New Perspectives on the Immigration Debate

At The Onion, Tuesday, June 13, 2006 at 7:30 PM

Ron Wilkins, a former member of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating 
Committee (SNCC), will be the Tuesday Night Forum guest speaker. He has 
worked many years toward strengthening relations between Mexican and black 
people. He has lectured extensively, designed and taught innovative 
cross-cultural courses at several colleges, displayed his "Journey to Black 
Mexico" photo exhibit at many venues and taken students to the Annual 
Meetings of Black Villages in Mexico's Costa Chica. Wilkins is a professor 
in the Department of Africana Studies at California State University, 
Dominguez Hills and Western Regional Deputy Chairman of the Patrice Lumumba 
Coalition. He can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.blackcommentator.com/182/182_mexico_black_history.html

Mexico Welcomed Fugitive Slaves & African-American Job Seekers

By Ron Wilkins
Patrice Lumumba Coalition

There are of course, many angles from which to view the escalating 
immigration debate. Mexican immigrants, who constitute the largest share of 
the undocumented, have a unique history with the African population inside 
the United States. As the Black community weighs-in on this very 
contentious issue, it becomes necessary for us (both black and brown) to 
review the history that we share. However, before reviewing our history 
together, I need to say unequivocally that the U.S. seizure of more than 
half of Mexico’s territory in 1848 netted Washington more than 80% of 
Mexico’s mineral wealth and was a criminal act. And that if Mexico today 
still included California and Texas, she would possess more oil than Saudi 
Arabia and have sufficient economic infrastructure to employ all of her people.

When Mexican people say that “the border crossed us, we did not cross the 
border,” they speak the truth, and more black people (most of whom are 
not strangers to oppression, exploitation, domination and exclusion) need 
to appreciate that. It has been said that for most of the 19th century, 
Mexican immigrants were more highly regarded by African Americans, than any 
other immigrant group. What may account for this, at least in part, is the 
enormous if not pivotal role undertaken by black fighters in the war to 
secure Mexican independence from Spain and abolish slavery. Unfortunately, 
many of us repeat the falsehoods of our adversaries and have forgotten our 
special relationship with Mexican and Indigenous peoples. It is time that 
our memories be restored and that the naysayers and nativist negroes among 
us either put up or shut up. What follows is the little known history of 
Mexico serving as a refuge for fugitive slaves and a provider of job 
opportunities for blacks emigrating from the U.S. to Mexico.

Mexico Rejected Fugitive Slave Extradition Treaties

 From the very beginning of his Texas colonization scheme, a determined and 
deceitful Stephen Austin sought to have Mexican officials acquiesce to the 
settlement of slave-owning whites into the territory. It was generally 
acknowledged that the people and government of Mexico abhorred slavery and 
were determined to prohibit its practice within the Mexican republic. 
Beginning in 1822, at least 20,000 Anglos, many with their slave property, 
settled into Texas. Jared Groce, one of  the first of Stephen Austin’s 
Texas settlers that year, arrived with 90 enslaved Africans. The Mexican 
Federal Law of July 13, 1824 clearly favored and promoted the emancipation 
of slaves. Mexico had even stipulated that it was prepared to compensate 
North American owners of fugitive slaves. Determined instead to have things 
their way, Anglos began to press for an extradition treaty which would 
require Mexico to return fugitive slaves.

 From 1825 until the end of the Civil War in 1865, Mexican authorities 
continuously thwarted attempts by slave-holding Texas settlers, to conclude 
fugitive slave extradition treaties between the two parties.  During this 
period of extremely tense relations between the two governments, Mexico 
consistently repudiated and forbade the institution of slavery in its 
territory, while U.S. officials and Texas slave-owners continuously sought 
ways to circumvent Mexican law. The Mexican authorities thwarted repeated 
attempts by slave-holding Texas settlers, to conclude fugitive slave 
extradition treaties between the two parties.

