Rebel Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities


Rebel Zapatista Autonomous Municipalities are de-facto autonomous territories controlled by the Neo-zapatista support bases in the Mexican state of Chiapas, founded following the Zapatista uprising which took place in 1994 and is part of the wider Chiapas conflict. Despite attempts at negotiation with the Mexican government which resulted in the San Andrés Accords in 1996, the region's autonomy remains unrecognized by it.
The Zapatista army, or EZLN, does not hold any power in the autonomous municipalities. According to its constitution, no commander or member of the Clandestine Revolutionary Indigenous Committee may take positions of authority or government in these spaces.
These places are found within the official municipalities, and several are even within the same municipality, as in the case of San Andrés Larrainzar and Ocosingo. The MAREZ are coordinated by Autonomous Councils and their main objectives have been to promote education and health in their territories. They also fight for land rights, labor and trade, housing, and fuel-supply issues, promoting arts, and administering justice.

Background

On 1 January 1994, thousands of EZLN members occupied towns and cities in Chiapas, burning down police stations, occupying government buildings and skirmishing with the Mexican army. The EZLN demanded "work, land, housing, food, health care, education, independence, freedom, democracy, justice and peace" in their communities. The Zapatistas seized over a million acres from large landowners during their revolution.

Distribution

Since 2003 the MAREZ coordinate in very small groups called caracoles. Before that, the Neo-Zapastistas used the title of Aguascalientes after the site of the EZLN-organized National Democratic Convention on 8 August 1994; this name gave the allusion to the Convention of Aguascalientes during the Mexican Revolution where Emiliano Zapata and other leaders met in 1914 and Zapata made an alliance with Francisco Villa.
MAREZCaracolFormer Name 'Indigenous GroupsArea and municipalities in which they are found

Mother of the sea snails of our dreamsLa RealidadTojolabales, tzeltales, and mamesSelva Fronteriza. "Ocosingo, Marques de Comillas"
  • 17 November
  • First of January
  • Ernesto Ché Guevara
  • Olga Isabel
  • Lucio Cabañas
  • Miguel Hidalgo
  • Vicente Guerrero
  • Whirlwind of our wordsMoreliaTzeltales, tzotziles, and tojolabalesTzots Choj Altamirano, Comitán
  • Francisco Gómez
  • San Manuel
  • Francisco Villa
  • Ricardo Flores Magón
  • Resistance toward a new dawnLa GarruchaTzeltalesSelva Tzeltal "Ocosingo, Altamirano"
  • Vicente Guerrero
  • Del Trabajo
  • La Montaña
  • San José en Rebeldía
  • La Paz
  • Benito Juárez
  • Francisco Villa
  • That speaks for allRoberto BarriosCholes, zoques, and tzeltalesZona Norte de Chiapas San Andrés Larrainzar, El Bosque, Simojovel de allende
  • San Andrés Sacamch’en de los Pobres
  • San Juan de la Libertad
  • San Pedro Polhó
  • Santa Catarina
  • Magdalena de la Paz
  • 16 February
  • San Juan Apóstol Cancuc
  • Resistance and rebellion for humanityOventicTzotziles, and tzeltalesAltos de Chiapas, San Andrés Larrainzar, Teopisca.
    Hope of HumanityEjido Santa MaríaChicomuselo
    Ernesto Che GuevaraEl BelénMotozintla
    Planting consciousness in order to harvest revolutions for lifeTulan Ka’uAmatenango del Valle
    December 21K’anal HulubChilón
    CRAREZCaracolFormer Name 'Area and municipalities in which they are found
    Steps of History, for the life of HumanityThe heart of rebellious seeds collective, memory of Comrade GaleanoLa UniónSan Quintín
    Seed that flourishes with the conscience of those who struggle foreverDignified spiral weaving the colors of humanity in memory of the fallen ones
    New Dawn in resistance and rebellion for life and humanityFlourishing the rebellious seedEl Poblado Patria NuevaOcosingo
    The rebellious thinking of the original peoplesIn honor of the memory of Comrade ManuelDolores HidalgoOcosingo
    The light that shines on the worldResistance and rebellion, a new horizonEl Poblado Nuevo JerusalénOcosingo
    Heart of our lives for the new futureRoot of the resistances and the rebellions for humanityEjido Jolj’aTila
    Flower of our word and light of our people that reflects for allJacinto CanekComunidad del CIDECI-UnitierraSan Cristóbal de las Casas

    Government

    At a local level, people attend a popular assembly of around 300 families in which anyone over the age of 12 can participate in decision-making. These assemblies strive to reach a consensus, but are willing to fall back to a majority vote. The communities form a federation with other communities to create an autonomous municipalities, which form further federations with other municipalities to create a region. The Zapatistas are composed of five regions, in total having a population of around 360,000 people as of 2018.
    Each community has 3 main administrative structures: the commissariat, in charge of day-to day administration; the council for land control, which deals with forestry and disputes with neighboring communities; and the agencia, a community police agency.

