Indigenous Mexicans turn inward to survive COVID-19, barricading villages and growing their own food

Authored by theconversation.com and submitted by shallah
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While the coronavirus hammers Mexico, some Indigenous communities in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca are finding creative ways to cope.

Oaxaca, one of Mexico’s poorest and most ethnically diverse states, is home to numerous Indigenous communities, including the Zapotec people. I have spent many years in the central valleys of Oaxaca conducting anthropological research in rural Zapotec villages, documenting the people’s lives, migration patterns and food culture.

Now, my summer research in Oaxaca canceled due to the pandemic, I am learning from afar how the Zapotec are confronting the coronavirus given such complicating factors as chronic poverty, inadequate health care, limited internet, language barriers and a lack of running water.

Working with colleagues at Mexico’s Universidad Tecnológica de los Valles Centrales de Oaxaca and scouring online media resources, I find the Zapotec are surviving the pandemic by doing what they’ve always done when the Mexican government can’t, or won’t, help them: drawing on local Indigenous traditions of cooperation, self-reliance and isolation.

So far, it’s working. While infections and death are rising relentlessly across Mexico, many Indigenous communities in Oaxaca remain largely insulated from the coronavirus. The Indigenous Mixtec village of Santos Reyes Yucuná reported its first infection on July 17, for example – four months after COVID-19 reached Mexico.

Cooperation is a cornerstone of Zapotec life in Oaxaca. A history of social exclusion by the federal government reminds the Zapotec not to rely on politicians to save them.

People work together from a young age, joining together in “tequio,” or communal labor brigades, to complete projects that can range from painting a school to repairing the electrical grid. Individuals, their families and their friends routinely work together to make small jobs go quickly and to make big jobs seem less overwhelming.

The Zapotec also maintain relative isolation from broader Mexican society, my research shows. They grow food in their “milpas,” or garden plot, to supplement store-bought fare, and police their own communities with volunteers called “topiles.” With high levels of community trust and a history of self-rule that predates the Spanish conquest, the Zapotec who continue to live in rural Oaxaca neither need nor allow much outside access to their villages.

These three aspects of traditional Zapotec culture – cooperation, isolation and self-reliance – are all helpful in a pandemic.

According to researcher M.C. Nydia Sanchez of Oaxaca’s Universidad Tecnológica, Zapotec families are sharing scarce resources like food, information, water and face masks in what’s called “guelaguetza,” the practice of working together and gift-giving.

And at a time when Mexico’s food supply chain is under stress, villagers are ensuring no one goes hungry by ramping up their crop of “maiz,” the corn used to make tortillas.

“Chapulines” – grasshoppers harvested from the fields and quickly toasted over a fire – are returning to the table as a protein-rich alternative to expensive, store-bought meats that are no longer available locally.

The tight-knit nature of Zapotec communities can, however, also complicate other measures critical to limiting residents’ exposure to infection.

These are small villages of no more than a few thousand souls. Everyone knows everyone, and it is typical for Zapotec people to spend much of their day together with family and friends. This can make it difficult to maintain the social distancing recommended by national health officials.

“To no longer greet each other so much on the street [is difficult], because we are used to it,” a Zapotec man named Jose Abel Bautista Gonzalez told Reuters in April. “It is a tradition, the culture of the people.”

Rather than closing their doors to family and friends, then, the Zapotec are aiming to stop COVID-19 from getting in at all.

Across much of Oaxaca, villagers are building barricades made of chain, stones and wood to physically block access into and out of their communities, which are typically served by only one road. Many villages are effectively quarantined from society.

“We decided to set up these barriers so that visitors or outsiders wouldn’t be coming in,” José Manzano, of San Isidro del Palmar, told Global Press Journal on June 28.

Such decisions, like most Zapotec policies, are built upon community consensus – not made on the order of a local or national political leader.

Indigenous Mexican communities are unlikely to escape unscathed from the pandemic.

