Ruben Albarran Archive

Star power merges with spirituality at Wirikuta Fest

Star power merges with spirituality at Wirikuta Fest

MEXICO CITY – The old Mexico met the new one Saturday at the massive Foro Sol and together, in a vivid explosion of rhythm and light and living energy, they danced the night away.

Wirikuta Fest, a lineup of nearly 20 big-name recording artists, was as much a celebration of Mexico’s indigenous roots and living heritage as it was a rock concert. Organizers and participants agreed, nothing quite like it had ever happened in Mexico.

The sacred lands of the Wixarika or Huichol Indians, currently under threat by Canadian mining companies, have become a rallying point for Mexicans of all ethnicities who care about the environment and the plight of the country’s indigenous people. Wirikuta Fest brought together more than 60,000 of them in a thunderous rallying cry: Wirikuta is not for sale.

Wirikuta, a 140,000-hectare territory in the Chihuahua desert and Catorce mountains, is held sacred by the Wixarika as the birthplace of the sun, and has been the destination of their yearly pilgrimages for more than a millennia. It is also the place they gather their sacred cactus, the hikuri or peyote.

For thirteen hours, the people streamed into the stadium like a river. Some headed straight for the stage, where a lineup of Mexican and Puerto Rican superstars – Café Tacvba, Caifanes, Enrique Bunbury and Calle 13 among them – took the government to task, honored their Indian ancestors and the tribes that continue to fight for their lands, and celebrated the movement for a new Mexico, one that is free from violence against the people and against the Earth.

“This is the time that our grandfathers foresaw, the time when we all unite, the South with the North,” said Roco Pachukote of Sonidero Meztizo. “Strength for the people in our hearts, Wirikuta is not for sale!”

Rubén Albarrán, vocalist of the wildly popular Café Tacvba, took the opportunity to challenge the government on its announcement Thursday that it would set aside the sacred lands in a special reserve – a plan Wixarika leaders, upon inspection, called a complete farce.

“We have to be really careful with information because just a couple of days ago we were deceived with a media masquerade,” Albarrán warned the crowds between high-energy hits like “Cero y Uno” and “Ingrata.”

Albarran, Roco and his partner Moyenei form the core of the Aho Colectivo, the group of recording artists who have been working with the Wirikuta Defense Front to raise funds and awareness to support the cause.

“What is happening with Wirikuta is happening everywhere,” Albarran told the assembled thousands, who roared back their assent in cheers that literally made the rafters tremble. “They are poisoning our water, poisoning our land. It would seem that we are attending the big final sale of the end of the world; the political class is selling everything.”

Meanwhile, others wandered the quieter perimeter, where a ring of tents and tipis surrounded the stadium’s performance area, offering activities ranging from indigenous temazcal or sweat lodge ceremonies and Aztec dances to documentaries and talks on environmental and indigenous themes.

Concert-goers took a break to enter the darkness of the temazcal, to sweat, to purify and sing and pray. Others entered the tipi of the grandmothers to receive their quiet blessing. Booths were set up to allow the inhabitants of Wirikuta and the Wixarika people to sell their wares. And an “ecotechniques” tent took more than 3,000 participants on a tour through an astounding variety of eco-friendly technologies, demonstrating the use and construction of bicycle-powered blenders and water pumps, solar ovens and composting toilets.

From the beginning to the end, the event was woven through with a spiritual dimension, which resonated in the drums of the Camino Rojo warriors and in the plaintive cry of the Huichol fiddles. Not long after sunrise, the Mexica-Chichimeca dancers arrived on the scene with their towering plumed headdresses and their rattling ankle bracelets, set to work building altars in each of the four directions and sent up their prayers, asking for blessings for the event.

A council of grandmothers from different traditions arrived to conduct a prayer circle, and another group set up tipis, built four sweat lodges and began chopping wood for the fire that would heat the stones for the temazcales.
And from the stage, Wixarika vocalist José Lopez from the popular band Venado Azul invoked the assistance of Grandfather Fire, Father Sun and Mother Earth.

Jesus Lara Chivarra, a Wixarika elder and one of the leaders in the Wirikuta Defense Front, was amazed at the turnout.

“It’s incredible to see so many people,” he said. “This means the Wixarika spirit has won the hearts of the people, this I can see.”

