CHIAPAS UPDATE: May 28-June 11, 2001
CPTnet
June 21, 2001
CHIAPAS UPDATE: May 28-June 11, 2001
Note: During the end of May, the Chiapas team carried out a consultation
with local advisors regarding CPT’s work in Chiapas. The consensus
continues to be that CPT’s work is an important contribution to the
complex situation. As the fall municipal (county) elections approach, there
is a predicted upswing in violence. (While the PRI, the ruling party in
Mexican politics for 70 years, lost the presidency last year, it did not
lose its hold on municipal and state governments. As contenders from other
parties continue to rise to the fore, the PRI party is struggling to
maintain its hold on power at any level.).
May 28:
Diego Mendez accompanied a member of the Civil Society of the Abejas to the
Chiapas capital city of Tuxtla Gutierrez to apply for a document required to
apply for a passport. (Two members of the Abejas, the pacifist indigenous
organization which is CPT’s closest local partner, are preparing to
join the CPT team in New Brunswick, Canada, later this year.)
May 29:
The team spent the day together in fasting and prayer after visiting the
Rancho Nuevo army base (near San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas), where
they spoke with General H. Sanchez (see forthcoming CPTnet release,
“Enjoy Tourism?”).
May 30:
Lynn Stolzfus traveled to the Abejas village of X’oyep, which recently
received a donation of tree seedlings to replant forests, which have been
decimated by cutting for firewood due to the high numbers of displaced in
the region.
May 31:
Mendez and Jerry Stein traveled to the autonomous community of Oventic.
(Autonomous communities, of which about 1,000 exist in Chiapas, have seceded
from the Mexican political system as part of their struggle for cultural and
economic recognition.) Oventic is one of seven
“Aguascalientes,” regional gathering points which serve as
cultural and political centers for the Zapatista movement. (The term
“Aguascalientes” comes from the site of a gathering during the
Mexican Revolution, where poets and thinkers came together to share and
dream about the possible future of Mexico.) In Oventic, the team attended
the opening of the first secondary school in the autonomous communities.
June 1-3:
The next day Stein and Mendez traveled with Fr. Francisco Angeles (name
changed), a Jesuit who works in this region, to attend a meeting of
catechists in Polho, another autonomous community. Mendez stayed in Polho
for two nights and attended the rest of the catechist meeting. Stolzfus
joined him there and they participated in Sunday worship at the Presbyterian
church in Polho.
Stein returned to San Cristobal with Fr. Angeles after attending
part of a retreat of the Abejas choir at the Catholic church in Yabteclum.
June 4:
Team members met with the Mexico staff of Global Exchange to talk about an
upcoming international conference on biodiversity (Jun. 15-17). Brethren
Volunteer Service Director Dan McFadden visited Stolzfus in San Cristobal.
June 6:
Stolzfus departed for a retreat in Guatemala. Mendez participated in a
planning meeting regarding the biodiversity conference at Global Exchange.
June 7:
Mendez and Stein went to Acteal to meet with the Mesa Directiva (Leadership
Council) to make arrangements for passports for the two Abejas who plan to
visit the CPT team in Esgenoopetitj. They traveled on to the Abejas
displacement camp of Nuevo Yibeljoj (where previous CPTers have spent
significant periods of time).
June 8:
Mendez returned to San Cristobal to meet with Global Exchange, CIEPAC, and
the human rights center of the Catholic diocese. Stein visited with families
in Nuevo Yibeljoj .
June 9:
Stein returned to San Cristobal. Mendez gave a talk to a group of students
from the U.S. studying at a university in Xalapa (which is on the Gulf coast
of Mexico, near Veracruz).
June 10:
Stein and Mendez accompanied Fr. Angeles to Tzabalo, a mixed community of
PRI supporters and Zapatistas. There was a 5-hour Catholic mass with 11
baptisms and the rededication and furnishing of the church building.