Mutualista

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Mutualistas were community-based mutual aid societies created by Mexican immigrants in the late 19th century United States. According to media analyst Charles M. Tatum, mutualistas

"provided most immigrants with a connection to their mother country and served to bring them together to meet their survival needs in a new and alien country. Cultural activities, education, health care, insurance coverage, legal protection and advocacy before police and immigration authorities, and anti-defamation activities were the main functions of these associations.[1]

Sometimes mutualistas were part of larger organizations affiliated with the Mexican government or other national associations. One such association included Alianza Hispano-Americana, which, founded in 1894 in Tucson, Arizona Territory, had 88 chapters throughout the Southwestern United States by 1919. Usually mutualistas had separate women's auxiliaries, but some, including Club Femenino Orquidia in San Antonio, Texas and Sociedad Josefa Ortiz de Domínguez in Laredo, were founded and run by women.

While Tatum lauds mutualistas for "bringing together Mexican nationals from different social classes to form a common bond, a feat that no organization had been able to achieve in Mexico", there were indeed social divisions within mutualistas. Some, such as Club Mexicano Independencia in Santa Barbara, California, were only open to male citizens of Mexico. Others had elitist membership restrictions.

Many historians describe the "familiar" orientation of mutualista societies. They fostered sentiments of unity, mutual protection, and volunteerism. Historian Vicki L. Ruiz sees mutualistas as "institutionalized forms of compadrazgo and commadrazgo", the "concrete manifestations" of which were orphanages and nursing homes.[2]

Some mutualistas became politically active in the American Civil Rights Movement. The Comité de Vecinos de Lemon Grove filed a successful desegregation suit against the Lemon Grove School District in 1931. Many of the people that were involved in mutualismo were active in the subsequent Chicano student political, and feminist movements. María Hernández, who formed Orden Caballeros de America with her husband Pedro in 1929, later worked on educational desegregation and supported the Raza Unida Party.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Tatum, Charles M. (2001). Chicano Popular Culture: Que hable el pueblo. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 0-8165-1983-8. 
  2. ^ Ruiz, Vicki L. (1998). From Out of the Shadows: Mexican Women in Twentieth Century America. New York City: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513099-5. 


Being here as a stub part of the Mexican-American history, is oky taking the term "mutualismo" as some type of associations created by chicanos. But it has to be put in clear that "mutualismo" or "mutualism" is not an invention of the Mexican immigrant. It has its root in many movements, many of them socialists, that came from Europe. It was very well developed in Spain and from there came to all Latin American countries, Mexico included. Of course, the Mexican immigrants to USA start developing the concept in its own variations. In all USA there are plenty of other "mutualist" organizations created in the so called white America. These too, has their origin in the European mutualism. And they had origins in different countries like England, Germany, Italy, etc. The above explanation is good as long the term mutualism neither get confuse with the chicano experience or you believe it is an invention of them.