Many of those he had spoken to throughout the day were confused by the government’s announcement on Thursday that the lands would be protected and returned to the Wixarika people. Gradually, he said, the news is getting out that the announcement was deceptive, that the lands they are turning over to the Huichols are only a small percentage of Wirikuta, and that the mines have not been halted.

“People will realize the Wixarika people have once again been deceived – and if they’re deceiving the Wixarika people they are deceiving the Mexican society as well,” he said. “This is the moment we invite the civil society not to stumble, to organize ourselves and to continue the work.”

Mercedes Aquino, one of the defense movement’s leaders and a resident of Real de Catorce, a former mining town at the heart of Wirikuta, was there helping promote the work of independent artisans and producers of the region, like Lorena Leon of the women’s cactus-growing cooperative Mujeres Rodeadas de Espinas (Women Surrounded by Thorns), and Jesus Perez and Benito Moreno, who turn plant fibers into a variety of products from tote bags to toilet paper holders.

The presence of the desert people at the concert was particularly meaningful, Aquino said, because there is a great deal of pressure in the area to support the mining projects due to the extremely depressed economy and the desperate need for jobs. Unlike the Wixarika people, who live from subsistence agriculture in the Western Sierra Madre 400 miles away, the mostly non-indigenous people of Wirikuta are hard-pressed to cultivate the dry desert lands. But these independent producers are showing sustainable alternatives to mining that won’t contaminate and dry up the scarce groundwater, Aquino said.

“People come in here and they are really amazed to see all the kinds of things that are produced in the desert,” she said. Cactus flowers, pickled and fresh; fruit jams and preserves and medicinal pomades and skin care products, all made of desert plants; handmade agave nectar; bags woven from the leaves of the yucca trees and lechugilla plants; and quiote, a sweet made from the sugar cane-like stalk of the maguey plant were just a few of the offerings.

In the tent next door, members of the Vision Council: Guardians of the Earth shared their vision for a more sustainable world, the same vision the group’s members carried through the Americas for 13 years in the Rainbow Peace Caravan, creating festivals much like this one, on a smaller scale.

“I really, really believe 2012 is the time of awakening,” commented Noelle Romero, author of the Manual Básico de Ecnotécnias, one of the group’s organizers. “I see it emerging everywhere – in Brazil, in Germany, in Colombia, in Spain. Everywhere people are empowering themselves to claim the world they want.

“When people say the world is ending, I cannot believe it when there is so much awakening. If there is a Great Spirit, this has to continue. This is the end of the world as we have known it – but I think it’s the dawn of a new world.”
People continued to stream into the stadium until the final acts of the evening, packing the stadium to its full capacity of 60,000.

“We are flying,” said an elated Luix Saldaña, a musician and one of the event’s main organizers, as the event began to wind down. “This is a unique event in Mexico; there’s never been an event like it, with an energy and an alternative proposal of this quality.”

The spiritual dimension of the event exceeded all expectations, said Saldaña, in terms of “the energy we’ve generated, in the type of public that came, in the energy that governs this entire event… it’s been more beautiful than we even hoped for. But the incredible thing is that the people who came … tuned into this channel of love and of unity and of spirituality.”

Saldaña attributed much of quality to the efforts of the people from various traditions who had come to offer their prayers and ceremonies to the event, but especially to the Wixarika people. About four busloads had made the three-day journey from their homes high in the Western Sierra Madre, and they were everywhere – on stage, in the audience, in the Wixarika tent, in the booths surrounding the stadium selling their characteristic brilliant, peyote-influenced artwork and jewelry.

“As you can see, these are Wirras from the sierra, not from the city – and this also added to the energy,” said Saldaña.

He stopped at the booth of Aho Colectivo members José Lopez, Claudia Carrillo de la Cruz and their small son, Yuawi, of Venado Azul were selling beaded jewelry, yarn paintings and their CDs. The money raised by this event is not going to the Wixarika people, but to the non-native people who inhabit their traditional pilgrimage lands, Lopez emphasized. His hope, and the hope of all the Wixarika people, is that this event will raise enough money to support an alternative to mining and to show the people of Wirikuta that the Huichol people really care about their well-being, and don’t just come to leave their offerings and their trash, as some local residents have complained.

“We want to make a sustainable project for them so the people from there can live like God meant them to.”

