María de Jesús Patricio Martínez
María de Jesús Patricio Martínez in Puebla
Patricio Martínez in Puebla in 2017
Born (1963-12-23) 23 December 1963
Other namesMarichuy
Occupations
  • Traditional medicine healer
  • activist

María de Jesús Patricio Martínez (born 23 December 1963), also known as Marichuy, is a traditional medicine healer and human rights activist in Mexico. Of Nahua descent, she was chosen as "representative indigenous spokeswoman" by National Indigenous Congress (CNI) for the 2018 general election, for which she ran as an independent candidate for the Presidency of Mexico.[1][2]She was also the first women in Tuxpan to participate in the dance of Los Sonajeros which was a ritual that asked for rain.[3]

On 28 May 2017, a congress was held in San Cristóbal de Las Casas, Chiapas, where Marichuy was designated by the CNI as the "representative indigenous spokeswoman" by 840 delegates from 60 indigenous communities of Mexico. The Congress also resolved to choose Marichuy as spokeswoman for the indigenous peoples of Mexico in the 2018 general election. Media reported that Patricio Martínez is the first indigenous woman to run for the Presidency of Mexico.[4]

Early life and work

María de Jesús Patricio Martínez was born 23 December 1963, in the Nahua community of Tuxpan, located in the present state of Jalisco.

Maria's integration to traditional and alternative medicine as a healing tool began with her observations of the older women in her community that used herbalism as a form of healing. She saw women in her community such as her aunts and grandmothers use these different forms of medicine to treat diseases such as fear, fright, heatwaves and weakness. Through seeing these alternative forms of medicine. Maria followed their path and became a traditional medicine healer.[5]  Her reasoning for following this path was because she felt her knowledge and understanding of the ways in which plants can aid the sick would be beneficial to help those in her community who were unable to afford medicine from the government.

In 1978, motivated by her mother's loss of mobility from the waist down, Martinez sought medical attention from traditional healers in her community who were able to return her mother's ability to walk.[6] Her mother indued three years of treatments by specialized doctors to help her mother regain her ability however misdiagnosed, doctors were unable to find the cause of her condition or any remedy for it. However, through a three-month use of alternative medicine, Maria's mother was able to walk again. Through seeing the ground breakings innovations traditional healers produced, Maria completed high school for the purpose of dedicating herself to preserving her community by way of studying traditional medicines.[7][8] After furthering these dreams to become a traditional doctor, she founded the Casa de Salud Calli Tecolhuacateca Tochan Clinic in 1992. Responsible for the Casa de Salud, Maria began the clinic in hopes for tending to her community with both traditional and alternative medicine.[6]The health center supports the continuity and further development of Nahuan traditional indigenous medicine, an objective supported for decades by the University of Guadalajara.

Indigenous movement

Marichuy is widely respected and, since 1994, a participant within the Zapatista indigenous movement, as well as a founding member of the National Indigenous Congress. The National Indigenous Congress is an organization Maria became a founding member of to voice the demands and necessities of both indigenous and disadvantage communities in the country. By establishing a removal of the Mexican political establish in a desire to construct a new style of political engagement, the organization approaches its demands by combatting marginalization and underrepresentation of communities.[9] "We think that compañera Marichuy doesn’t sell out, doesn’t give up and doesn’t surrender, as she was trained inside the CNI, we believe that," said one of the women of the Indigenous Governing Council (CIG) while reading the pronouncement of Marichuy's election.[10] Motivated through her biggest obstacle, the repression of people who disagree, as well as the incarceration of the councilmen of Querétaro and the assassination of two CNI members. Marichuy continues to persevere and move onward with her movement as the figure spearhead for change in indigenous communities.[6]

In 2001, Marichuy spoke before the Congress of the Union about the situation of indigenous women nationwide. At that time, lawmakers directly and indirectly responsible for indigenous human rights violations in Mexico decided not to attend.[11]

In May 2015, the Tuxpan Municipal Government Council delivered the Tuxpan Award of Merit to María de Jesús Patricio Martínez, allotted by the University of Guadalajara's Unit of Support to the Indigenous Communities (UACI), the Coordination of Linkage and Social Services. The award was given to Marichuy in the area of Science and Culture, for her work in the House of Health for preserving traditional and herbal medicine.[10]

Spokesperson and the Mexican presidency

Altering a strategy which has rejected the Mexican state and its electoral politics, the Zapatistas announced in December 2016 their plans to elect a female spokesperson to represent the indigenous community as a presidential candidate. On May 28, 2017, Marichuy was elected by the National Indigenous Congress (CNI) as their spokesperson and representative for the presidency. Although afraid at first to accept her election to participate, Maria joined the campaign in hope to address the problem severely affecting her community. Some of the concerns that impacted Maria to participate in the election include the imposition of mines, remnants of waste left by companies that negatively affect the environment as well as the repression of communities that fought against dispossession such as death, disappearances and incarcerations and the ongoing health problems occurring in her community.[6] In hope to bring visibility to the issues occurring in her community, Maria participated in the election to facilitate a connection between both indigenous communities and society in an effort to reconstruct Mexico. Her campaign reflected both a displacement and an adherence to post-modern Zapatista politics –on the one hand, they reject state-power as a political goal; on the other, by endorsing Marichuy they joined an electoral competition of alternative state projects.[12]

