Dear Mexican: In a column some time ago, you mentioned the Aztec
prophecy claiming that “their descendants would reclaim ancestral
lands in the southwest U.S., and guess what.” I'd appreciate it
if you shed a little light on this statement. This is the mythical
state of Aztlán your referring to, right? What are its “borders”?
How many Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, Central Americans, and indigenous
peoples know and/or believe in this? Is there a movement to take
over these lands? And how similar is this to the (incorrect) Jews'
claim to the holy land of Israel?
Texas Truth Seeker
Dear Gabacho: Oh, Aztlán! Nothing gets Know Nothings more
encabronados than this creation myth. The breve version:
the Aztecs told the Spaniards that their ancestors had migrated
from somewhere north of modern-day Mexico City. The Spaniards begin
a'slaughtering, unintentionally elevating Aztlán to Eden in the
minds of the Mexica. Centuries later, the 1960s Chicano Movement
began appropriating Aztec motifs (more on this in an upcoming column)
and picked up on the People of the Sun's longing for the Garden.
Not content with pilfering from one culture, the Chicanos also grabbed
from another — the historical reality of the southwest United States
once belonging to Mexico — and conveniently anointed this geographic
region Aztlán despite there being no evidence the Aztecs ever lived
anywhere in the Southwest, let alone the whole enchilada.
At least the Jews kept their origin story straight for millennia,
you know?
Aztlán seems like revanchist irredentism, żqué no? But believing
in it is mostly a college phase, like thinking communism can work
or that Dane Cook is funny. Most Mexicans only vaguely know about
Aztlán, and then in the same way gabachos think about Plymouth
Rock. Some Chicanos remove Aztlán from its terrestrial moorings
and adopt its Edenic spirit — in other words, the spirit of a people
committed to bettering their community. Nothing harmful in that.
But yes: some do believe the American Southwest is Aztlán
and that all non-Mexicans should vamoose back to Europe — the Mexican
calls these ahistorical pendejos indigenazis. Don't believe
the hype — Aztlán is as harmless as arroz con leche, and
anyone who believe otherwise has listened to too much Coast to
Coast. Mexicans aren't taking back any ancestral lands because
they're guided by Aztec destiny or fiat — los Estados Unidos
can take credit for that demographic reality, baby.
I don't know if someone has asked you this before — they probably
have — but with all the talks of problems with illegal immigrants,
and with all the obvious racial tension in this country between
whites and Mexicans, do you think that Mexicans are the new blacks
of this country?
Division Street Dude
Dear Gabacho: Gracias for giving me the opportunity to commemorate
the passing of one of the Mexican's idols: Studs Terkel, the legendary
oral historian who went to his reward two weeks ago at the age of
96. I can give you an answer, but Terkel documented a much-better
respuesta in his 1992 collection, Race: What Blacks and
Whites Think and Feel About the American Obsession, in a chapter
titled “Ron Maydon.” In it, the namesake Chicago wab said Mexicans
served as a buffer between African-Americans and gabachos.
In light of Barack Obama's historic victory, Maydon's following
words are most telling: “Whatever gains the Hispanic community has
made in this country have been at the expense — we've piggybacked
the black movement. I say every time blacks see political, economic
and social gains, I say hooray for them because we get some of the
fallout. They sneeze; we catch the cold. They make inroads; we get
hired.” By the way, Know Nothings and the Hillary Clinton campaign:
More than two-thirds of Mexicans voted for a negrito in this
presidential election, contrary to your assertions. How do you like
them manzanas?