    Economy

    The Zapatista economy is mainly composed of worker cooperatives, family farms and community stores with the councils of good government providing low-interest loans, free education, radio stations and health-care to communities. The economy is largely self-reliant and agricultural, producing mainly corn, beans, coffee, bananas, sugar, cattle, chickens, pigs and clothing at cooperatives. The communities have abolished private ownership of property and instituted a system of common ownership of land, and they sell over $44 million worth of goods to international markets each year. Given the collective ownership of land and system of participatory democracy, hunger and violence are extremely low compared to other impoverished Mexican communities.

    Public services

    Education

    The Zapatistas run hundreds of schools with thousands of teachers modeled around the principles of democratic education where students and communities collectively decide on school curriculum and students aren't graded.

    Healthcare

    The Zapatistas maintain a high-quality universal healthcare service which is provided free of charge. However, medications must still be paid for to cover restocking costs. Residents of the Zapatista communities believe their health services are better staffed, equipped and less racist towards indigenous people than most services in Chiapas. It also works with surrounding hospitals and freely takes in patients from other communities who need to use the medical facilities that only the Zapatistas have. Since 1994, the Zapatistas have built 2 new hospitals and 18 health clinics in the region to increase the well-being of communities. One 2014 study indicates the following achievements in Zapatista healthcare:
    According to one account of Oventic from 2016:
    In Oventic, there was a small yet seemingly fully-functional medical clinic, which appeared to offer basic healthcare. A sign on the door said general consultations, gynecology, optometry and laboratory services were all available five days a week. Emergency services were available 24 hours, seven days a week. They appeared to have a shiny new ambulance at their disposal. Other services offered a few days a week included dentistry and ultrasounds.

    Environmental protection

    The Zapatistas have taken on many projects to protect and restore the damaged ecosystems of the Lacandon Jungle, including the banning of chemical fertilisers and pesticides, as well as resisting the extraction of oil and metal through mining. According to one person who stayed in the town of Oventic in 2016:
    There was also something else — something which took me a long time to put my finger on. Then it finally hit me: there was no litter; not even a stray chocolate bar wrapper.
    The Zapatistas have also embarked on beekeeping and reforestation efforts, having planted over 30,000 trees in order to protect water sources, reverse deforestation in the rainforests and provide sources of food, fuel and construction material. Beekeepers aim to reverse much of the collapse of the bee population, and produce honey for food, ecological regeneration and candles.
    Several eco-socialist and eco-anarchist authors have praised the efforts of the Zapatistas to construct an ecological society. However, the Zapatistas have also been heavily criticized by both environmentalists and the indigenous Lacandon Maya for allowing and encouraging logging, farming and settlement construction in protected areas of the Lacandon Jungle.

    Feminism

    The Zapatistas are strongly affiliated with feminism and pro-queer politics, the Revolutionary Law on Women, drafted by Comandante Ramona states that:
    First: Women, regardless of their race, creed, color or political affiliation, have the right to participate in the revolutionary struggle in a way determined by their desire and capacity.
    Second: Women have the right to work and receive a just salary.
    Third: Women have the right to decide the number of children they will have and care for.
    Fourth: Women have the right to participate in the affairs of the community and hold positions of authority if they are freely and democratically elected.
    Fifth: Women and their children have the right to primary attention in matters of health and nutrition.
    Sixth: Women have the right to an education.
    Seventh: Women have the right to choose their partner, and are not to be forced into marriage.
    Eighth: Women shall not be beaten or physically mistreated by their family members or by strangers. Rape and attempted rape will be severely punished.
    Ninth: Women will be able to occupy positions of leadership in the organization and hold military ranks in the revolutionary armed forces.
    Tenth: Women will have all the rights and obligations elaborated in the Revolutionary Laws and regulations.
    In 2018, the Zapatistas hosted a feminist festival, which was described as "not only an opportunity to create educational or professional networks, but also a space to consider one’s health and well-being as a woman in the fight for justice. There were activities ranging from workshops, discussion panels and movie screenings to theater performances, art exhibitions and sports events, including basketball and soccer matches. Themes included gender violence, self-defense, self-care, sexism in the media, sexual rights, health and education, misogyny and childhood, discrimination against indigenous LGBTQ communities, women environmental rights defenders, and decolonization. All of the activities were led and held by women, and all of them were aimed at generating consciousness of gender inequality or the restoration of women’s self-confidence and autonomy."

    Political affiliation

    The neo-Zapatistas do not proclaim adherence to a specific political ideology beyond left-wing politics. However, the functioning of the MAREZ distinguished it programmatically from the traditional left, reclaiming Zapatista- and Magonist-inspired "indigenismo" with contributions from libertarian socialism, Marxism, and anarchism. Some authors also draw parallels between neozapatismo and autonomism, while others argue it can be better defined as semi-anarchist.

    Criticism

    The Zapatistas have faced criticism from several socialists and anarchists. Anarchists have argued that the Zapatista communities have not taken enough effort to fully abolish the capitalist practices of wage labor, rent and multinational investment from their communities. Whilst non-anarchist socialists have criticized them for not centralizing their power enough and exploiting their natural resources to fund social programs in their communities and sponsor revolutionary activity throughout Mexico. Some eco-anarchists have criticized the communities for not engaging in a fully vegetarian lifestyle, continuing to use plastic and deforest the surrounding jungle to raise cattle.