In 1826 the Committee of Foreign Relations of the Mexican Chamber of 
Deputies refused to compromise on the issue of fugitive slaves and defended 
the right of enslaved Africans to liberate themselves. Mexican government 
officials cited “the inalienable right which the Author of nature has 
conceded to him (meaning enslaved persons).”

Congress member Erasmo Seguin from Texas commented that the Congress was 
“resolved to decree the perpetual extinction in the Republic of commerce 
and traffic in slaves, and that their introduction into our territory 
should not be permitted under any pretext."

Again, in October 1828 the Mexican Senate rejected 14 articles of a 
newly-proposed treaty and harshly criticized article 33, stating “it 
would be most extraordinary that in a treaty between two free republics 
slavery should be encouraged by obliging ours to deliver up fugitive slaves 
to their merciless and barbarous masters of North America.”

Reporting on the growing number of Anglo settlers in Texas, Mexican General 
Teran reported “most of them have slaves, and these slaves are beginning 
to learn the favorable intent of Mexican law to their unfortunate condition 
and are becoming restless under their yokes …” General Teran went on to 
describe the cruelty meted out by masters to restless slaves; “they 
extract their teeth, set on the dogs to tear them in pieces, the most 
lenient being he who but flogs his slaves until they are flayed.”

On September 15, 1829 Afro-Mexican President Vicente Guerrero signed a 
decree banning slavery in the Mexican Republic. Yielding to appeals from 
panicked settlers and Mexican collaborators who saw Mexico benefiting 
economically from the Anglo presence, Guerrero exempted Texas from the 
prohibition on the introduction of slaves into the republic, on December 
2nd.  Several months later, the Mexican government severely restricted 
Anglo immigration and banned the introduction of slaves into the republic.

Undeterred, the Anglos succeeded in negotiating a new treaty with Mexico in 
1831, which included article 34, which called for pursuit and reclamation 
of fugitive slaves. After considerable wrangling between the Mexican 
Chamber of Deputies and Senate, article 34 was removed from the treaty. 
Also, by 1831 it became apparent through debate within the Mexican Senate 
that the government’s welcoming of fugitive slaves was not completely 
altruistic.  Some Mexican officials, fearful of U.S. military intervention, 
had  began to see it as wise to encourage the development of runaway slave 
colonies along the Northern border as a way to lessen the threat posed by 
the U.S. As historian Rosalie Schwartz put it, many Mexican officials 
“reasoned, these fugitives, choosing between liberty under the Mexican 
government and bondage in the United States, would fight to protect their 
Mexican freedom more vigorously than any mercenaries.” As the interests 
of Mexican officials and U.S. abolitionists coincided during the early 
1830’s, a modest number of former slaves established themselves in Texas 
and fared well during the period.

In 1836, after the fall of the Alamo and its slave-owning or pro-slavery 
leaders, such as William Travis, Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett, Mexican 
forces were defeated and an independent Texas was eventually annexed by the 
United States. However, before the expulsion of Mexican forces from Texas, 
Brigadier General Jose Urrea evicted scores of illegally-settled plantation 
owners, liberated slaves, and in many instances, granted them on-the-spot 
titles to the land they had worked. Oddly enough, many black people call 
for “forty acres and a mule” – a reference to Union General 
Sherman’s Special Field Order 15 and General Howard’s Circular 13, 
which made some land available to former  slaves. But what one never hears 
are references to Mexican General Jose Urrea and the land titles that he 
and his men granted to former Texas slaves, following the defeat of the 
Alamo, a generation before the “Civil War.”

Even after the loss of Texas, Mexican officials refused to formally 
acknowledge Texas independence on the grounds that it “would be 
equivalent to the sanction and recognition of slavery.” After Texas 
independence the slave population mushroomed and the number of runaways 
across the South Texas–North Mexico border, increased. In 1842 Mexico’s 
Constitutional Congress reasserted the nation’s commitment to fugitive 
slaves.  In 1847, 38,753 slaves and 102,961 whites were listed in the first 
official Texas census. In 1850, in a new treaty accord with the United 
States, Mexico again refused to provide for the return of fugitive slaves.