Mexico is so far losing its battle with the economic effects of the coronavirus: Jobs are disappearing, and economists predict the national economy may contract by 8% this year. Tourism, the lifeblood of Mexico’s economy, has halted.

That means hunger and a long recession that experts say will impact the rural poor disproportionately. Mexico’s social development agency estimates up to 10 million people may fall into extreme poverty, ending the country’s nearly decade-long run of poverty reduction.

And if the coronavirus does get into Zapotec communities, it will probably hit residents hard. Their villages lack the running water, social distancing, mask supply and health care necessary to slow the spread of the disease.

The lack of potable water additionally increases the risk that intestinal problems like cholera, among other health conditions common in rural Indigenous populations, will exacerbate the effects of COVID-19.

The Mexican government has committed to build more rural hospitals, including in Oaxaca. But the virus moves faster than construction crews. The Zapotec’s best bet, they know, is still themselves.

Editor’s note: This story has been updated to accurately characterize the Indigenous inhabitants of the village Santos Reyes Yucuná.

jabberwockxeno on August 14th, 2020 at 14:50 UTC »

I've seen a few people comment that they didn't even realize there were people from indigenous Mexican cultures like the Maya, Zapotec, Mixtec, etc still around... This is unfortunately a very common misconception, and goes to show how bad education is on Indigenous American (across the americas, not just the US) societies is.

There's still millions of people in Mexico who speak Nahuatl (Aztec), Maya languages, Zapotec, Mixtec, Purepecha, etc; who are still mostly ethnically those same civilizations, though obviously they are fairly culturally assimilated in a lot of respects: Catholic, usually, not practicing actual Mesoamerican polytheism, they don't use pyramids as temples, etc; though there's a fair amount of Mesoamerican cultural practices that got mixed into their Catholicism.

They also tend to live in rural, poor areas and face a lot of discrimination, even though the ruins of cities they historically made get used for tourism by the Mexican government. I've even heard stories from an archeologist that some of the Maya people who were living right next to ruins didn't even realize their ancestors would have been the ones who built it, because education in those areas is that poor and/or because the Mexican goverment doesn't really teach much preshispanic history anyways, and what they do teach is often heavily Aztec-centric for national identitity reasons.

The Zapotec people which this article discusses, were historically (and are obviously still there today) one of a few civilizations in what's now the Mexican state of Oaxaca, the other most notable one being the Mixtec. Monte Alban, a major Zapotec political center/captial, was one of the earliest large scale metropolises in Mesoamerican history and may have been the first site with a large scale formal political bureaucracy, and stayed an important political center from 500BCish to around 600AD, by which point it declined and other Zapotec centers like Mitla became more important. By the time the Aztec came around in the 14th and 15th centuries, most Zapotec city-states and kingdoms got conquered, but notably you had the Zapotec kingdom of Tehuantepec allying with Spanish conquistadors to take out their political rivals in the Mixtec kingdom of Tututepec (which was actually the surviving remnant of a larger empire formed by the Mixtec conqueror 8 Deer Jaguar Claw, who nearly unified the entire Mixtec civilization in the late 11th/early 12th century AD)

Also Mesoamerican history in general is super fascinating:

Most people are aware that the Mesoamericans, such as the Aztec, Maya, etc built big pyramids, were good at mathematics and calendars... that's pretty much all most people are actually aware about in terms of their accomplishments.

But, their cities rivaled what you saw in Ancient Greece and even contemporary 16th century europe, with populations in the tens to even hundreds of thousands, with sewage systems, plumbing, pressurized fountains, and toilets, and even some build on lakes out of artificial islands, with grids of canals and gardens throughout? Or how their sanitation and medical practices were some of the most advanced in the world, with buildings and streets washed daily, people bathing multiple times a week; strict grooming and hygine standards, state ran hosptials, and empirically based medicaltreatements and taxonomic categorizational systems for herbs, flowers, and other plant life?

