By Joseph P. Duggan on 5.5.09 @ 6:08AM
Outside of historically conservative Puebla, today is an optional
holiday in Mexico.
PUEBLA DE LOS ÁNGELES, Mexico -- The authentic Cinco de
Mayo, like Ireland's Solemnity of St. Patrick, is quite
different from the ersatz celebrations in the United States
conjured by the beer barons and their marketing wizards, dousing
Kowalskis, Smiths, and Changs with Budweiser or Schlitz until
they become Mexicans-for-a-Day.
In Mexico the Fifth of May is an "optional" national holiday,
with a few schools and offices closed. With the exception of
Puebla, most communities in the country do not have a
celebration. September 16, not May 5, is Mexican Independence
Day. On the panoramic Rorschach of Mexican identity and history,
Cinco de Mayo is scarcely a smudge: It recalls that
rarity of rarities, a Mexican military victory in an
international conflict.
On the hill overlooking this city, on May 5, 1862, outnumbered
federal troops and local militiamen -- think of them as Mexican
Minutemen -- defeated French invaders from the Second Empire of
Napoleon III, whose advisors on international development and
security considered Mexico a "failed state" in need of a forceful
dose of fraternité. The walls on these heights enclosed
first a colonial Franciscan monastery, later a republican
military stronghold, and finally, in what passes in our secular,
post-Franciscan age for an "instrument of peace," the National
Museum of Non-Intervention. On the usually busy weekend before
Puebla's big day, the museum was closed because of the
intervention of international health bureaucrats in Geneva,
Washington, Beijing, and Brussels, and, in an Atlanta Margaret
Mitchell never knew, the white-coated wonders of the Centers for
Disease Control.
The Mexicans won the battle of Puebla, but soon the French won
the war and achieved their objective of regime change, installing
an under-employed Austrian nobleman, Maximilian von Habsburg, as
Emperor of Mexico. Many citizens of Mexico, and notably of
Puebla, since colonial times one of the most conservative,
Catholic and royalist communities in the country, had been
disheartened with the aesthetic and hygienic implications of four
decades of republican government: "freedom is untidy." They were
relieved by the advent of a scion of the great family of Philip
II, who authorized construction of Puebla's majestic cathedral.
Near the monument to the heroes of Cinco de
Mayo stands the arch where poblano conservatives
welcomed their own Habsburg Emperor to their city.
For years, Mexican conservatives had been in disarray, casting
about like CPAC congregants for a flavor-of-the-month (Romney?
Thompson? Or the gringo Santa Anna, Gingrich?). At last, in
Maximilian, they thought they had their man on a white horse. Not
for the last time in the history of this continent, activists on
the Right mistook dynastic politics for conservative convictions
and policies. Maximilian turned out to be a Compassionate
Conservative -- a closet liberal. By 1867, squishy Maximilian
lost his base, and more. The French military cut and ran, and
Mexican conservatives shed few tears when Maximilian was captured
by the Reforma army of Benito Juárez and, through the
ministrations of one of the country's ubiquitous firing squads,
had his once-metaphorical bleeding heart made dead real.
While the Cinco de Mayo battle site stood closed,
Puebla's Catholic churches -- bearing the United Nations seal of
approval as "Patrimony of Humanity" -- were open for private
prayer or tourist gawking, but in the archbishop's concession to
the swine flu scare, without Sunday or weekday masses. (For the
erstwhile Huguenot Henry of Navarre, Paris was worth a Mass, but
not so for 21st-century Puebla, clenched in the Gnostic sphere of
influence of the United Nations' World Health Organization.) The
most glorious of the baroque ornamentations of Puebla is the
Church of St. Dominic's Chapel of the Rosary, whose feast in
October celebrates another unlikely victory, that of the Western
alliance against the Ottomans in the naval battle of Lepanto. A
source of pride in Catholic Mexico is that the coalition
commander, Genoese admiral Andrea Doria, carried into battle a
copy of the image of Mexico's Virgin of Guadalupe given to him by
Philip II.
A few days visiting Puebla was an escape from a state of siege 80
miles away in Mexico City, whose 20 million inhabitants have been
denied access by the health bureaucracy to the cantinas and
restaurants that tend to make life in the crowded metropolis
worth living. As Cinco de Mayo approached, Mexican
federal officials were changing their public attitude toward the
World Health Organization and the big nation-states from docility
to resentment and defiance. Mexicans, if no one else, recognize
that the recent actions of the United Nations and the governments
of France, Spain, and the People's Republic of China among others
restricting travel and tourism are barely distinguishable from
the instruments of economic warfare. A Sunday newspaper headline
blared a sadly feckless government declaration urging Mexicans to
avoid travel to China -- to which a girl from the formerly
Mexican territory of the San Fernando Valley might shrug, "As
if."
In the national capital, citizens held tight to their
operating-room masks, believing perhaps that if only Dr. von
Aschenbach had availed himself of one of these, Death in
Venice might have had an ending as happy as The
Sound of Music. But from Thursday through Sunday in Puebla
-- Mexico's conservative Orange County -- the spirit of
Non-Intervention waxed each day with the waning use of the
sterile blue cubrebocas. Will the next manifestation be
a rally to "Get Mexico Out of the U.N."?
(Mr. Duggan is a visiting professor at
Tecnológico de Monterrey in the suburbs of Mexico
City.)
topics:
Mexico City, Emperor Maximilian, Battle of Puebla