Speech to the Environmental Grantmakers
Association
September 24, 2007
Tamayá Resort, New Mexico
My grandfather, Manuel Sandoval, was born in Mexico
in 1843. Where in Mexico? In Chamisal, which is a small village
located high on the western slopes of the Sangre de Cristo
Mountains about 60 miles north of here.
My grandmother, Margarita Salazar,
was born in 1880 in San José along the Rio Pecos in
northern New Mexico. I remember her telling me that when
she was a child, she saw her father and uncles saddle up,
put white caps over their heads and faces to disguise their
identity, and ride off to destroy fences and tear up railroad
lines late at night, all as an act of rebellion against encroachment
on their communal lands by Anglos. These Gorras Blancas were
part of a larger political movement that resorted to guerilla
tactics to protect their land and culture.
Like so many other Nuevo Mexicanos, I grew up hearing
these stories of our people and their ongoing struggle against
American colonization.
Chicanos in New Mexico are tied to a living history
that impacts our current political, economic and social life
on a daily basis.
Our remembered history continues to define us even today.
The basic historical facts are that Spanish colonizers
arrived in New Mexico in 1598 and imposed a European ethic on
indigenous peoples who had already been living here for at least
10,000 years.
That history between Spanish colonizers
and indigenous peoples is the same story of European colonization
played out countless times all across the world—in Africa,
South America, and Asia.
That story of colonization has played
out twice in New Mexico. First, for 250 years under Spanish
and Mexican rule; and second, for the past 160 years under
US rule. US colonization
wasn’t just imposed on Native Americans; Chicanos were
tossed into the same crucible of colonization.
Gen. Stephen Watts Kearny annexed New Mexico into the
US in 1846, named a provisional governor and moved on to claim
California for the US as part of the Mexican-American War.
A few months later, the Taos Rebellion
against American Occupation was organized and led by Mexicano
Pablo Montoya and Taos Pueblo native Tomás Romero. The
freedom fighters were able to kill Gov. Bent and several other
officials Gen. Kearny had appointed, as well as other Americans
living in the Taos area. The insurrection spread across northern
New Mexico.
The rebellion was brutally put down
by American forces. Insurgents were defeated at the battle
of Mora; at the battle of Santa Cruz de la Cañada and
finally, at the battle of Taos Pueblo. More than 500 Mexicanos
and Indians were killed just in Taos alone.
Resistance to American Occupation was not limited to armed
rebellion.
Ever since American Occupation, Mexicanos/Chicanos have
been active in politics.
In the political arena, Chicanos were already active in
the Mexican government, and had a long and successful history
of political involvement in the Spanish colonial period. This
engagement in the political process continued under US rule.
So successful were Chicanos in participating in electoral politics,
the US Congress refused statehood to New Mexico for more than
half a century because of the dominance of Nuevo Mexicanos in
territorial politics.
In the late 1880s and 1890s, when Chicano
homelands and resources were being stolen on a massive scale,
a political party called La Raza Unida was formed to protect
Chicanos’ rights.
Supporting Chicano cultural, land and economic interests
was a highly literate intelligentsia. Between 1834 and until
1958, scores of Spanish-language newspapers were published in
central and northern New Mexico. Through these mass media, critical
issues of cultural defense and land protection were widely disseminated
among the 110,000 Chicanos living in New Mexico in 1890.
On a personal note, my father, Benjamín
Sandoval, was one of those Spanish-language journalists. He
wrote in the 1930s, 40s and 50s for El Nuevo Mexicano—the
Spanish-language edition of today’s Santa Fe New Mexican.
He was also El Nuevo Mexicano’s literary
page editor and was a poet and essayist.
Despite the efforts of our ancestors
to protect our lands and culture, US Occupation ended with
the loss of most grazing and timbering lands in northern New
Mexico. Those not stolen outright by speculators and crooks
like the Santa Fe Ring were seized by the federal government,
which claimed that village communal lands were actually public
domain. The Santa Fe
National Forest, the Cibola National Forest and the Carson National
Forest were all created partly out of communal lands taken under
the public domain ruling of the federal government. Together,
these three northern New Mexico national forests cover more than
5 million acres.
In the 1880s and 1890s, when the rip-off of Chicano homelands
was in full swing, Las Gorras Blancas became a guerilla movement.
At night, these Chicano freedom fighters destroyed fences, burned
barns, and ripped up railroad lines to protest the loss of their
communal lands. I am proud to say that my great-grandfather,
Leonardo Salazar, was one of them.
In response to this political and armed struggle, Congress
created in 1891 the US Court of Private Land Claims for the purpose
of deterring and adjusting land claims in the territories which
were acquired from Mexico. In hindsight, the Court ended up hastening
the loss of communal lands, but also protected others. Today,
we still have 22 recognized land grants that together hold 250,000
acres of communal lands in trust for heirs.
The struggle of Chicanos to protect land and water rights
here has continued unabated through the years.
In 1967, an armed group of land grant
activists led by Reies López Tijerina stormed the Rio Arriba County Courthouse. There,
they hoped to arrest the local District Attorney, who days before
had illegally instructed state police to arrest people for simply
trying to attend a meeting. The meeting was never held.
In the armed confrontation at the courthouse,
a jailer and a sheriff’s deputy were shot, and two hostages were
taken by the raiders into the nearby mountains. New Mexico authorities
then launched the biggest manhunt in our state’s history
to find and arrest the raiders.