The slave institution in Texas was continuously undermined by defiant 
Tejanos (Mexicans in Texas) who took great risks and invested enormous 
resources toward facilitating the escape of enslaved Africans.  The Texas 
to Mexico routes to freedom  constituted major unacknowledged extensions of 
the “Underground Railroad.”  Tejanos were variously accused of 
“tampering with slave property,” “consorting with blacks” and 
stirring up among the slave population “a spirit of insubordination.”

Plantation owners in Central Texas adopted various resolutions aimed at 
preventing Mexicans from aiding the slave population.  Whites in Guadalupe 
County prohibited Mexican “peons” from entering the county and anyone 
from conducting business or interacting with enslaved persons without 
authorization from the owners. Bexar County whites suggested that 
”Mexican strangers entering from San Antonio register at the mayor’s 
office and give an account of themselves and their business.” Delegates 
to a convention in Gonzales resolved that ”counties should organize 
vigilance committees to prosecute persons tampering with slaves” and that 
all citizens and slaveholders were to endeavor to prevent Mexicans from 
communicating with blacks. Whites in Austin decreed that “all transient 
Mexicans should be warned to leave within ten days, that all remaining 
should be forcibly expelled unless their good character and good behavior 
were substantiated by responsible American citizens” and that “Mexicans 
should no longer be employed and their presence in the area should be 
discouraged.”  In Matagorda County, all Mexicans were driven out under 
the bogus claim that they were wandering, indigent sub-humans who “have 
no fixed domicile, but hang around the plantations, taking the likeliest 
negro girls for wives … they often steal horses, and these girls too, and 
endeavor to run them to Mexico.”

By the year 1855, the estimates were that as many as 4000 to 5000 formerly 
enslaved Africans had escaped to Mexico. Slaveholders became so alarmed at 
this trend, that they requested and received, approximately 1/5th of the 
standing U.S army which was deployed along the Texas-Mexico border in a 
vain effort to stem the flow of runaways.  Defiant Mexicans stood their 
ground, refused to return runaways, continued supporting slave uprisings 
and providing assistance to escaping slaves. In the words of Felix Haywood, 
a Texas slave, whose experience is recalled in The Slave Narratives of 
Texas, “Sometimes someone would come along and try to get us to run up 
north and be free. We used to laugh at that. There was no reason to run up 
north. All we had to do was walk, but walk south and we’d be free as soon 
as we crossed the Rio Grande.”

What a Difference a Border Made

1857 was a year whose profound irony made it one of the most interesting. 
1857 was the year that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against Dred Scott, an 
enslaved African who had sued for his freedom, on the grounds that his 
owner had forfeited any claim to him, after taking him into a free state. 
Ironically 1857 was the same year that the Mexican Congress adopted Article 
13 declaring that an enslaved person was free the moment he set foot on 
Mexican soil.

Mexico as a Provider of Job Opportunities for African Americans
During the 1890’s, hundreds of black migrants fed-up with slave-like 
conditions and segregation,  left Alabama for Mexico and established ten 
large colonies.  Shortly  thereafter, during the period of the Mexican 
Revolution, large numbers of black people migrated from New Orleans to 
Tampico, Mexico as the oil industry prospered. These Africans in Mexico 
established branches of Marcus Garvey’s Universal Negro Improvement 
Association. One of the black oil workers who came to Tampico stated, 
“there is no race prejudice, everyone is treated according to his 
abilities.” During the same period, black heavyweight champion Jack 
Johnson asserted that Mexico was “willing not only to give us the 
privileges of Mexican citizenship, but was also willing to champion our 
cause.”

