| Volume Thirty-Nine | 1997 | |
On June 12, 1833, the Mexico City newspaper
Striking a foreboding note, the editors of the conservative paper
predicted that despite any attempts to stop the disease's progress
through the art of science,
The best defense against cholera's onslaught (
This essay will illustrate how attempts to understand the cholera epidemic of 1833 in Mexico were more often than not ideologically charged. It will demonstrate how the disease became a sort of metaphor for the characteristic instability of the nation at the time. Sources consulted include personal journals, newspapers and pamphlets published in Mexico City during the summer of 1833.
Newspapers of the 1830s in Mexico were highly politicized, reflecting the journalistic revolution that had accompanied the movement toward independence a decade earlier. The same conditions applied to pamphlets. Many times anonymously penned, the latter often served as tracts for competing conservative and liberal interests.4
Some of the most prolific pamphleteers of the time were politically active figures who made good use of public print to sway popular opinion.
Cholera entered Mexico during the short-lived presidential administration of the radical, liberal statesman, Valentín Gómez Farías. Santa Anna had appointed him as president of the republic in the aftermath of his victory over the conservative and increasingly authoritarian general, Anastasio Bustamante. As this study will detail, many conservative reactionaries used the disease's successes to discredit the liberal reforms of Gómez Farías' federalist government. The Catholic Church in particular, which saw its wealth come under steady attack during his brief tenure in office, claimed that the disease was a divine punishment for the liberal policies pursued by the state.
In the decades following Independence, the Catholic Church in Mexico continued to hold considerable influence (spiritual, political, and financial) among the Mexican conservative elite and masses, a condition which it guarded jealously. As one historian has argued, "it was a widely accepted fact that any political leader who threatened to lay a finger on the Church was met with anathemas and excommunications, with prophecies of divine vengeance and with the preaching of civil war."5
In 1833, the Catholic Church was still the largest owner of land in Mexico, a fact that drew the attention of reform-minded liberals eager to break the economic depression that had effected Mexico since independence from Spain. A chief target of their liberal program was not only the landed wealth of the Church, but also the revenues collected from the tithe.
For conservative interests in 1833, the Church was a symbol of the traditional stability many longed for in the troubled years after independence. Throughout the colonial period the Church had secured for itself many privileges by building strong ties to the elite classes. For example, it was the primary lender of money to creole interests, many of whom had second sons entering its service. It also dominated colonial education. As political thought polarized after independence, and the Mexican liberals leveled their sights on its wealth, the Church was quick to exploit the myriad relations that it enjoyed with the moneyed and propertied classes of Mexico. As one author has put it, "the clergy would not only keep their revenues and their privileges; they would also fight freedom of opinion, secular education, anything that might undermine the power which ignorance and superstition had given them over the masses."6
In June of 1833, however, Gómez Farías' radical government
made the first of several overt attempts to curb the power of the
Church. "Recent appointments of canons were annulled, a papal-bull
designating a new bishop for the Yucatán diocese was rejected,
discussion of a law introducing minor changes in the clerical and
military
Gómez Farías' attack on the Church's corporate and entailed properties was part and parcel of his economic liberalism. It also drew the most fire from the pulpit. Gómez Farías believed that land as a form of capital had to be freed from the hold of corporate privilege in order to promote economic progress. For him, ecclesiastical and aristocratic claims to property rights were contrary to the interests of the Mexican citizenry as a whole.8
In response to such reforms, the conservative disunity that
had characterized the Bustamante era was quick to coalesce. Within
the traditionally conservative provinces, reaction to the
anticlerical proposals took the form of armed insurrection by
provincial generals determined to set the nation back on a more
traditionalist path. The state of Michoacán, an area in which
Spanish colonial society had sunk its roots deepest, was the first
to produce a conservative-backed insurrection proclaiming
On May 26, 1833, in the provincial capital of Morelia, Captain
Ignacio Escalada pronounced against the federal government in
Mexico City and pledged allegiance to the Church and its
privileges. In doing so he appealed to Santa Anna in Mexico City
to defend the cause through his office as supreme chief of the
nation. Although Santa Anna tacitly declined to associate himself
with Escalada's revolt, it soon became apparent that it was not an
isolated event. On June 1, a similar
The clergy and their supporters reacted by backing such movements. Their principal tactic was to foment disturbances among the still-very-Catholic masses from the pulpit as well as through the printed word. Their intent was to convince Santa Anna to abandon his support of Gómez Farías and dissolve his radical government, putting an end to the pronounced anti-clericalism of his regime.
The numerous conservative revolts that appeared in the
provinces throughout the summer of 1833 provided Gómez Farías with
a pretext for even more laws aimed at eliminating his opposition.
