Chicago Sun-Times

What Americans should learn about Cinco de Mayo

- BY FROYLAN JIMENEZ Froylan Jimenez is a history teacher in Chicago Public Schools.

Cinco de Mayo is a holiday that is often celebrated but rarely understood. For people of Mexican descent, Cinco de Mayo is a date in history that commemorat­es the unlikely victory of Mexican troops over the mighty French army in 1862.

Cinco de Mayo has become, for Mexican Americans, a day signifying that overcoming steep odds is possible — and where better to remember that underdog spirit than in America?

Yet, there are more meaningful connection­s to Cinco de Mayo that all Americans can relate to, as a lesson in the price of unity and the cost of division. The underpinni­ngs of the Cinco de Mayo conflict stemmed from the national debt that was incurred because polarized political factions took their difference­s to the point of civil war in Mexico’s Guerra de La Reforma, which pitted liberal and conservati­ve forces at odds over control of the government.

The conservati­ve side was so upset with the country’s new leadership that not only did they revolt against the government but also against the new constituti­on, and borrowed money from foreign countries to finance their war effort.

The Mexican Guerra de la Reforma was similar to the U.S. Civil War in that it was a military war as well as an ideologica­l war regarding human rights and dignity. While the topic of slavery divided Americans during this country’s Civil War, it was equality, education and private property in an unjust colonial system that prompted the issues in the Mexican conflict.

More specifical­ly, the liberal forces of Mexican President Benito Juarez advocated for separation of church and state, which meant stripping the Catholic Church of its vast real estate holdings to make way for more equitable home ownership and property redistribu­tion among ordinary citizens. In addition, Juarez and his allies pushed to provide free public education instead of allowing the church to have complete dominion over schooling.

In the end, the liberal forces defeated the conservati­ve forces that fought to keep the status quo, and Mexico began to dismantle its colonial system and offer more opportunit­ies to the people.

Meanwhile, Mexican conservati­ve leaders continued to lobby foreign countries to intervene. As a result, there was an internatio­nal dispute over the money that conservati­ve forces borrowed from France, Spain and England during that period. Juarez had to suspend those debt payments in order to prioritize the country’s domestic needs. In an effort to restructur­e and stabilize the economy and national unity, Juarez closed a chapter of civil conflict but opened a new saga in the form of foreign invasion.

The price for national unity was more war — this time against France, which claimed that it was fighting because of the foreign debt that it was owed but in reality saw an opportunit­y for imperialis­m.

While England and Spain understood that Mexico was simply asking for an extension of time to pay its debts, France sent military forces across the Atlantic to invade and occupy the country. It is here that we see the bravery, national defense and heroism of the Mexican Army on May 5, 1862 — Cinco de Mayo — at the battle of Puebla, which highlights the triumph over the much larger French army and most importantl­y, the victory for a united, more equitable country structured by a constituti­on.

The Mexican capital would eventually fall to the French and that would lead to the brief reign of French Emperor Ferdinand Maximillia­n. With the aid of the United States, Juarez was able to reclaim governance of Mexico and prevail over both the French and the conservati­ve Mexican forces that had defied his vision of unity and leadership. Similar to President Abraham Lincoln, Juarez was eventually able to make the changes his country needed.

Cinco de Mayo is viewed as a festive occasion to celebrate Mexican food and drinks, but it is more than that.

It is a lesson in courage and overcoming great odds. It is an example of a country’s extreme political polarizati­on and the resulting need for leadership that can bring stability. It set a precedent for rights and opportunit­ies in education and home ownership. It is an integral part of Mexican history, but also a teachable moment for all Americans who value a lesson in the price of national unity — and the cost of insurrecti­on against the principles of a nation’s constituti­on.

 ?? JEFF HAYNES/AP ?? Members of the Ballet Folklorico Mexico Lindo perform in celebratio­n of Cinco de Mayo before a May 5, 2019, game between the Red Sox and White Sox in Chicago.
JEFF HAYNES/AP Members of the Ballet Folklorico Mexico Lindo perform in celebratio­n of Cinco de Mayo before a May 5, 2019, game between the Red Sox and White Sox in Chicago.

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