Lopez had never played before such a large audience, and he was still euphoric, hours after his performance.

“This event was incredibly vibrant and it continues vibrating now,” he said. “It’s a prayer we’ve made for the Mother Earth, for the deities – this moves the world. Wirikuta is not alone. Wow, it will stay engraved in my memory forever.”

For more information about the movement to protect Wirikuta, follow the Wirikuta Defense Front on their blog, Facebook or Twitter, at @FDWirikuta or @Venadomestizo.


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Huichols slam Mexican government for “media masquerade”

Huichols slam Mexican government for “media masquerade”

Above, Rubén Albarran from the rock band Café Tacvba confers with Wixarika leader Santos de la Cruz at a press conference regarding the government announcement.

MEXICO CITY – It sounded too good to be true – and, indeed, it was.

The mining company First Majestic Silver was handing over its mining concessions in the sacred lands of Wirikuta, and the government was declaring 45,000 hectares a National Mining Reserve, which would be protected from exploitation. In a ceremony held Thursday at the National Museum of Anthropology, Bruno Ferrari, Secretary of the Economy, and Juan Rafael Elvira Quesada, Secretary of the Environment, announced the news in the company of a group of Wixarika people. The announcement came as the movement to protect Wirikuta geared up for its biggest event since the campaign for the sacred site’s defense began: Wirikuta Fest, where a star-spangled cast of Mexico’s most beloved recording artists will raise funds for sustainable development projects for the residents of Wirikuta.

The news went out in the international media on Friday: Mexico promises to protect Huichol indian lands,” reported the Washington Post, Associated Press and ABC News, among others. “Minera cede concesiones en el territorio protegido de Wirikuta” (Mining company cedes concessions in the protected territory of Wirikuta), proclaimed CNN Mexico.

The social media were on fire; messages circulated on Twitter and Facebook faster than you could refesh your screen: “Aho! Ganamos!” (Yes! We won!) and “Felicidades a los Huicholes!” By the afternoon, however, a different sort of tweet was flying about: “Wirikuta NO HA GANADO! (Wirikuta has not won!)

On Friday, in a hastily organized press conference, leaders of the Wirikuta Defense Front called the government announcement a fraud, designed to confuse the public and undermine the momentum and public support created by Wirikuta Fest. Besides the Wixarika authorities and experts from the Wirikuta Defense Front, Rubén Albarrán and Roco Pachuchote, two of Mexico’s most popular recording artists who are helping to organize Wirikuta Fest, spoke at the press conference.

“They said Wirikuta is safe from danger, but it’s a lie; Wirikuta has been sold,” declared Felipe Serio Chino of the Wixarika Union of Ceremonial Centers. The concessions that First Majestic Silver turned over to the Wixarika people were the same 761 hectares they offered to a Wixarika delegation a year ago when they visited the company headquarters – and the delegation rejected the offer. That 761 acres includes the Cerro Quemado, which for the Wixarika people is the birthplace of the sun and the place where all life began. But Wirikuta comprises a vast network of sacred sites and a pilgrimage route that connects them, explained Serio Chino. The entire sacred territory of Wirikuta, which resides in the Chihuahua Desert of San Luis Potosí in northern Mexico, is 140,212 hectares. Aside from being one of the most sacred sites of the Wixarika people, it is one of the most desperately poor regions of the country.

Regarding the 45,000 hectares that the government has set aside as a National Mining Reserve, Santos de la Cruz of the Wixarika Regional Council further clarified the issue. “This surface is curiously in the zone where there are no concessions,” he said. The massive Universo mining project planned by Revolution Resources will not be affected, and the First Majestic project can continue as planned.

The selection for the 45,000 hectares were the result of a georeferentiation project conducted by the government agency responsible for indigenous affairs, the CDI, to determine precisely where the sacred sites were located. The results are not valid, De la Cruz emphasized, because they did not have the approval of the Wixarika people, who govern their affairs through a consensus process that involves the entire community. In this case, the community had not even been consulted about the government’s placement of their sacred sites.

“The Wixarika people have nothing to celebrate,” added Jesus Lara Chivarra, also a member of the Wixarika Regional Council and an expert on the Wixarika sacred sites. The triumph belongs to the mining companies, not the Wixarika people. What was announced yesterday was a complete farce.”

