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MACKENZIE WEATHERLY. TWELVE WOMEN IN THE TWELFTH YEAR “WE LEARN AS WE GO”. “We Learn As We Go”. By: Hilary Klein. Background . Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) Best known for the uprising in January 1994 Broad social movement Principal demands Land
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MACKENZIE WEATHERLY TWELVE WOMEN IN THE TWELFTH YEAR“WE LEARN AS WE GO”
“We Learn As We Go” By: Hilary Klein
Background • Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) • Best known for the uprising in January 1994 • Broad social movement • Principal demands • Land • Indigenous rights and culture • Constructed indigenous autonomy in its territory • Own government • Health and education infrastructure • Economic institutions
Background • Zapatista territory covers much of the eastern part of the Mexican state of Chiapas. • Hundreds of villages in the Lacandon jungle, the canyon region, the highlands and the northern zone of Chiapas make up the Zapatista support base.
EZLN • 1996-Intercontinental Gathering for Humanity and Against Neoliberalism • Key event for world-wide movement against capitalist globalization • One of the only times public space dedicated to Zapatista women telling their stories • Aprox. 3,000 participants attended this gathering • 3 days of 200 different Zapatista women telling their stories • Each of the five Caracoles, were represented
Before • Many worked on the plantations • Described mothers’ and grandmothers’ lives as: • horrendous, exploitation , violence and discrimination, lack of access to health care and education • Triple discrimination • Women, poor, and indigenous
After • Credit the Zapatista movement to changes • rights as women • Decrease in domestic violence • Right to choose who to marry • Right to choose how many children to have • Not restricted to working in the home and raising children • Women now serve as local and regional representatives, political leaders, and members of the government, health and education promoters
How were these changes achieved? • Women’s collectives • Vegetable gardens, bread-making, artisan. • Source of financial resources invested back into the communities • Collectives acted as a springboard for participation in other areas in the movement
Leadership in the EZLN • ComandantaRamona • Early Political leader • Founded the National Indigenous Congress in 1996 • Major Ana Maria • One of the first military leaders of EZLN • Women slowly started participating politically more and more • 1993-Revolutionary Women’s Law
Rhetoric vs Reality • Common contradiction in radical and revolutionary movements • Rhetoric about women’s rights important first step • However reality needs to catch up to the statements made by the leadership about women's role in the movement • Some Zapatista communities women largely still in subordinate positions • Tension was present at the gathering • Listeners left feeling that the women were describing ideal conditions not how they really are
Political Participation • Women often participated in the autonomous council, they present proposals to the community • Solved problems within the community • Resolved family disputes • Helped women be treated as equals • Encourage others to be active and participate
Health and Education • Autonomous health car and education systems were developed in response to the lack • Common in past for children to die from curable disease • Lived far away from city and even if could get there often denied due to racism against indigenous people • Few schools in the indigenous communities and those that existed did not allow girls • Both schools and health care centers were created within the communities
The Other Campaign & Dialogue with Civil Society • Final theme of the encuentro- gathering was women and the Other Campaign • Most recent mobilization and process of dialogue with civil society • Group traveling to sectors of society those most marginalized and listening to their experiences. • Emphasizes problem is bad government • Part of the vision of the Zapatisa movement • Right to land, housing, education, health-care self-determination for all oppressed communities
The Encuentro • More solid recognition of women’s rights in the Zapatista movement • Those that participated gained confidence and knowledge • Use to reflect how far they have come and where they need to go still
Twelve Women in the Twelfth Year • In the 12th year of the EZLN many important women are forgotten • Tells the stories of 12 different women and their significance • Mainly Night of January 1st 1994 • Night the rebels take San Cristobal de Las Casas
Women of the EZLN • ComandanteRomona • Negotiator during Peace Talks • Insurgent Infantry Captain Irma • Took the plaza of Ocosingo • Insurgent Infantry Captain Elisa • Became Captain during battle after Captain was injured • Give orders in soft murmur but everyone obeys • Insurgent Infantry Captain Laura • Captain of a unit composed of only men • Insurgent Infantry Captain Silvia • Trapped for 10 days after fighting in Ocosingo • Slips past multiple federal soldiers and military checkpoint
Women of EZLN • Insurgent Infantry Captain Maribel • Took Radio Station in Las Margaritas • First rebel to have contact with government • When asked her aged she responds with “502” counts all the years since the rebellion began • Infantry Insurgent Isidora • Rescues unit of 40, all men from the flames in Ocosingo while wounded • First Lieutenant in hospital, Amalia • Saves her Captain and refuses to surrender when surrounded • Lieutenant in hospital, Elena • Illiterate when joined, learn to read, write, and medicine
Twelve Women • December 1994 Ana Mara commands to break through military blockade around the Lacandon Jungle • Monica, Isabela, Yuri, Patricia, Juana, Ofelia, Celina, Maria, Gabriela, Alicia, Zenaida, Maria Luisa • The Zapatistas escaped the blockade • The women are dismissed and made invisible
Conclusion • Dona Juanita • Finally reached her dream • There is still more to fight for • Many of these women are forgotten • Their faced erased, name hidden “Tomorrow, if there is to be one, it will be made with the women, and above all, by them…”