Juan Uribe, a major Mexican official, visiting Los Angeles in 1919, was 
quoted as saying, “ My only regret is that it is not physically possible 
to immediately transport several million African Americans to my beloved 
Mexico, where the north yields her riches as nowhere else and where people 
are not disturbed by artificial standards of race or color.” Similarly, 
African American immigrant Theodore Troy said, “I am going to a land 
where freedom and opportunity beckon me as well as every other man, woman 
and child of dark skin. In this land there are no Jim Crow laws to fetter 
me; I am not denied opportunity because of the color of my skin and 
wonderful undeveloped resources of a country smiled upon by God beckon my 
genius on to their development.” A black colony which  included fifty 
families, developed fruit orchards and engaged in cattle raising. It 
established itself in Baja, California, in the Santa Clara and Vallecitos 
Valleys situated between Ensenada and Tecate, approximately thirty miles 
south of San Diego and lasted into the 1960’s.

Not to be overlooked is the enormous success of the Negro Baseball Leagues 
in Mexico during the 1930’s and 1940’s. Black ball players together 
with 4-500 family members seeking relief from racism in the U.S. and 
segregated institutions, were hosted in Mexico by generally respectful 
competitors and admiring fans. One competitor in particular, Ray Dandridge 
played for 18 years in Mexico, before Jackie Robinson gained admission into 
U.S. major league baseball. Also, from the 1930’s to the 1960’s, major 
Mexican muralists, such as Diego Rivera, David Siqueiros  and Jose Clemente 
Orozco invited prominent African American artists such as Hale Woodruff, 
John Biggers, Elizabeth Catlett and Charles White to the Mexican Art School 
where they developed an art style which helped them to connect images, more 
effectively, to ethnic and class struggle.

Of course there are many more historical intersections where Mexican and 
African people cooperated with each other. A few examples were the 
solidarity between the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee 
(SNCC)/Black Panther Party and Brown Berets; SNCC and the Alianza Federal 
de Pueblos Libres and El Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Atzlan (MEChA) 
and the Black Student Union (BSU). Mack Lyons, a black member of the United 
Farm Workers Union’s National Executive, negotiated its contract with 
Coca Cola, which owns Minute Maid and sizeable Florida orange groves. In 
Los Angeles, during the 90’s, black and brown students recognizing common 
history and mutual interests, formed the African and Latino Youth Summit 
(ALYS).

Admittedly, Vicente Fox is no Vicente Guerrero. The Mexico of today is 
profoundly different from the refuge that once welcomed fugitive slaves, or 
land of opportunity that embraced African American job-seekers; yet, its 
beautiful history of support, for African Americans in need of allies, 
cannot be erased. It might prove useful to see the relationship between 
black and brown people as similar to the bond between a man and woman. It 
is beautiful most of the time, but there are moments when it is tested and 
may become strained. When this happens one or both must give more and work 
to increase or renew trust.

The black or brown reader of this piece should now know that the best of 
our history together, as black and brown people, speaks to the necessity of 
collaborating during the worst of times. A wise people are a grateful 
people, and never content themselves with recalling and celebrating their 
legendary alliance with an important neighbor. Instead, they press forward, 
fully aware that mutually-supportive relationships are still possible and 
necessary.

About the Tuesday Night Forum

The Tuesday Night Forum, sponsored by the Social Concerns Committee of the 
Sepulveda Unitarian Universalist Society meets on the second and fourth 
Tuesdays of each month at 7:30 PM. Our guest speakers discuss current 
social justice issues from a progressive point of view usually not covered 
by the corporate media.

The Sepulveda Unitarian Universalist Society, also known as "The Onion," is 
located at 9550 Haskell Ave. in North Hills. From Los Angeles take the 405 
freeway north, exit left (westbound) on Nordhoff, go two blocks and turn 
right on Haskell. It's on the right side just north of Plummer.

For further information and to confirm speakers please call Ida Hurt at 818 
772 1555 or see our webpage at http://www.suus.fatcow.com/php/feature



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