While the still pro-liberal Santa Anna busied himself with
preparing to do battle against the opponents of his government,
Gómez Farías accelerated the delivery of his reformist package. On
June 8, the Mexican congress proclaimed Gómez Farías' right to
resort to the use of
Two weeks later, on June 23, the government enacted the infamous
In response to the news of Escalada's revolt, the official
government paper This hypocritical soldier, supposing that we are
living in the eighteenth century, is deluded and
fancies himself a Mohammed promising to save the
religion of Christ and the
The most formidable of the conservative uprisings against
Gómez Farías, however, was that of General Durán, now joined by his
caudillo (military chieftain) cohort Mariano Arista, Santa Anna's
traitorous deputy commander of the previous campaign. On August 2,
1833,
The following day the paper reported that Arista and
Durán had sacked the town of San Juan del Río southeast of the
capital in order to re-supply their insurgent troops. The editors
of for as much as they profess and feign to pose as
the defenders of religion, quite the opposite their
perversities appear. Their deeds that become known
with each step they take are nothing more than
those of a large group of thugs and assassins that
disturb the tranquillity of families, attack all
classes of property, and rob even the goods of the
Church whose cause they proclaim to defend.14
Arista and Durán continued their marauding in the vicinity of Querétaro and were able to amass an army considerable enough to warrant Santa Anna's decision to lead a punitive force against it. As Santa Anna prepared to depart from Mexico City to engage the rebel force coming from the northwest, however, cholera entered the capital. After his departure, reports filtered in that the disease had struck his ranks. As the general later wrote in his autobiography:
In order to stop Arista's scandalous acts and to prevent their spreading further, I marched six thousand men to Guanajuato, where the rebel army was still in revolt. Choleramorbus had just entered Mexico, and a terrible epidemic struck my ranks while we were passing through the heavy rains in the Bajío. The dreaded disease ravaged and incapacitated a third of my force, causing me to delay back to Allende, where the epidemic had not reached. I remained in Allende during the worse part of the season, replenished my troops, and continued on to Guanajuato, which was also free of cholera.15
Cholera also struck the forces of Arista and Durán. On August
6,
Throughout the month of August, cholera took a heavy toll on the opposing armies. One source has estimated that Santa Anna alone lost 1,000 men to the dreaded disease.17
Arista and Durán suffered a similar fate; one paper reported that cholera was largely responsible for decimating their forces.18
When the epidemic subsided, Santa Anna finally caught up with Arista in early October and soundly defeated him. Durán remained at large, but he subsequently posed no real threat to the government. Durán eventually escaped to Guatemala where he died in exile.19
Against this backdrop of political division and military
treason, cholera steadily wound its way toward Mexico City.
Reports of the disease's progress in the provinces immediately
became caught up in the rhetoric of the press. Throughout June,
while cholera was claiming its first victims to the north in and
around Tampico and to the south in the Yucatán, the conservative
pro-clerical paper The time to speak is when there is freedom of the
press, with all its guarantees as provided by the
Constitution. The time to remain silent is when
the drove of demagogues that abuse extraordinary
faculties incite the masses to disorder and murder.
The anonymous editors of
The government responded to such innuendo by closing down the
newspaper. In We have the sweet pleasure of making known to our
readership (while at the same time protesting) that
the closure of this paper is by no means a sign of
weakness, nor selfishness, nor even a tacit
confession of admittance of guilt -- or that we find
ourselves guilty of the fact that we have given
cause or reason -- for the outbreak of revolution,
when our sole, faithful objective has been to avoid
one. It has been well-noticed that in spite of the
government's granting of extraordinary powers, that
in spite of having been given notice on our part of
the possibility of exile, we would have continued
with the same moderation of those respectable men
of society that abhor revolution.
