, 1900, 1962, mexican, military, political, leader, campesino, origin, participated, mexican, revolution, after, revolution, continued, fi. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Jaramillo and the second or maternal family name is Mendez Ruben Jaramillo Mendez 1900 May 23 1962 was a Mexican military and political leader of campesino origin who participated in the Mexican Revolution After the Revolution he continued to fight for the land reform promised under the Mexican Constitution Ruben Jaramillo in an undated photo Contents 1 Mexican Revolution 2 Jaramillista movement 3 Death 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingMexican Revolution editJaramillo was born in Tlaquiltenango Morelos in 1900 When he was 15 years old he joined the Liberation Army of the South under the direct command of Emiliano Zapata 1 By age 17 Jaramillo had been promoted to the rank of captain and commanded 75 men 2 During the 1920s and 1930s Jaramillo advocated on behalf of ejidos grants of communally owned land by the federal government to farmers He supported the 1934 presidential campaign of Lazaro Cardenas who created a cooperative sugar mill in Zacatepec in 1938 at Jaramillo s urging Jaramillo was elected by the workers to help run the mill but his advocacy on behalf of the workers led to frequent clashes with administrators appointed by the government 1 Jaramillista movement editWhen workers at the Zacatepec sugar mill went on strike in 1943 Jaramillo persuaded the campesinos to stop producing cane for the mill The state government ordered his arrest so Jaramillo fled to the mountains and took up arms against the government He and his followers known as Jaramillistas briefly took control of Tlaquiltenango 3 In 1944 President Manuel Avila Camacho invited Jaramillo to Mexico City to negotiate an end to the fighting Avila granted amnesty to the Jaramillistas and guaranteed their safety 4 For the next nine years Jaramillo fought for land reform within the electoral system He founded the Agrarian Labor Party of Morelos Partido Agrario Obrero Morelense or PAOM which quickly had 15 000 members Jaramillo ran as its candidate for governor of Morelos in 1946 and 1952 5 Jaramillo lost both times although he and his followers disputed the official election results 6 7 In 1953 Jaramillo again led an armed revolt against the government For the next five years he and the Jaramillistas eluded the army The army brought cavalry and artillery against the rebels and it was assisted by the air force Finally amnesty was negotiated with President Adolfo Lopez Mateos in 1958 8 9 Lopez Mateos had promised Jaramillo he would support the campesinos of Morelos but Jaramillo was soon disappointed 9 When cattle ranchers began to take the land previously granted as ejidos the federal government did nothing Jaramillo led thousands of farmers in resistance 10 Jaramillo attempted to negotiate with the government on their behalf While the government delayed the campesinos occupied the land illegally The government asked Jaramillo to help remove the squatters while the legal process continued most of the farmers agreed When the federal government ultimately turned down the farmers request for assistance Jaramillo appealed to Lopez Mateos but the president refused to meet with him In 1961 the campesinos again occupied the land This time the army removed them 11 Death editOn May 23 1962 Jaramillo s home was raided by a group of Federal Judicial Police and soldiers He his wife Epifania and his three stepsons were taken to Xochicalco Morelos where they were killed 12 The only surviving member of the family was a stepdaughter who had fled to ask the town s mayor for help 13 A few days after the murders Carlos Fuentes went to Xochicalco and wrote an article that was published in Siempre a popular magazine 14 They pushed him down Jaramillo could not hold himself back he was a lion of the field that man He threw himself at the party of murderers he was defending his wife and his stepchildren they