LETTER
FROM MEXICO #2
A Hero of Tlatelolco
By David Bacon
NACLA Reports, web edition
https://nacla.org/news/2014/10/20/hero-tlatelolco
A Hero of Tlatelolco
By David Bacon
NACLA Reports, web edition
https://nacla.org/news/2014/10/20/hero-tlatelolco
MEXICO CITY (10/10/14) -- Every year on October 2
thousands of Mexican students pour into the streets of Mexico City, marching
from Tlatelolco (the Plaza of Three Cultures) through the historic city center
downtown, to the main plaza, the Zocalo.
They're remembering the hundreds of students who were gunned down by
their own government in 1968, an event that shaped the lives of almost every
politically aware young person in Mexico during that time.
This year, just days before the march, the municipal
police in Iguala, Guerrero, shot students from the local teachers' training
college at Ayotzinapa. More
demonstrations and marches are taking place all over Mexico, demanding that the
government find 43 students still missing.
Many speculate that graves found in Iguala contain their bodies -
murdered by the same police, acting as agents of the local drug cartel. Students marching on October 2 were in the
streets for them as well, aware that the bloody events of 1968 were not so far
away in some distant past.
Raul Alvarez Garin was one of those whose world changed
at Tlatelolco. He was a leader of the
national student strike committee, organizing campus walkouts and street
mobilizations through the spring of 1968.
This rebellious upsurge was simultaneous with student protests in
France, the U.S. and, it seemed then, the whole world. In Mexico it culminated in a huge rally at
Three Cultures Plaza.
The Mexican government was preparing for the Mexico City
Olympics that year. It had never
tolerated political dissent beyond very narrow limits, but then it was even
more defensive than usual, fearing any social movement that appeared to
challenge its hold on the country's politics.
The authorities decided to bring out the army and shoot the students
down.
Somehow Alvarez survived the bullets in the plaza, and
was then shut into a cell in the notorious Lecumberri prison for two years and
eight months. He died two weeks ago on
September 27, having spent a lifetime trying to assign responsibility for the
decision to fire on the crowd. There was
actually no mystery about it. The orders
for the massacre were given by then-Secretary of the Interior (Gobernacion)
Luis Echevarria. But Echevarria was
acting for Mexico's political establishment, organized in the Institutional
Revolutionary Party (PRI). Alvarez
wanted the crime acknowledged publicly and the guilty punished. By spending the next half-century pursuing
that goal, he became not just a hero to the Mexican left, but its conscience.
Alvarez was already a man of the left when he got to
Tlatelolco. He'd joined the Young
Communists, but then left before 1968.
He married Maria Fernanda Campa, daughter of Valentin Campa, one of
Mexico's most famous radicals who lived underground and went to prison after
leading a railroad workers strike in 1958.
After his release, Campa became the 1976 presidential candidate of the
Mexican Communist Party, before it merged with other parties and eventually
disappeared.
Later in life it was hard to imagine Alvarez as he was
described by friends in 68 - a skinny intense youth of 27. When I met him in 1989 he was already a man
of substantial girth. We'd go to lunch
with his brother, economist Alejandro Alvarez, and spend hours talking politics. Raul would get animated, talking beneath his
huge mustache faster than my broken Spanish could keep up. He'd ask a hundred questions about Mexicans
and unions in the U.S., and we'd plan articles for the newspaper he edited,
Corre la Voz (Spread the Word).
Alvarez believed that words have power. Long before Corre la Voz, he started another
famous Mexican leftwing journal, Punto Critico, with other 1968 veterans. His goal was to make his politics accessible
to ordinary people, not to inspire debate among dogmatists. "He put our debates into context and
showed their limits," remembered Luis Navarro, now an editor at Mexico's
leftwing daily La Jornada. "His
language was always understandable."