Albarrán, the iconic vocalist for the wildly popular Café Tacvba, lightened the mood with a few lines from the song composed for Wirikuta: “Wirikuta no se vende, Wirikuta se defiende (Wirikuta is not for sale, Wirikuta is to defend).

“Yesterday the news took us by surprise and we were almost celebrating,” said Albarrán, who is also one of the founders of the Aho Colectivo, formed by Mexican recording artists to raise awareness and funds for the Wixarika defense. “Then we realized that we were facing a media masquerade. Now the intention of the festival is to make the public aware of this farce. We continue on our path and with all the proposals for which the festival was created; there has been no change. These offers have already been made to the Wixarika people and they’re not interested. We continue with the activities in favor of the people of Wirikuta.”

Tunuari Chávez, an environmental engineer with the Wirikuta Defense Front, displayed a map of Wirikuta that showed the mining concessons in red. The portion that First Majestic had donated to the Wixarika people is indicated in green – less than one percent of the 140,000 hectares that comprise Wirikuta. About 70 percent of Wirikuta has been concessioned to mining companies.

Today the organizers are scrambling to put the last touches on the long-awaited Wirikuta Fest, a mega-concert at the Sol Center that is drawing a full lineup of Mexican pop stars from Caifanes and Enrique Bunbury to Calle 13 and Julieta Venegas. The concert sold out at 60,000 and is expected to raise more than a million dollars for sustainable development projects benefiting the residents of Wirikuta.

For the full press release, and for more information about the movement to defend Wirikuta, see www.wirikutadefensefront.org, and follow them on Facebook and Twitter, @FDWirikuta, @Venadomestizo and hashtag #Wirikuta.

Stars come out for Wirikuta

Stars come out for Wirikuta

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Wixarika pilgrims in their traditional dress began arriving in this town yesterday in preparation for a historic “spiritual consultation” with their deities.

This story is the second in a series about the historic pilgrimage of the Wixarika people to their sacred site of Wirikuta. Read the first part here. A report on tonight’s ceremony, a consultation with the Wixarika ancestral spirits about the crisis facing the birthplace of the sun, will follow.

REAL DE CATORCE, San Luis Potosí, Mexico – Some 800 Wixarika people – 18 busloads – are gathering in the desert below are expected to descend on this tiny town within an hour and will begin the trek up the sacred mountain of Cerro Quemado, the place where they believe the sun was born. Thunder is sounding in the distance, a little intimidating for a group of open-air campers given the polar front that is expected to descend tonight. Nonetheless, the local people are greeting the rains with joy, since the last hard rain was more than a year ago – and then it was the disastrous flooding of Hurricane Alex. This time, they hope for a ground-drenching, drought-quenching downpour. And everyone around here knows the Huichols bring the rain.

Meanwhile a star-studded lineup of high-power celebrities, academics, documentarians and media notables have been arriving in this rugged colonial mountain town since yesterday. Today, Mexican actress Ofelia Medina added her name to the list of registrants, along with writer Elena Poniatowska, Ruben Albarran of Cafe Tacuba, the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights and Sandor Iron Rope, vice president of the Native American Church.

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Hector Guerra of Pachamama Crew, Moyenei and Roco of Sonidero Mestizo and Lengua Alerta were among the lineup supporting Wirikuta in Real de Catorce.

And last night, a lineup of popular artists from Mexico City, part of a team that has been supporting the defense of Wirikuta with periodic concerts and events, culminated a high-voltage performance in the historic restored Paz y Amor bar and restaurant with a rousing cry that was part chant, part prayer. ““Wirikuta no se vende, se ama y se defende! (Wirikuta is not to sell, it is to love and protect!”) Pachamama warriors, amor para mi gente (love for my people!)

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Café Tacuba’s Ruben Albarran poses with a group of caballerangos, horsemen who make their living taking tourists up into the mountains.

Ruben Albarran of Café Tacuba, one of Mexico’s most popular rock bands, went on the local community radio station to reassure residents of the town that they were not here to protest the mine or to impede development. “On the contrary, we’re here to support the community. Our idea is to raise funds to support development projects here in the region that will provide jobs for the people without harming the environment.”

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Armando Loizaga of the Nierika Center and Sandor Iron Rope, vice-president of the Native American Church

Leaders of the Native American Church, the Council of Chiefs of the Sun Dance and other indigenous leaders from the United States and Canada gathered with Wixarika leaders today in preparation for tonight’s historic ceremony.