brought him down with their rifle butts they knocked out an eye Epifania flung herself on the murderers they tore her rebozo they tore her dress they threw her on the stones One son cursed at them they opened fire and he doubled over and fell beside his mother on the stones While he was still alive they opened his mouth picked up fistfuls of earth pulled open his mouth and laughing filled it with earth After that it went fast the other sons fell riddled with bullets the submachine guns spat on the five fallen bodies The squad waited for them to stop breathing But they went on living They put their pistols to the foreheads of the woman and the four men They fired the finishing shots 15 Jaramillo s death was news around the world 16 He became a folk hero Villages and schools were named after him 17 The article by Fuentes was widely reprinted U S singer songwriter Phil Ochs wrote a song about Jaramillo 18 Nobody was charged with the killings 1 See also editComando Jaramillista Morelense 23 de MayoReferences edit a b c Joseph Gilbert M Henderson Timothy J eds 2002 The Mexico Reader History Culture Politics Durham N C Duke University Press p 482 ISBN 0 8223 3042 3 Hodges Donald Clark Gandy Ross 2002 Mexico Under Siege Popular Resistance to Presidential Despotism London Zed Books p 40 ISBN 1 84277 124 8 Weinberg Bill 2000 Homage to Chiapas The New Indigenous Struggles in Mexico London Verso p 241 ISBN 1 85984 719 6 Hodges Gandy August 2002 Mexico Under Siege Zed Books p 45 ISBN 9781842771259 Hodges Gandy August 2002 Mexico Under Siege Zed Books pp 45 46 ISBN 9781842771259 Cadena Roa Jorge 2003 State Pacts Elites and Social Movements in Mexico s Transition to Democracy In Goldstone Jack A ed States Parties and Social Movements Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 115 ISBN 0 521 81679 3 Hodges Gandy August 2002 Mexico Under Siege Zed Books p 46 ISBN 9781842771259 Hodges Donald Clark Gandy Ross 2002 Mexico The End of the Revolution Westport Conn Praeger p 92 ISBN 0 275 97330 1 a b Hodges Gandy August 2002 Mexico Under Siege Zed Books p 49 ISBN 9781842771259 Weinberg 2002 Homage to Chiapas Verso p 242 ISBN 9781859843727 Hodges Gandy August 2002 Mexico Under Siege Zed Books pp 51 52 ISBN 9781842771259 Harms Patricia Winter 2009 Rural Resistance in the Land of Zapata The Jaramillista Movement and the Myth of the Pax Priista 1940 1962 Book review Canadian Journal of History 44 3 doi 10 3138 cjh 44 3 568 Retrieved March 5 2010 Hodges Gandy August 2002 Mexico Under Siege Zed Books p 55 ISBN 9781842771259 Shorris Earl 2004 The Life and Times of Mexico New York W W Norton and Company p 335 ISBN 0 393 05926 X Krauze Enrique 1997 Mexico Biography of Power A History of Modern Mexico 1810 1996 Hank Heifetz trans New York HarperCollins p 642 ISBN 0 06 016325 9 Hodges Gandy 2002 Mexico Bloomsbury Academic p 103 ISBN 9780275973308 A 41 anos de la fundacion de la Ruben Jaramillo Conurbados Morelos conurbados com April 11 2014 Retrieved December 21 2018 Shorris 2004 The Life and Times of Mexico W W Norton amp Company p 336 ISBN 9780393059267 Further reading editFuentes Carlos 1997 1996 Agrarian Mexico The Death of Ruben Jaramillo A New Time for Mexico Marina Gutman Castaneda and Carlos Fuentes trans Berkeley Calif University of California Press ISBN 0 520 21183 9 Jaramillo Ruben Manjarrez Froylan 1967 Autobiografia in Spanish Mexico City Editorial Nuestro Tiempo OCLC 1301556 Macin Raul 1970 Jaramillo Un Profeta Olvidado in Spanish Montevideo Tierra Nueva OCLC 1684221 McCormick Gladys I 2002 Heroes Myths and Citizens in Mexico The Case of Ruben Jaramillo Thesis University of Wisconsin Madison Padilla Tanalis 2008 Rural Resistance in the Land of Zapata The Jaramillista Movement and the Myth of the Pax Priista 1940 1962 Durham N C Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 4337 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ruben Jaramillo amp oldid 1210353982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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