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May 11, 2006
Mexican
Women Beg: "Close the Border"
by David A. Yeagley, Ph.D.
Not
all Mexican women want to have "anchor
babies" in the United States. The real Mexican
women of Tecalpulco want their migrant men to come
back home and take care of the babies they left
behind. "Close the U.S. borders!" they say. "Send
our men back home!"
Tecalpulco is a small village in Guerrero,
Mexico, on Mexico's southernmost border. It is just
north of the city of Campuzano. Tecalpulco
is famous for hand-made craft and jewelry. There is
an internationally
known artisans establishment there called
ArtCamp.
Vacationers
know the place. The artisans run a coop, and
they're subject to the pressures of global
market manipulation.
But their men don't care. They've all moved
norte, to join the mass trespassing movement
in America.
And the women of southern Mexico are tired of
this nonsense. They have expressed their protest to
BadEagle.com,
where a number of pieces on Mexican
issues have been posted in recent weeks.
BadEagle.com has received direct mail from the
artisanas campesinas, the women who make the
famous jewelry.
I've gotten permission to post this
correspondence. The women write from the heart in
imperfect English, as one might expect.
Here is the first, from May 4, 2006:
- When our men went to the United States
they were young and adventurous; They have had
their adventure, now we want them to come home
to us and to their families and to their home
country. Close the border so that the ones who
are here do not leave. We have work now and the
men can help us to sand-down and polish the
jewelry.
-
- Our group is of women from the village
of Tecalpulco. The tradition of our village is
handcrafted fashion jewelry. Since the men have
left, we women have organized a good business of
fashion jewelry production in cottage industry.
The men can help us, they don't have any excuse
to stay [in America].
-
- Thank you very much from the hearts of
the women of Artesanas Campesinas.
-
- Rosalinda Mejia Baron
-
- Eva Albavera Viveros, Contact
Person
ealbavera@yahoo.com.mx
- Telefonos:
001 762 62 73481
001 762 62 22758
So, the women of southern Mexico, far south,
have lost their migrant men to the craze of
invading America. Their husbands, the fathers of
their children, have abandoned them for some grand
"revolutionary" fling up north.
Here's more, from May 9:
- We want to thank you from the bottom of
our hearts for acknowledging us as persons, we
are so grateful that you recognize us for who we
are, village women of Mexico.
-
- We, the women in Mexico, are living
under very depressed conditions for a long time.
Most of the man in the villages have gone to the
United States to work there and have left the
women here with the children. At the beginning
they were sending money but that was every 6
months or every year, and they weren't always
sending us enough to cover our basic needs.
Frequently, these men drop out of our sight
all-together.
- We are campesinas, we have our
cornfields and do work them, but we have learned
that in modern times we can't live off of them.
We have to buy cooking gas, daily food, shoes
for the children, school materials, etc. Now
that the kids went into school again we barely
got enough money to buy their uniforms and we
are now working hard to pay the school every
month and saving money to buy the rest of the
materials that they need. It is impossible to
live like this, yet we have no choice except to
survive, even though we are inside a pattern
where everything is costly.
-
- We never asked anything from you, still
we want to ask you to close the Mexico border to
illegal migration because our men go north to
get money and they remain up there sometimes
with another woman and we don't like it; we want
our men to be deported since they are breaking
the laws. Please isn't there a way to have these
men deported back to their homes and families in
Mexico? That would be the best to happen for us!
because we need their help in sanding and
polishing the jewelry we have been
producing.
- Thank you, thank you so much in the name
of the Rural Artisans Women of Taxco!
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Tamara Hernandez Danel
This is as plain as it gets. Among the so-called
migrant hordes of banditos are deadbeat dad,
carelessly leaving behind their wives and children
to fend for themselves. So, where's the voice of
international protest here?
Where are the feminists when you need them?
Yeagley
Archive
Dr. David A. Yeagley is a published scholar,
professionally recorded composer, and an adjunct
professor at the University of Oklahoma College of
Liberal Studies. He's on the speakers list of
Young America's
Foundation. E-mail him at badeagle2000@yahoo.com.
View his website at http://www.badeagle.com.
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