Mexico apologises to Mayan people for centuries of ‘terrible’ abuses

The official apology came amid broader commemorations of the 500th anniversary of the 1519-1521 Spanish Conquest of Mexico, and 200 years of Mexico’s 1821 independence from Spain.

The Appeal for Forgiveness for Grievances to the Mayan People ceremony took place in Felipe Carrillo Puerto, Quintana Roo State, Mexico, on May 3, 2021.
AFP

The Appeal for Forgiveness for Grievances to the Mayan People ceremony took place in Felipe Carrillo Puerto, Quintana Roo State, Mexico, on May 3, 2021.

Mexico's government has offered an official apology to the indigenous Maya people for the "terrible abuses" committed against them in the centuries since the Spanish conquest.

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador presented the apology as part of a series of events this year marking the 500th anniversary of the conquest and the bicentennial of Mexican independence.

"We offer the most sincere apologies to the Maya people for the terrible abuses committed by individuals and national and foreign authorities in the conquest, during three centuries of colonial domination and two centuries of an independent Mexico," Lopez Obrador said.

He was joined by Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei at the ceremony held in the southeastern state of Quintana Roo.

Lopez Obrador referred, in particular, to the 1847-1901 Caste War, an indigenous rebellion in which around 250,000 people were believed to have died.

His government also recognised the racism and neglect that continue to afflict the ethnic minority.

"We apologise to the Maya people of Mexico... for the wrongs committed against them throughout history and for the discrimination that they are still victims of today," Interior Minister Olga Sanchez said.

READ MORE: Guatemala find reveals early Mayan writing

Violence and migration 

Giammattei, whose country has a large Maya population, said that slavery and war have been replaced by other problems such as violence and migration.

"We continue to face the loss of human life – now due to organised crime, malnutrition and the search for opportunities that so many people seek far away," he said.

Jeering was heard during the ceremony from residents who oppose the construction of Lopez Obrador's "Maya Train" pet project to link Caribbean resorts with ancient archaeological sites.

Critics of the railroad say it will damage the environment and hurt indigenous communities.

READ MORE: Ancient Mayan palace discovered in eastern Mexico

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