ANOTHER
HOLY HORROR: THE CRISTERO WAR
(Free
Inquiry, April-May, 2007)
By
James A. Haught
In the vast
annals of faith-based killing, some episodes are widely known, while other
religious bloodbaths are oddly forgotten.
The
whole world is aware of the stunning "martyr" attack of Sept. 11,
2001. And most people recall the Jonestown tragedy and the Waco siege -- as
well as historic horrors: the Inquisition, the witch-hunts, the Crusades, the
Reformation wars, the pogroms against Jews, the era of human sacrifice, etc.
However,
some other faith-driven tragedies have mostly vanished from public awareness.
For example, few Americans know that Catholic-Protestant strife caused a cannon
battle in the streets of Philadelphia in 1844. Or that the Taiping Rebellion --
led by a mystic who said he was God's second son after Jesus, with a divine
mandate to "destroy demons" -- killed millions of Chinese in the
1850s.
Here's
another half-forgotten holy war: the Cristero conflict that killed 90,000
Mexicans in the 1920s.
It
culminated a long, convoluted, gory story spanning a century. It was a classic
example of the age-old struggle between reformers and the priest class which
gains power in a society, entrenches itself with rulers, lives off the
populace, and imposes strictures on the people.
The
Cristero War showed the power of religion to propel believers into bloodshed.
And it showed that attempts to suppress religion by law can trigger violent
"blowback."
After
Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, democracy advocates sought to
loosen the Roman Catholic Church's grip on Mexican society. Some anticlerical
laws were passed, but they were revoked by dictator Santa Anna in 1834.
Then
liberal Benito Juarez, a Zapotec Indian, came to power in the 1850s and enacted
(ital) La Reforma, (unital) a sweeping plan for secular democracy. Among
various reforms, it ended Catholicism's exclusive role as the state religion,
curtailed the church's great land wealth, halted ecclesiastical courts,
abolished church burial fees, and revoked priestly control of education,
marriage and other facets of daily life.
The
changes were written into a new constitution -- but the church excommunicated
all Mexican officials who swore to uphold it. Civil war erupted, and religious
conservatives seized Mexico City, driving the liberal government to Veracruz.
The United States supported Juarez, and his regime defeated the rebels in 1861.
Exiled
Mexican conservatives appealed to Catholic France, Catholic Spain and the pope,
plus other Europeans. French, Spanish and some English forces invaded Mexico,
driving Juarez to the north. A Habsburg noble, Maximilian, was installed as
emperor -- but he was slow to revoke the anticlerical laws. The clergy and the
pope's emissary felt betrayed. Europeans withdrew their military backing.
Juarez regrouped, defeated Maximilian's militia, and executed the emperor in 1867.
After
Juarez died, successors added further church-state separation. Religious oaths
were banned in courts. Church ownership of land was forbidden. But dictator
Porfirio Diaz seized power in an 1876 revolt, and gradually restored Catholic
privileges during his long reign.
After
1900, young radicals began calling for the overthrow of Diaz, plus distribution
of land to peasants and abolition of priestly power. Their unrest finally
exploded in the Mexican Revolution that raged from 1910 to 1916. Then the victorious
reformers drafted a 1917 constitution mandating democracy -- and imposing tough
limits on the clergy. It halted church control of schools. It banned monastic
orders. It eliminated religious processions and outdoor masses. It again
curtailed church ownership of property. And it forbade priests to wear clerical
garb, vote, or comment on public affairs in the press.
At
first, this strong crackdown was only lightly enforced, and church protests
were subdued. But in 1926, new President Plutarco Calles intensified the
pressure. He decreed a huge fine (equal to $250 U.S. dollars at the time) on
any priest who wore a clerical collar, and demanded five years in prison for
any priest who criticized the government.
In
response, Catholic bishops called for a boycott against the government.
Catholic teachers refused to show up at secular schools. Catholics refused to
ride public transportation. Other civil disobedience occurred. The pope in Rome
approved the resistance. The government reacted by closing churches. Ferment
grew.
On July
31, 1926, the bishops halted all worship services in Mexico. Today, an ardent
Catholic website, The Angelus, says the step was unprecedented in Catholic
history, and presumably was "intended to push the Mexicans to
revolt."
It
worked. On Aug. 23, 1926, about 400
armed Catholics barricaded themselves in a Guadalajara church and fought a
gunbattle with federal troops, costing 18 lives. The following day, soldiers
stormed a Sahuayo church, killing its priest and vicar.
Catholic
rebellions erupted in numerous places. Rene Garza, leader of the Mexican
Association of Catholic Youth, called for general insurrection, declaring that
"the hour of victory belongs to God." Volunteer bands attacked
federal facilities and army posts, shouting "Long live Christ the king!
Long live the Virgin of Guadalupe!" The rebels called themselves Cristeros
-- fighters for Christ.
Mexican
bishops refused to oppose the rebellion, and quietly approved it. Two priests
became guerrilla commanders. One, Aristeo Pedroza, was prim and moral. The
other, Jose Vega, was a drinker and womanizer. Three other priests became
gunfighters. Many others became covert activists.
Father
Vega led a raid on a train, and his brother was killed in the attack. In
revenge, the priest had the train cars doused with gasoline and torched,
killing 51 civilian passengers inside. The massacre soured public support for
the uprising. The government expelled Catholic bishops from the country. After
another engagement, Vega ordered all federal prisoners stabbed to death, to
save ammunition. The priest later was killed in a raid.
An
estimated 50,000 Catholic men became guerrillas, and thousands of Catholic
women joined "St. Joan of Arc" support brigades. The rebels began
defeating federal units, and controlled large sections of Mexico. Some Catholic
army officers mutinied in behalf of the religious insurgents.
The
U.S. ambassador to Mexico launched negotiations to end the conflict. His effort
was damaged, however, because President Calles was scheduled to be succeeded by
moderate President-elect Alvaro Obregon -- but a Catholic fanatic assassinated
Obregon.
Eventually,
talks brought a cease-fire. The Catholic Church was allowed to keep its
buildings, and priests were allowed to live in them.
The
Cristero War took about 90,000 lives: 56,882 on the government side, plus some
30,000 Cristeros, plus civilians.
On May
21, 2000, the Vatican conferred sainthood on 23 Cristero figures: 20 priests and
three laymen. (Normally, each canonization requires evidence of at least two
miracles, but the church lowers this standard for "martyrs," so the
number of proclaimed miracles in the Cristero War may be less than 46.) On Nov.
20, 2005, thirteen others were designated martyrs and beatified, advancing
toward sainthood.
On the
government side, no glories were proclaimed for those who struggled and won at
least a partial victory against domination by the clergy.
For
freethinkers, the message of the Cristero War is clear: Religion is dangerous,
laced with the potential for violence (as evidenced by deadly 2006 Muslim
eruptions over European cartoons of the Prophet). Over-strong governmental attempts to subdue it can impel
believers into irrational slaughter. A wiser course is to maintain separation
of church and state, patiently waiting for advances in education and science to
erode public support for supernaturalism.