Our Lady of
Guadalupe: Religion and Origins of Mexican National Consciousness
On December 12, the
Centro Cultural Aztlan opened the 29th Annual “Celebration a La Virgen
de Guadalupe” Group Exhibition. The show was impressive in its
depth of iconic imagery and its broadness of thematic concepts. Centro
Director Malena Gonzalez-Cid invited thirty-three artists, nearly all from
San Antonio, to display their works as a tribute to La Virgen
de Guadalupe. Kandelyne Gomez, “La
Madre.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. Our Lady of Guadalupe has
played an important role in Texas history. Under the leadership of San
Antonio parish priest Father Carmelo Tranchese, the Westside San Antonio
community adjacent to Our Lady of Guadalupe church was awarded the first
public housing grants by the Roosevelt Administration in 1940. Father Carmelo
lobbied Congressman Maury Maverick and President Franklin Roosevelt in the
late 1930s for the construction of federal public housing. Juan Hernandez with San
Antonio, Texas Cassiano Homes artists. Photo by Ricardo Romo. First Lady Eleanlor
Roosevelt visited the Our Lady of Henry de León, Floral
altar to La Virgen. Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo
Romo. The story of Our Lady of
Guadalupe began in early December of 1531 when a Madonna with Indian and
Mestizo features appeared to Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin on a hill in Tepeyac,
Mexico. Juan Diego informed Bishop Juan de Zumarraga that the Holy Mother had
requested that a church be built on that site. The Bishop resisted and asked
for proof that Juan Diego had talked to a religious deity. Anel L. Flores, “A Love
Letter to Yolanda Lopez From a Trans Star.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural
Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. When Juan Diego conveyed
that request of proof to La Virgen on December 12th, she
tasked Juan Diego with gathering red roses from the hillside. Juan Diego
gathered the roses and placed them in his tilma [mantle of cotton fiber]. Upon
opening his tilma to show the Bishop the roses, an image of La Virgen
de Guadalupe appeared on the cloth. The Bishop was convinced by
this miracle and ordered the construction of a basilica at the site where Our
Lady of Guadalupe first appeared. Raul Servin, “La Mera
Madre.” Courtesy of
Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. Mexico, Spain’s newest
colony in the New World, faced a crisis on many fronts in 1531. Ten years
after the conquest of the Aztec empire, the Spaniards continued to wage war
on Indian communities. The region surrounding Mexico City, which had numbered
1.5 million inhabitants in 1521 when the conquistador Hernan Cortes defeated
the Aztecs, had been devastated by war and epidemics that reduced the native
Aztec population to 70,000 by 1531. Every year of forced work in the encomiendas
[landed estates] and mines significantly shortened the lives of thousands of
Indigenous people. Hector Garza, “Huitzil.”
Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. Mexico had the largest
native population of the New World, and the Olmec and Mayan civilizations
there were thousands of years old. Moreover, the Aztecs had sophisticated
religious rituals dating back to 1325 when they arrived in the Valley of
Mexico. During this colonial period, Spanish friars joined with the Spanish
King’s Royal Armed Forces in destroying native temples and constructing new
Catholic churches in their place. The apparition of La Virgen
de Guadalupe on December 12, 1531 on the hills of Tepeyac, Mexico
signaled the beginning of a new spiritual era in the Americas. With the
visitation of La Virgen, natives who had resisted Catholicism turned to
the Brown Madonna as their predominant symbol of inspiration and proof that
God listened to them. Jacqueline Salgado,
“Tonantzin.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. Jacques Lafaye, author of
the book Quetzalcoatl and Guadalupe: The Formation of Mexican National
Consciousness, noted that before the apparition, Catholic
missionaries had little success converting the native population. Researchers
partially attributed this lack of success to the Friars’ failure to teach
natives the Spanish language, although in their assimilation efforts, the
friars created colleges and schools for native children. However, most Indian
families rejected the idea of becoming “Spanish.” Moreover, Cortes had
rewarded many of his soldiers with encomiendas, the landed estates that
came with free Indian labor, and the Indians were also required to pay
tribute to the owners of the large estates and mines. Alexandra Nelipa, “La
Virgen.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. In addition to describing
the Spanish failure to assimilate the native population, Lafaye argued that
