When Spanish settlers
came to Mexico in the early 16th century, they moved northward, and by 1598
some had settled in the present state of New Mexico, USA. Many of them weren’t
Spanish, actually, and they had various religious backgrounds. They had roots
in various regions of Europe and North Africa. In order to participate in the
voyages of Spain they had declare loyalty to Spain and identify themselves as
Christians, but some of them secretly kept traditions of their religions, Islam
and Judaism, in the privacy of their homes.
The historian Larry
Torres says the descendants of these early settlers, referred to as
Nuevomexicanos, missed the social changes that happened in European culture
over the following centuries. In a sense, they are a living time capsule. They
had no contact with the Renaissance, the Enlightenment or the Industrial
Revolution. Their religion, their traditions, and their customs are from the
Middle Ages. This culture is still reflected in the language, which is a kind
of Spanish that is 400 years out of fashion. Scholars from Spain have come to
New Mexico to study the language that was spoken by the great Spanish novelist
Cervantes (1547-1616). But what happens when you have a society that suddenly
time travels from the Middle Ages to the Atomic Age?
Nuevomexicano history is
often misunderstood. For most Americans, the nation’s history begins on the
East Coast where the settlers from Holland and the British Isles first arrived.
After that, it is a story of continual westward expansion. However, when
Americans from the northeast arrived in New Mexico in the 19th century, they
encountered a Spanish-speaking culture that had already been there for 250
years. Even today, many Americans are surprised to learn that there is a
European culture in the USA that was in America before the first Thanksgiving
dinner in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1621.
When the Nuevomexicanos
met the migrants coming from the east, they had never seen factories or trains.
Their lifestyle was not much different than that of the first peoples of the
region, the Pueblo, whom the easterners referred to as “Indians.” The word Pueblo
itself is a blanket Spanish term for diverse groups such as the Hopi, Zuni and
many others. The Nuevomexicanos co-existed relatively well with the Pueblo
compared to the relationship that developed between the Pueblo and the modern
Americans.
The arrival of newcomers
in New Mexico caused a brutal transition for Spanish and Pueblo cultures.
Migrants brought with them banks, factories, roads and railways—all the
trappings of a way of life that depended on money and working for wages. The
newcomers refused to recognize the existing titles proving ownership of the
land.
Life in New Mexico
became stranger still when the Manhattan Project came to the small town of Los
Alamos in 1943. This was the top secret project to build the first atom bombs.
Suddenly, people with a pre-industrial culture found themselves working in the
high-tech future. While the best jobs went to scientists and engineers from
elsewhere in America, the Nuevomexicanos took jobs lower down in the
organization. Many national defense and advanced technology centers still
operate in the state, and the economy is heavily dependent on this sector.
A resident of a village
called Truchas compared his town with Los Alamos. Both towns are at the same
elevation, directly across from one another, but one is living in the 19th
century, while the other is in the 21st and planning for the 22nd century. In Truchas,
people are just trying to get enough food to eat, making a living off the land.
In Los Alamos, you have people who are thinking about space travel and
long-term management of nuclear waste, which would be incomprehensible to the
villagers living in Truchas.
Nuevomexicanos have an
intense commitment to their cultural history. They know their culture has
evolved independently since 1598. They have a unique adaptation to modernity
that outsiders are not likely to appreciate. In fact, the English speaking
people of New Mexico, whose ancestors arrived recently in the 19th century, are
likely to think of Spanish-speakers as foreigners. They often insist that the
newcomers should learn English and adapt to American society, failing to see
that the Nuevomexicanos and Pueblo are not recently-arrived immigrants.
Anthropologists say that
the region hosts a clash of three cultures: that of the Pueblo, the
Nuevomexicanos and the modern military state. They note also the irony in the
fact that all three of these cultures are difficult for them to study because
they all place a high value on secrecy. The sacred sites of the Pueblo have
meanings that outsiders can never understand. The Nuevomexicanos have secret
religious rituals, and the scientific laboratories guard the national secrets
of nuclear weapons.
Further
reading:
The Toxic Legacy
of Racism and Nuclear Waste Is Very Much Still With Us in Los Alamos
Adapted from these sources:
Joseph Masco, Nuclear
Borderlands: The Manhattan Project in Post-Cold War New Mexico (Princeton
University Press, 2006), 165-168.
Lois Palken Rudnick, Utopian
Vistas: The Mabel Dodge Luhan House and the American Counterculture (University
of New Mexico Press, 1996), 336.
No comments:
Post a Comment