CNI's decision is also seen as a proposal for all Mexicans. "It’s an inclusive proposal, not only of the indigenous and with the indigenous, which makes the vindications of all the exploited, oppressed and discriminated of the earth its own, regardless of their ethnic or national origins and cultural characteristics. It’s not an essentialist or ethnic proposal. The proposal addresses all the peoples of Mexico, including the one of the majority nationality, that world where we all fit."[13][14] CNI'S collaboration with Maria developed through a common goal that a new and improved Mexico would emerge as the current version during the election did not favor the working class and the people of communities. [6] According to both. members of the organization and Maria herself, by running in the presidency they hope not to win but to address and give voice to those who have no voice. By electing Marichuy to the presential run they hope to make an "indigenous, feminist perspective a part of Mexico’s national presidential debate.[15]

Officially recognized by the National Electoral Institute (INE) on October 15, 2017, Marichuy and the Council have begun collecting the required 866,593 signatures, throughout 17 states, during the subsequent 120 days. The INE digital signature process via cell telephone has revealed serious flaws weighted to benefit wealthier voters. Marichuy said, "the INE made a list of telephone makes and models so that you must have at a minimum an Android 5.0 operating system or higher and so many hours to begin with the download of the applications in the devices, we find that the list is not true; we find brands that are not included in the list and of those that are included they don’t all work. The download is tedious and can take hours." The INE declared each signature registration would take 4.3 minutes, but each actual signature registration has taken up to 16 hours, or more. 'With these "classist, racist and excluding measures," Marichuy said, you realize "that this electoral system is not made for those peoples below that govern ourselves and that the laws and institutions of the State are made for those above, for the capitalists and their corrupt political class, resulting in a big simulation."'[16][17]

Marichuy has further stated, "as is the custom in our peoples, surrendering, selling out or giving up is not an option and we will redouble efforts to collect the citizen support required to figure as an independent candidate to the presidency of the Republic on the 2018 electoral ballot."[17]

At the Zocalo parade in Oaxaca, Maria took the stage to deliver a speech to the Oaxacan people of the village. She addressed the people of the community and the speakers before her that listed the injustices occurring and said the following" “These are problems that are not new. Up there, on top, they say that everything is fine. We’ve seen that’s not true". By furthering focusing on the dangers threatening indigenous land, she continues by saying "What we get when we plead [for justice] is jail, death, and contamination from large projects that don’t benefit anyone in the pueblos.” She lastly concluded her speech by the following statement "Indigenous people are ready to fight, and we won’t stop. We will work together to construct a new Mexico from below, and to destroy this grand capitalist system that is destroying us.”[18]Maria's run for presidency is a historic movement as it focuses on the massive destruction of capitalist system that fails to protect the environment and social justice system while also failing to address the concerns of women and indigenous communities.

References

  1. Cabrera, Rafael (31 May 2017). "10 Things To Know About The First Indigenous Woman To Run For President Of Mexico". BuzzFeed. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  2. Concheiro, Por Luciano (28 May 2017). "Los pueblos indígenas de México eligen a su vocera e irrumpen en el escenario político". The New York Times (in Spanish). ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  3. Juan, Villoro (24 February 2018). "Voting for an indigenous woman is forbidden". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  4. Lafuente, Javier (30 May 2017). "El zapatismo impulsa a los indígenas a las elecciones (Zapatismo supports indigenous to elections)". EL PAÍS (in Spanish). Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  5. "María de Jesús Patricio Martínez – HONORABLE AYUNTAMIENTO DE TUXPAN JALISCO ADMINISTRACION 2021-2024" (in Spanish). Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 "It Is the Time of the People: MarÍa de Jesús Patricio Martínez | Cultural Survival". www.culturalsurvival.org. 5 September 2017. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  7. "Marichuy, la candidata independiente siempre cerca del EZLN desde 1994 y una de las fundadoras del CNI". Chiapasparalelo.com. 29 May 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  8. "Marichuy, the independent candidate close to the EZLN". Chiapas-support.org. 29 May 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  9. "A Remedy Against a Divided Mexico; The First Indigenous Woman for President?". MO*. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  10. 1 2 "Marichuy, the independent candidate close to the EZLN". Chiapas-support.org. 29 May 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  11. "Mexico has its first indigenous woman candidate for president". Pri.org. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  12. Centeno, Ramón I. (1 February 2018). "Zapata reactivado: una visión žižekiana del Centenario de la Constitución". Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos. 34 (1): 36–62. doi:10.1525/msem.2018.34.1.36. ISSN 0742-9797. S2CID 149383391.
  13. "La Jornada: Siete razones para apoyar la propuesta del CNI-EZLN". Jornada.unam.mx. 30 June 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  14. "Seven reasons to support the CNI-EZLN proposal". Chiapas-support.org. 1 July 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  15. Conniff, Ruth (14 February 2018). "Marichuy: Mexico's First Indigenous Woman Presidential Candidate". Progressive.org. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
  16. "Marichuy denuncia fallas en sistema del INE para recolectar firmas vía teléfono celular - Proceso". Proceso.com.mx. 18 October 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  17. 1 2 "Marichuy denounces INE's system for collecting signatures via cell phone". Chiapas-support.org. 23 October 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  18. Conniff, Ruth (14 February 2018). "Marichuy: Mexico's First Indigenous Woman Presidential Candidate". Progressive.org. Retrieved 7 December 2023.
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