“Our brothers have asked us to join them in prayer with the sacred medicine,” said Chief Oscar Moreno, who came on behalf of Leonard Crow Dog. Lakota spiritual leader. Like the Wixarika or Huichol people, the Lakota and many other tribal peoples in the north pray with peyote, which they consider a sacrament. Wirikuta is one of the most important ceremonial centers for the collection and ceremonial use of peyote, and the Wixarika have been the historical guardians of the sacred hallucinogenic cactus, which they say puts them in contact with their ancestors and the spirits of the land. “We are indebted to them in this holy ground because they have cared for the medicine and they brought it to the North.”

Moreno was concerned to hear the news of the planned gold and silver mines in the area. “We’re very familiar with what this means, and we’re here to pray in the hope that others will understand that desecrating sacred land is not a good idea for anyone.”

Cilau Valadez, a young Huichol artist who has been traveling in Canada and the United States, building alliances with the different tribes through the Americas, said the visit of leaders like Moreno, Anishinabe leader Wab Kinew and Native American Church Vice-President Sandor Iron Rope represents a significant moment in Native American history.

“We are fulfilling the Hopi prophecy that speaks of a time when all the original peoples from the North and the South will come together,” he said. “It means that we are one people, and that we must be recognized.”

Meanwhile, rumors circulated of a pending “counterprotest” of local residents in favor of the mine as habitants of Real de Catorce watch the proceedings with a mixed feelings. “Yes to the sacred sites, yes to mining,” read one banner hung at the entrance of the town. “Huichol brothers, support us, and we will support you.” Another one read, “Mining, tourism and sacred sites go hand in hand. We support the environment; we only want social wellbeing.”

Father Ernesto Vega Torres hears from his parishioners on both sides of the fence and worries about the future of the region, regardless of what happens. “Everything is just on hold; everyone is waiting to see what will happen with the mine,” he said. “It’s a very difficult situation.”

He pointed to a severe water crisis in town today as businesses in the city center ran out of water entirely. Two pumps broke down due to a lack of water in the wells, he said. “It hasn’t rained in more than a year; we’re in the worst drought since 1917. There was no sowing because the rain never came, so there was no harvest. People’s animals are dying. It’s a crisis, so they want jobs. But here we run into a problem, because there’s simply no water – and mining requires a lot of water.”

Volunteers with horses and burros have been preparing all week for the ceremony, carrying up the mountain a historic quantity of water, along with other supplies: 600 liters, along with firewood for 17 fires, 2,500 tamales, 30 kilos of beans, 50 kilos of coal and the stoves for cooking. An estimated 800 Wixarika are expected to arrive in the mid-afternoon.

All participants are being asked to observe a strict protocol to allow the Wixarika to conduct their ceremony without outside interference. The all-night ceremony will take place at the top of the Cerro Quemado, the sacred mountain where the Huichols believe the sun was born. They will arrive this afternoon after days with no sleep and little food, following the complicated series of activities required of all who make the pilgrimage to Wirikuta. Their rituals are meant to be a re-creation of the journey their forefathers made at the beginning of the world, and in the process, they dream the rain and the coming of the sun, and they bring the light and the rain, said Johannes Neurath of the National Museum of Anthropology, one of the invited guests.

“It’s a very unique event – something that’s never happened,” said Neurath. “Obviously they are very worried about what’s happening here; normally they are very divided among themselves. It’s very rare that they organize among themselves, and even more so that they would allow us to attend.”

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Patricia Diaz, director of several documentaries about the Huichols, and actress Ofelia Medina were among the invited guests to the ceremony.

Medina Ofelia, one of Mexico’s most beloved Hollywood actresses and a longtime supporter of indigenous rights, compared the situation in Wirikuta with the Zapatistas’ uprising in 1994, which she also supported. “It’s the same struggle,” she said. “It’s for the rights of the indigenous people of Mexico, who have always been marginalized.” She was looking forward to the ceremony, not her first as she has been working with the Wixarika since 1985. She wasn’t sure what to expect, however. “They have taught us not to go with expectations,” she said with a smile. “It’s better to wait and see.”

For more information about Wirikua, see www.wirikutadefensefront.org.

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