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The Ghost Of Carmelita And The Health Care Debate

HOUSTON — The armed men injecting themselves into the town hall meetings on universal health care remind me why it is important to tell the thugs to go home…

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HOUSTON —
The armed men injecting themselves into the town hall meetings on universal
health care remind me why it is important to tell the thugs to go home the way
Carmelita did.

There’s a reason to truncate that kind of serial
intimidation, whether by a government or by unregulated militias. In his book
“Ringside Seat to a Revolution,” David Dorado Romo brings this to light.

His great-aunt Adela told him that back in 1917, she
and other working-class Mexicans whocrossed the
border daily from Ciudad Juárez to El Paso, were ordered off the trolley and
forced by U.S. authorities to take a bath and then be sprayed with pesticides
at the Santa Fe Bridge. Rumors circulated (later verified) that naked Mexican
women were secretly photographed as they bathed.

Customs officers put the women’s clothing in a large
dryer. Adela added the detail that one of those times the dryer melted her
shoes.

To Romo, all this seemed like a family yarn until,
while researching his book at Washington’s National Archives, he ran across a
photo of the steam dryer and the story about the “bath riots.”

Its protagonist was a 17-year-old maid, Carmilita
Torres. The newspapers described her as “an auburn-haired Amazon.”  Crossing the bridge one morning,
Carmelita defied the U.S. officers and convinced 30 other women to get off with
her and protest the humiliating practice.

The year before, 27 men were burned alive in jail
after an explosion and fire following a similar “public health” measure that
had them soak their clothes in gasoline, creosote and formaldehyde and then
wash their bodies in a brew of gasoline, coal oil and vinegar.

As Carmelita and the other women marched on the
disinfection camp, 200 more women joined them. By noon, according to press
accounts,  they numbered “several
thousand.”

They blocked traffic going into El Paso. The customs
inspectors who tried to disperse them were pelted with bottles, rocks and
insults.The army commander at Fort Bliss ordered soldiers to the scene, where
the street battle continued and a sergeant was hit in the face by one of the
“Amazons.”

The “Amazons” wrenched the controls from the trolley
motormen and held one of them hostage. A Mexican death squad commander (these
were revolutionary times), Gen. Francisco Murguía, ordered his cavalrymen to
point sabers at the crowd, inciting the women to jeer, hoot and attack the
soldiers. An onlooker who hollered out “¡Viva Villa!” was reported executed by
Murguía’s men.

So what’s the connection between 1917 and 2009?

Historical records show that customs officials began
using Zyklon B in the disinfectant building, which they called “the gas
chamber.” An article in a 1938 German publication specifically praised the use
of Zyklon B to fumigate immigrants. The Nazis adopted it as the chemical agent
used at German border crossings and concentration camps. For the Final
Solution, they used Zyklon B pellets in the gas chambers to exterminate
millions.

The Bath Riots of 1917 were the first skirmish in the
resistance to the  slaughters that became
the shame of the 20th century. 
It all started over issues concerning public health.

You and I can feel the vehemence of the authoritarian
personalities pressing to control the health discussion outside and inside the
town-hall meetings. The psychodramas in those ruffians’ heads turn things
upside down. They make it seem like they are the ones in danger and need to
preserve their way of life that is in danger. That’s why — they want us to
relieve — they brandish guns, talk tough, and loud.

These are dangerous times when AK-47s and other guns, the symbols of death, are brandished during
talk about health care, a life-affirming expression.

And then there is the memory of what Carmelita and
the Amazons did. With their feminine voices, about to be doused in the
cleansing fluids, they stood up against bad policy and men with guns.

[José de
la Isla’s latest digital book, sponsored by The Ford Foundation, is available
free at www.DayNightLifeDeathHope.com. He writes a weekly commentary for
Hispanic Link News Service and is author of The Rise of Hispanic Political
Power (2003). E-mail him at joseisla3@yahoo.com.]

   © 2009

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