It was also one of only 3 places in the world where writing was independently invented: Not just with simple pictographic scripts, either: the infamous Maya hieroglyphs are actually a full, true written language, with many other Mesoamerican scripts having varying degrees of phonetic elements as well.. They had books, too, made of paper made from tree bark

The Maya, in addition to keeping books, would meticulously catalog the political history and lives of their rulers into stone stela: To this day we have detailed family trees, and records of who did what on what day, records of wars, political marriages, and the like thank to those. For the Aztec, in addition to philosophers, called tlamatini, who would often teach at schools for the children of nobility (though even commoners attended schools, too in what was possible the world's first state-ran education system, for example, we have remaining works of poetry, as this excerpt from 1491, New Revelations of the Americas From Before Columbus, shows

I cannot recommend reading that entire excerpt enough, but I will post a short excerpt to entice people to:

“Truly do we live on Earth?”asked a poem or song attributed to Nezahualcóyotl (1402–72), a founding figure in Mesoamerican thought and the tlatoani of Texcoco, one of the other two members of the Triple Alliance. His lyric, among the most famous in the Nahuatl canon, answers its own question:

Not forever on earth; only a little while here. Be it jade, it shatters. Be it gold, it breaks. Be it a quetzal feather, it tears apart. Not forever on earth; only a little while here.

....

Contemplating mortality, thinkers in many cultures have drawn solace from the prospect of life after death. This consolation was denied to the Mexica, who were agonizingly uncertain about what happened to the soul. “Do flowers go to the region of the dead?” Nezahualcóyotl asked. “In the Beyond, are we still dead or do we live?” Many if not most tlamatinime saw existence as Nabokov feared: “a brief crack of light between two eternities of darkness.”

....

According to León-Portilla, one exit from this philosophical blind alley was seen by the fifteenth-century poet Ayocuan Cuetzpaltzin, who described it metaphorically, as poets will, by invoking the coyolli bird, known for its bell-like song:

He goes his way singing, offering flowers. And his words rain down Like jade and quetzal plumes. Is this what pleases the Giver of Life? Is that the only truth on earth?

Ayocuan’s remarks cannot be fully understood out of the Nahuatl context, León-Portilla argued. “Flowers and song” was a standard double epithet for poetry, the highest art; “jade and quetzal feathers” was a synecdoche for great value, in the way that Europeans might refer to “gold and silver.” The song of the bird, spontaneously produced, stands for aesthetic inspiration. Ayocuan was suggesting, León-Portilla said, that there is a time when humankind can touch the enduring truths that underlie our fleeting lives. That time is at the moment of artistic creation

I could go on, but this is basically a shortened version the first of 3 comments I made here, which go into:

In the first comment, I notes how Mesoamerican and Andean socities way more complex then people realize, in some ways matching or exceeding the accomplishments of civilizations from the Iron age and Classical Anitquity, be it in city sizes, goverment and political complexity, the arts and intellecualism, etc

The second comment explains how there's also more records and sources of information than many people are aware of for Mesoamerican cultures, with certain civilizations having hundreds of documents and records on them; as well as the comment containing a variety of resources and suggested lists for further reading, information, and visual references; and

The third comment contains a summary of Mesoamerican history from 1400BC, with the region's first complex site; to 1519 and the arrival of the spanish, as to stress to people just how many different civilizations and states existed and how much history actually occurred in that region, beyond just the Aztec and Maya

gohan556 on August 14th, 2020 at 12:42 UTC »

When this first started in Mexico my grandma and her whole village were isolated from the outside. Not even letting people inside due to fears from getting infected. Many tried to flee the city to go in her village, but were refused entry by the whole village.

jackerseagle717 on August 14th, 2020 at 09:39 UTC »

its the same in my country (india) too.

literally no help is being provided by the government to poor migrant workers and villagers. so they walked hundreds of kilometers in peak indian summer heat, some with newborn babies and children, back to their villages. they have barricaded themselves in their villages and are not allowing entry to anyone from cities. they are also growing vegetables and food for themselves and selling the excess for metropolitan cities.