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From: "Dana Aldea" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Censored/Brenda Norrell, The Zapatista Highway,Apr 23
Date: Wed, 25 Apr 2007 05:07:13 +0200

Reporter's Notebook, The Zapatista Highway
Zapatistas in Sonora.

By Brenda Norrell
April 23, 2007
http://www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com/

RANCHO EL PENASCO, SONORA, Mexico -- The last thing you want to happen when
you are returning from a Zapatista meeting with Subcomandante Marcos in
Mexico, is for the van to die on the Mexican side of the border, and to have
to push it back into the United States.

But that is what happened on our way back. With a great deal of laughter,
Jose and Gregorio, joined by some good-hearted volunteers, pushed the van
through U.S. immigration and we coasted into Nogales, Ariz.

It was the unexpected end to a wonderful weekend of the unexpected. It began
in Tucson, Ariz., with the arrival of American Indian Movement security,
O'otham from Salt River Pima and Gila River, Hopi-Zia Pueblo and Tohono
O'odham. With the car packed with buffalo meat from Salt River Pima, we
headed down, stopping in Sonora to buy watermelons.

At the Rancho Penasco biodiversity ranch south of Magdalena, there was a
larger than usual buildup of undercover Mexican police, intelligence
officers driving white and grey compact cars, at the entrance gate.

Arriving from the north and south were Indigenous from many tribes for the
consultation with Subcomandante Marcos and Comandantes, to plan for the
Indigenous Intercontinental Conference.

Cautious, I decided to spend the first night in a nearby hotel, so I could
be in touch with the international press if there were problems with the
Mexican police building up at the gate. As a news reporter staying alone at
a hotel in Mexico, the worst thing that can happen is to look behind you in
the hotel lobby and see a dozen cars of undercover Mexican police ready to
check in at the same hotel. But that is what happened. I took an Extra
Strength Tylenol and went to sleep on the mattress, which was actually a
slab of granite.

Then, Saturday morning, something magical happened. Indigenous arrived from
all over Arizona and northern and southern Mexico. Over the fire making
tortillas, working 16 hours a day, were Yaqui women from Potam Pueblo, along
with Tohono O'odham, Mayo and their friends from Sonora and Arizona. They
cut buffalo meat, scrambled eggs, cut papayas and of course made large pots
of coffee, washed enormous amounts of dishes and laughed.

At the gate, with AIM security, David was on duty around the clock, joined
by Tish, Al, Meldon, Mike and Otis. They checked the identification of
everyone who entered and halted the undercover Mexican police along the
highway from intimidating people arriving. Raramuri came from north central
Mexico, Purepecha from Michoacan, Yaqui  from Rio Yaqui Pueblos, Mayo from
Sinoloa, O'odham from Sonora and Mayans  from Chiapas. They were joined by
San Carlos Apache, Navajo, Hopi, Salt  River Pima, Gila River Pima and
Tohono O'odham from Arizona.

>From this gathering came a powerful force of love and joy. Crossing the
border, the old van blew steam like a tired dragon as it limped back.

There was no surrender.
--Brenda Norrell

(Spanish) Declaration for the Indigenous Intercontinental Conference to be
held in Vicam Pueblo in October, 2007:
http://www.encuentroindigena.org/

Zapatistas uphold Cucapa fishing rights on Colorado River Delta:
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Apr07/Bacher21.htm






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