nation-building required cultural harmony among the Spanish colonists
regarding their identity. This thorny identity question was complicated by
the arrogance of the initial Spaniards who arrived with Cortes. They
considered themselves Spaniards first, people of the Iberian Peninsula. They
sought and held all the important government and religious posts in the
conquered territory. In justifying their authority to govern, these Espanoles
declared themselves superior to the Creoles, the children of Spanish
parents born in Mexico. The Espanoles expressed condescending
views of racial mixing and especially viewed themselves as superior to the
Indians and those of mixed races. Richard Arredondo, “Virgen
de Guadalupe al Barroco.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by
Ricardo Romo. The French intellectual
Lafaye linked the apparition of La Virgen de Guadalupe to the
emergence of a Mexican national consciousness. In essence, he viewed the
incorporation of Catholicism made possible by the apparition not only as
serving as a beginning of religious transformation but also as key to the
formation of the identity of the Mexican nation. The earliest mention of La Virgen
de Guadalupe in Texas occurred in 1689 when Alonso de León, the
Spanish governor of Coahuila, discovered and named the river 30 miles north
of San Antonio the Río Guadalupe after La Virgen
de Guadalupe. Anita Valencia, “Soy Tu
Madre.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. Historians note that La Virgen
de Guadalupe also played a significant role in Mexican colonial
history. In 1810, nearly three hundred years after the appearance of the
Virgen, Mexican colonists began their fight for independence from the Crown
of Spain. On September 10, 1810, Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, a Roman Catholic
priest in Dolores, Mexico, rang the bell of his church calling for
parishioners to revolt against the Spanish colonial government. Thousands of
Mexicans, mainly of Indian and Mestizo heritage, joined Father Hidalgo
hoisting the banner of Our Lady of Guadalupe as they marched against the
Spaniards. Willie Herron. East Los
Angeles Mural dedicated to Mexican Independence [Virgen Guadalupe is behind
the light post]. Photo by Ricardo Romo. One hundred years later,
almost to the date of the Mexican War of Independence of 1810, Emiliano
Zapata led a rebel army consisting largely of exploited rural Indian laborers
to fight against the dictator Porfirio Diaz in the Mexican Revolution. These
soldiers also carried the banner of the Brown Madonna. Alfredo R. Rodriguez, “La
Guadalupe.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by Ricardo Romo. Once again in 1965 in the
US Southwest when Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta launched the United Farm
Workers [UFW] labor movement, farmworkers protesting labor conditions marched
with the banner of La Virgin de Guadalupe. The advent of
the Chicano Art Movement coincided with these early years of the UFW
movement. Chicano artists painted social justice murals which often included
images of La Virgin de Guadalupe and adorned public walls
in cities across the Southwest. Mexican historians note
that La Virgin de Guadalupe became a unifying symbol for
Mexican identity and nationalism during the Mexican Independence era
[1810-1820]. This symbolism resonated with Mexican Tejanos during the wars
against Spanish rule in Texas, such as in the Battle of Medina in 1813, one
of the major battles against the Spanish forces fought near San Antonio. Over
the last hundred years, La Virgen de Guadalupe has also been
considered a protector of migrants, a role of immense significance today when
migration is considered a pressing national issue. Angelina Pliego,
“Tradicion de Guadalupe.” Courtesy of Centro Cultural Aztlan. Photo by
Ricardo Romo. The veneration of the
Brown Virgin grows every day. The Mexico City Basilica dedicated to the
Virgin de Guadalupe is the second most visited church in the world after the
Vatican. In 2019, the Basilica in Mexico City recorded more than 11 million
worshipers and visitors. Many of the Mestizo and Indian worshipers approach
the Basilica on their knees seeking respite and healing or offering gratitude
for miracles bestowed by La Virgen. Visitors arrive by the thousands daily to
pray before the tilma of Juan Diego with the image of La Virgin
de Guadalupe . In the U.S. Southwest on December 12th, many
Latinos, and especially Latina/Mexican immigrant women, continue to celebrate
the Brown Madonna with rosary prayers and red roses. Vincent
Valdez, “La Virgen de Guadalupe.” [Wood, 8x4 ft.] Gift of Harriett and
Ricardo Romo to the McNay Museum of Art.
© 2024 Dr. Ricardo Romo |
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