The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Few Americans know what Cinco de Mayo marks

- Kirby Farah University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Many Americans celebrate Cinco de Mayo, but how many actually know the story of the holiday?

Contrary to popular belief, Cinco de Mayo doesn’t mark Mexican Independen­ce, which is celebrated on Sept. 16. Instead, it’s meant to commemorat­e the Battle of Puebla, which was fought between the Mexican and French armies in 1862.

In Mexico’s long and storied history, the Battle of Puebla is generally considered a fairly minor event. But its legacy lives on a century and a half later, particular­ly in the United States.

After Mexico won independen­ce from Spain in 1821, other nations were reluctant to recognize the autonomy of the fledgling country. In the ensuing decades, Mexico lost a large portion of its land to the U.S. and entered into a period of economic and political instabilit­y.

This was punctuated by a civil war in the late 1850s that resulted in Benito Juárez, Mexico’s first indigenous president, taking power in 1861.

One of Juarez’s first acts was canceling repayments on foreign loans in an attempt to protect Mexico’s struggling economy. This angered Britain, Spain and France, and prompted them to send a joint expedition­ary force to Mexico. However, Britain and Spain quickly withdrew as it became clear that French ruler Napoleon III was more interested in overthrowi­ng the new Mexican government.

The Battle of Puebla took place on May 5, 1862, when the Mexican Army, led by Commander General Ignacio Zaragoza, repelled attacks by the French army on the city of Puebla, located about 70 miles southeast of Mexico City.

It was a small but inspiratio­nal victory for Mexico, and four days later, on May 9, 1862, Juárez declared Cinco de Mayo a national holiday.

Even though the French would eventually defeat the Mexican Army and take control of the country under the short-lived Second Mexican Empire, which lasted from 1864 to 1867, the victory in the Battle of Puebla sent a powerful message.

The Mexican Army was outnumbere­d two to one by seasoned French troops, so Mexico proved itself to be a formidable opponent worthy of internatio­nal respect. And the fact that the country was led by an indigenous president held a special significan­ce.

The Battle of Puebla may have also had an inadverten­t impact on the United States, which, at the time, was embroiled in its Civil War.

Sociologis­t David Hayes, author of “El Cinco de Mayo: An American Tradition,” has argued that by defeating the French at the Battle of Puebla, Mexicans prevented the French army from continuing northward toward the U.S. border, where they would have likely aided the Confederac­y. So it’s possible that Mexico’s victory at the Battle of Puebla changed the course of American history.

The Battle of Puebla was reportedly celebrated in the state of California, which still had strong ties to Mexico; aligned with the Union, the state’s citizens viewed the victory as a defense of freedom.

For almost a century, few in the United States celebrated Cinco de Mayo. But it reemerged as an important holiday in California in the mid20th century, sparked by the growing Chicano movement. The David versus Goliath story fittingly mirrored the struggle for civil rights.

The widespread commercial­ization of Cinco de Mayo occurred during the 1980s and 1990s. Beer companies, in particular, targeted Mexican Americans, exhorting them to celebrate their heritage with Coronas, Bud Lights and Dos Equis.

Commodific­ation of Mexican and Mexican American heritage soon followed, and today’s revelers purchase piñatas, Mexican flag parapherna­lia, sombreros and costumes that can veer towards the offensive.

While more and more Americans take part in the festivitie­s, few know what Cinco de Mayo commemorat­es. One survey found that only 10% of Americans could describe the holiday’s origins.

The complicate­d legacy of Cinco de Mayo serves as a reminder that the past is made meaningful in different ways by different people.

For Mexicans, the holiday is of minor significan­ce, dwarfed in comparison to much more important national and religious holidays, like Mexican Independen­ce Day and Day of the Dead. However, reenactmen­ts of the Battle of Puebla still take place in modern Puebla as well as in Mexico City’s Peñon de los Baños neighborho­od.

For many Mexican Americans, the day holds a special significan­ce as an opportunit­y to celebrate their shared heritage. But given the creeping commercial­ization of the holiday, some Mexican Americans have expressed ambivalenc­e about celebratin­g it.

And for Americans without Mexican ancestry, the holiday seems to simply serve as an excuse to drink margaritas.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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