Through the years after 1968 he supported every worker's
fight that seemed capable of improving conditions, but that also challenged the
political order. As Mexico's political
structure began to change in the 1980s Cuauhtemoc Cardenas ran for President in
1988, against the PRI his father had founded forty years earlier. Alvarez and others saw the Cardenas campaign
as an opening to wrest power from the PRI, twenty years after Tlatelolco. As the votes for Cardenas were being counted,
and it was clear he was winning, the election computers suddenly went
down. When they came back up the next
morning the PRI candidate, Carlos Salinas de Gortari, one of the country's most
corrupt politicians, was declared the winner.
During and after that campaign, many currents of the
Mexican left came together and organized the Democratic Revolutionary
Party. Alvarez was a founder. He began to look for a way to break workers
and unions free of the PRI, to give the new party a working-class base. I met him that year after the election, when
I came to Mexico with other U.S. trade unionists. The North American Free Trade Agreement was
already on the horizon. Raul and Alejandro Alvarez were some of the first
people who saw the advantage of cooperation in trying to fight it on both sides
of the border.
I was beginning to work as journalist north of the
border. Raul and Alejandro helped me
understand that for all of NAFTA's disastrous impact on the workers of my
country, the trade agreement would have much worse consequences in Mexico. I
spent last week as a judge in the Permanent People's Tribunal investigating the
causes of migration from Mexico to the U.S. and the terrible violations of the
rights of migrants in both countries.
It's clear that if anything, they underestimated the damage. And repression in Mexico is not just a thing
of the past. As we met as judges in the
Permanent People's Tribunal, just days after Raul Alvarez died, we heard
testimony about yet other mass killings -- of 73 migrants killed and buried in
the desert in northern Mexico, and the discovery of 193 more in 47 graves less
than a year later.
The PRI finally lost the Presidency in 2000, although not
to the left but to the rightwing National Action Party. Nevertheless, Alvarez believed it might be
possible to get a new government, even a conservative one, to call the
murderers of 1968 to account. A new
office was created, the Special Prosecutor for Social and Political Movements
of the Past. Alvarez, Felix Hernandez
Gamundi and Jesus Martin del Campo filed a legal case against Echevarria over
the Tlatelolco massacre, the killings of other students in a street protest in
1971, and the "dirty war" in which the Mexican government targeted
leftists for assassination through the rest of the 1970s.
Formal charges were finally made against Luis Echevarria
Alvarez and Luis Gutierrez Oropeza for the Tlatelolco murders, and Mario Moya
Palencia and Alfonso Martinez Dominguez, among others, for the 1971
attacks. In the end, however, these
former functionaries were able to avoid trial after invoking legal
technicalities challenging the ability of prosecutors to indict them. In reality, the political system itself was
reluctant to unearth a network of responsibility that would have spread to
include many others. Nevertheless, Raul
Alvarez and his two co-complainants felt their work made plain to the Mexican
people the terrible acts of repression that had cost many lives, and who had
given the orders for them.
Bringing up the rear of the October 2 march were members
of the only union visibly present -- the Mexican Electrical Workers (SME). Both Alvarez and this union have been anchors
of leftwing politics in Mexico City. For
twenty years the SME campaigned to stop the Mexican government from turning
over the nationalized oil and electrical power industries to private
corporations. To neutralize its
opposition, the SME's 44,000 members were fired five years ago. The PAN administration of Felipe Calderon
ordered the army to occupy the generating stations and declared the union
"non-existent." When the PRI
came back into power last July, it pushed through a constitutional amendment
permitting the privatization.
Raul would have pointed out that there is really no
difference between the pro-corporate policies of PRI and PAN. He fought to keep parts of the PRD from
supporting the same privatization reforms.
Just days before his death, a delegation of SME leaders went to his home
in Mexico City, and gave him a union card, making him member #16,600. He told them he was proud to be a member of
this "union in resistance."
Raul Alvarez' photograph, taken on another October 2
march a few years earlier, was carried as the banner at the head of the
marchers this year. If he'd been alive,
he would undoubtedly have been there in front himself.
No comments:
Post a Comment