Emiliano Zapata(1879-1919)
- Actor
Emiliano Zapata was born on August 8, 1879 in Anenecuilo, Mexico, the
son of a local businessman. He was not himself a tenant farmer, but was
raised amoung them in the predominantly agrarian Morelos district,
where the primitive living conditions convinced him of the need for
sweeping reforms. He became the peasants' spokesman in the area and was
briefly drafted into the Mexican army as punishment for his radical
statements on their behalf. In the early 1900s, as public pressure grew
against the dictatorial regime of President Porfirio Díaz, Zapata started
organizing a revolutionary army in Morelos. He proved to be a natural
tactician as well as an inspiring leader. When a revolt against Diaz,
headed by Francisco I. Madero, broke out in March 1911, Zapata was appointed
Supremo (Supreme Chief) of the Revolutionary Movement of the South. By
the end of May, Zapata's forces had defeated Diaz's troops in Yautepec,
Cuautla and Cuernavaca, in southern Mexico, events that played a key
role in Madero's subsequent victory and appointment as president of
Mexico. When Madero was overthrown and assassinated by Gen. Victoriano
Huerta in 1913, Zapata entered into a campaign of guerrilla warfare
against the Huerta regime, which was even more repressive than Diaz's.
By July 1914 Zapata's forces had fought their way to the outskirts of
Mexico City, forcing Huerta to flee into exile. Four months later, when
the revolutionaries' victory was complete, Zapata entered Mexico City
in triumph with fellow commanders Pancho Villa and Venustiano Carranza, and the three
established a provisional government. However, the following spring
Zapata, like Villa before him, was ousted from the new government by
Carranza and his followers. Once again Zapata entered into a protracted
guerrilla war against the government. After a four-year stalemate and
infrequent clashes with federal troops, the government finallly
persuaded Zapata to attend a peace conference aimed at ending the
insurrection, and the conference took place in Chinameca on April 10,
1919. However, when Zapata arrived he was immediately surrounded and
shot and killed by government troops; the "conference" was a ploy by
Carranza to lure Zapata to a place where he could be assassinated.
Zapata's reforms were eventually instituted, though, albeit years after
his death. He is regarded to this day by most Mexicans as a martyr to
the Mexican revolution.