We are
The Church continued throughout the summer of 1833 to goad and incite the public via the inflammatory language of religious pamphlets. In one such treatise the Dean of the Cathedral of Mexico City warned that:
Mexico that was in the past Catholic and religious, Mexico the favored vineyard of the Lord. How can it be that thou has become alien, foreign and odious for thy God? Alas Mexicans, in the last moments of your temporal existence when you are prostrate on your bed of pain, your limbs paralyzed and still, your eyes languid and filled with tears, your face darkened by the horrors of death, when you are abandoned by everything that now occupies you and charms you, your reason quieted, your passions silent, then the cries of your startled conscience will resound in the hollow of your heaving breast. And the respectable ministers of the Church, now despised, slandered and ridiculed, will surround you with holy zeal imploring the mercies of heaven.23
The government's response to such dire incantations included a decree on June 19 that prohibited the clergy from using the pulpit for any other purpose than to deliver the word of God. It also reminded them that their duty was to "inspire loyalty, in the spirit of peace, union and obedience, to the established authorities."24
The charge made by the editors of
Although a good deal of the legislation directed at the Church was designed to limit cholera's advance, conservative propagandists interpreted all such laws as an unwarranted attack upon the Church's privileges. For example, a law that attempted to limit large groups of people from gathering in plazas and churches was immediately seen as anti-clerical, and hence radical in design. In arriving at their conclusions, clerical propagandists neglected the warnings put forth in the medical pamphlets current at the time that substantiated such legislation and warned against the gathering of large groups of people in crowded, unsanitary conditions. In addition, many conservative reactionaries failed to see the medical logic behind a law of April 23 that prohibited religious wakes and the ceremonious display of the corpses of distinguished individuals in churches, but urged instead for rapid burials.25
That the government's actions in fighting cholera became caught up in the religious and political controversies of the day should not come as a surprise. In its implementation of a coherent sanitation policy, certain funds that were made available by the government came from recently-expropriated properties of the Church, including entailed estates once held by the clergy. Indeed, it was a fact that the government was eager to indicate. Such was the case of the properties belonging to the estate of the Duke of Terranova y Monteleone, the Sicilian heir to Hernán Cortés.26
On June 27,
The secularization of the Californian missions in August 1833,
during the height of the epidemic, was perhaps the most important
piece of liberal reform against the holdings of the Church since
the renewed attacks on the tithe. In turn, it served as yet
another clarion for the conservative opposition and prompted
renewed attacks by many pious souls convinced that cholera was
surely the Lord's revenge. The government paper
As the cholera epidemic progressed during the summer of 1833, more published sermons and religious sonnets appeared in the city's streets, establishments and homes attacking the Radicals' policies and those who supported them. One such sonnet warned:
Other sonnets, heavy with religious metaphor and symbolism, beseeched the populace to renew its faith in the wisdom of the Church.
Perhaps no other individual strove as hard to discredit the regime of Valentín Gómez Farías as did the pro-clerical, conservative lawyer, Carlos María Bustamante. As a stalwart propagandist for the Conservatives and a personal enemy of Gómez Farías, Bustamante consistently used cholera as a weapon in his assault on the government. In his historical journal, Bustamante wrote that "the memory of the government of Gómez Farías struck fear in the hearts of Mexicans just as did Robespierre put fear in the hearts of the French."31
"Extraordinary faculties and the
In his chronicle of the cholera epidemic, Bustamante portrays Gómez Farías as a blinded demagogue motivated by greed and vindictiveness. He wrote that
in the middle of this horrible confusion the only thing that remained firm and consistent were the principles of persecution of those that governed us; blindness accompanied reprobation. His hatred multiplied and doubled back on his efforts to sing a triumph over his enemies. Never have such measures been taken to gather wealth, to attack the sacred right of property and to mock the guarantees outlined in the constitution.33
Conservative diatribes such as those by Bustamante further strengthened the clergy's resolve to incite the lower classes against the radical policies of Gómez Farías. In his typically caustic, imaginative prose Bustamante claimed that in the midst of the epidemic's darkest days thousands of people flocked to the city's churches to renew their faith.
The capital found itself in such a state of commotion and upheaval that no one dared not to place themselves favorably in the eyes of God in case they should suffer His judgment. Former enemies reconciled their differences, broken marriages were mended, items stolen from Churches were returned to the hands of priests, and one noticed a great change in the comportment of persons formerly notorious and unruly. Confessors received from droves of penitents prohibited books in great volume whose indulgent passages had destroyed their morality; having been spared by the hand of cholera, one would put in the hands of their confessor a small key saying to him 'take from the drawer from which this key belongs the manuscripts that lie therein; take them and burn them, because they do not contain anything more than ridiculous plans and projects that I had invented to destroy the religion that I profess.'34
Despite the government's half-hearted attempts at prevention and
the inflammatory prose of the opposition, cholera passed through
Mexico City's gates on August 6, 1833. By the second week of
August the disease had begun to take a heavy toll of life in the
capital. Conservative reaction responded predictably. On August
12, 1833,
Moreover, the Archbishop rejected outright the opinions and advice of the Mexican medical community of which Gómez Farías, a physician by training, was a member. Instead he asked:
How can these quacks -- profane men -- possibly know of the cure of a disease so celestial and divine in origin? Attacking the body, it is able to take from the streets the souls of a certain class of serpents that have introduced the pest into the Lord's flock. Their doctors maintain that their knowledge of the disease will naturally guide them to a discovery of a cure. We must pass judgment on them and ask, when have they communicated with God or been graced with the aid of His knowledge and the revelation that choleramorbus is not a disease of Asian origin, nor brought to Europe by the armies of the Holy Alliance, but rather el ángel esterminador del día [the exterminating angel of the day], sent by the fury of heaven justly irritated by the heretical, impious, blasphemous and non-Catholic way of life that has been introduced into our Republic?36
The Bishop's denunciations gathered momentum and quickly took the form of a diatribe against the radical policies of the Gómez Farías regime and the accepted science of the day. He retorted:
This disease does not call for healing potions but rather reform of the intellect and of the heart. Just as sin is born from sensuality, intellectual faculties have cooperated to pervert the religiosity and Catholicism of the Mexican people.