Tijerina defended himself against 54 criminal charges
resulting from the raid and was found not guilty on all of them.
For northern New Mexico Chicano land-based communities,
the loss of communal lands has not only been economically devastating.
We have paid a heavy price in other areas as well.
Our separation from our homelands has created a deep,
troubling and ongoing general psychosis.
This psychosis is reflected in the
fact that more than half of our Chicano kids never finish high
school. In my
home county of Rio Arriba—just an hour north of here—our
people suffer the highest per capita deaths from heroin addiction
in the country. Rio Arriba and other northern New Mexico counties
are among the poorest in the nation, rivaling Appalachia and
pockets in the deep South for the lack of health care, affordable
housing, education and other indicators of poverty.
I believe these data reflect the damages inflicted by
colonization over the past century and a half. As a community,
Chicanos have also internalized much of this oppression. We have
come to believe the stereotypes as reality and act accordingly.
The leadership of the Chicano community has much to do
and must share in much of the blame for the poverty of spirit
and body our people endure. I reject the role of victim and I
know most of our people do as well. Despite our political muscle,
we lack a coherent vision for re-creating healthy communities;
we lack internal discipline; and we do not hold our leadership
accountable.
Compounding our classic colonial situation is our mestizaje. Chicanos
are mestizos—we are the product of Spanish-Mexicano intermixing
with indigenous peoples. Under Spanish colonial rule, we
were the conqueror. Under US rule, we were the conquered.
This mestizaje has complicated
our relationship to place.
For example, whenever Chicano activists
in New Mexico seek to have the terms of the treaty ending the
Mexican-American War enforced in their efforts to reclaim what
were once land grant lands and now are federally-protected
forests and public lands, or whenever Chicanos claim to be “native” to
New Mexico, both Native American and Anglo communities argue
that we were just the first wave of European colonizers to arrive
in this area. At the same time, we do not have control
over the federal system that dictates how our homelands are used.
How does our mestizaje play
out in land and resource conflicts in New Mexico?
As Jake Kosek writes in his book, Understories: The
Political Life of Forests in Northern New Mexico: “Hispano
rights depend on their bloodlines to Spanish and Mexican pasts.
To deviate from this blood purity is to dilute the rights and
claims that come with these pasts—the treaties, deeds,
patrimony and so on…The seamless, essentialized histories
that reproduce rigid racial categories miss the ways in which
Hispano and Native American identities are made…Underestimating
the centrality and contradictions of mestizaje as
a central part of contemporary southwest racial politics leads
to the complications of land claims that are predicated on
the fiction of racially pure and distinct ethnic groups. In
this sense, Hispanos are trapped between what they need to
remember and what others will not let them forget.”
Given the highly complex and politically charged context
of a mestizaje reality playing out
against a classic colonial pattern of exploitation in northern
New Mexico, Anglo environmentalists have become a volatile addition
to the politics of land use in northern New Mexico.
There exists a deep hostility between
land-based Chicano communities in northern New Mexico and mainstream
environmental organizations. This hostility is tied to class
and race issues and to a widely-held belief among Chicanos
that environmentalists are just another expression of US colonial
exploitation.
This hostility boiled to the surface
a few years ago, when Forest Guardians sought and obtained
a court injunction against logging in northern forests as an
action to protect
the habitat of federally-protected owls. This action infuriated
Chicanos, because their traditional wood-gathering activities
were severely limited as part of the injunction.
Again, quoting Kosek: “The forest injunction and
subsequent litigation by environmentalists are in direct conflict
with community efforts to reclaim their lands. Sam Hitt, the
former president of Forest Guardians, stated that he does not
support communities regaining title to the land, nor does he
support it being the source of their livelihoods. (Hitt
said) “Our first priority is protecting nature. Everything
else, though it may seem important, is not our concern…We
speak for nature, for the forest, because it does not have a
voice.” The arrogance of this statement and the presumption
that his group enjoys a direct and exclusive communication line
with nature resonates with the arrogance of (other colonial institutions)
(my paraphrase).”
Given Chicanos’ struggle against
what we view as unrelenting colonial exploitation of our homelands,
Anglo conservation groups have done little to separate themselves
from this colonial model.
Part of that colonial model is defining
just who a conservationist is. Look around this room. It appears
we have defined a conservationist as someone who is middle-class,
white and mostly male, though I’m pleased to see so many
women joining the conservation movement in leadership positions.
Still, there is a deep cultural, class and ethnic divide
in New Mexico in the conservation arena.
Mainstream conservation groups hire mostly all white staff
and seek funding from mostly all white foundation staff and boards.
Left in the margins are other conservationists: Chicano
acequia members, numbering in the tens of thousands; land grant
activists, also in the thousands, and hundreds of Chicano farmers
and ranchers.
Our challenge is to move beyond the rigid class and ethnic
bias that afflicts the conservation movement and open ourselves
to a deep re-examination of who a conservationist is and what
a conservation movement should look like in this state.
If we can do that, who knows, we might create a re-invigorated,
broad-based, conservation movement in the West that can change
policies across the region, not through litigation and political
maneuvering, but through the creation of a powerful set of voices
that insist on saving our places.
We must look deeply into our hearts and
change ourselves, change our organizations and change our movement to make real the
dream of our great American leader, Martin Luther King, who dreamed
that one day, we would all judge each other by the content of our
character instead of by the color of our skin.