Those incredulous souls that read this piece will see that it is not only a well of evangelical doctrine but rather a most luminous treaty on spiritual pathology in which are described with mastery the diseases of our souls.37
Warning of impending damnation should the state continue on its present course, the Archbishop ended his tract with a summary of conservative, clerical thought against recent attacks on the Church's corporate rights and properties. Defending the right of the Church to hold property, he argued that the wealth that Cortés accumulated during the Conquest, "risking his life by spreading the Christian faith in the service of God, was his [and subsequently of his heirs, the Duke Of Terranova y Monteleone's] by divine right."38
In regard to the
Concerning the issue of ecclesiastical
privileges (the
Finally, in defense of the much besieged tithes, he claimed they were the exclusive property of the Church. "Anything to the contrary is anathema."41
Over a month later on September 14, 1833, as cholera subsided
from the capital, an anonymous editor of
The specter of cholera and the manner in which it entered the political discourse during Gómez Farías' regime no doubt fueled the popular opposition that Santa Anna opportunistically began to sense against his appointed president.43
That cholera provided a pretext for Gómez Farías to enact anti-clerical measures, as many conservative detractors have argued, however, is difficult to prove. Gómez Farías' acceptance of extraordinary powers from the Mexican congress in early June, 1833, was part and parcel of the politics of the day. However, efforts by the clergy to incite the masses against his radicalism, and link the epidemic with the wrath of God, eventually produced the desired result. In the words of one student of Mexican history, "If the clergy were the propagandists and the paymasters of reaction, its chief source of power was the army."44
The growing indignation of the clergy and the
wealthy creoles was unbounded, and army officers
began to rebel, raising the cry of
In rebuffing extremist claims that cholera's successes were
the fault of the government, the liberal-backed paper
It is not the Mexican Church that raises the voice of rebellion; it is not the Church that indiscreetly incites those to revolt in order that they might follow a bloodied standard; it is those ambitious ones that cover themselves with vestments of hypocrisy, aspiring criminals that ingratiate and elevate themselves in order to attack and ruin the prosperity of the nation.46
Striking a middle note, the steadily more moderate paper although it should not be permitted to rejoice or
profit from such calamity, by the limited good that
has resulted, we will console ourselves to say that
such destructive catastrophes -- similar to volcanic
eruptions that purify the air, that fertilize the
soil -- bring forth the opportunity to diminish our
vices and revitalize the morality of our ways due
to the terror that they cause. We firmly believe
that Providence, at times, sends forth such
universal calamities in order to better a people.47
By looking at personal journals, newspapers and pamphlets published during Gómez Farías' administration, the historian is offered an unique and revealing window on Mexican society in the 1830s. Cholera was used as a tool by political factions of both liberal and conservative persuasion to influence public opinion and action. It provided quarreling factions with a strong symbol of the many ills afflicting Mexico at the time.
Besides claiming an estimated 10,000 lives in Mexico City alone, the epidemic served to polarize and heighten tensions between conservative and liberal factions.48
Indeed, the study of the epidemic and the historical sources it produced provide rich insight into their respective ideologies. For many in Mexico in 1833, be they part of the ignorant masses, the pious clergy, the educated elite or the land-owning class, cholera's presence and its high human toll no doubt stirred their consciences and their souls. In terms of the liberal politics of the day, the disease's devastation demanded reflection on not only temporal concerns, but religious ones as well.
Gómez-Farías' radical reformism, coupled with the epidemic's
course, provided the initial impetus to the many conservative-backed revolts (pronunciamientos) that arose against his
government. It can easily be surmised that the epidemic introduced
into the Mexican political scene an additional element of
instability at a time when governmental institutions and political
alliances were at their weakest. The myriad uprisings that
appeared in the provinces only compounded this fact. As a self-styled mediator and agent of stability, Santa Anna's altruistic
claims to be uninterested in politics and the presidency of Mexico
became less and less convincing after the summer of 1833. His
resumption of his duties as president in 1834 marked a turning
point in the political history of the Early Republic, as the
country turned once more to centralism and Hailed as the savior of Mexico by the clergy, who
pronounced his