Mixteco Women on the
Migration Route
Laura Velasco Ortiz
Translated by Hector Antonio Corporan
Siguiendo el viaje de algunas mujeres mixtecas
que salieron de su pueblo y se instalaron, hasta ahara
en Tijuana, aparece el dinamismo de la migraci6n.
Cambios como la adolescencia, el noviazgo, el
casamiento o la union, la llegada de los hijos y a veces
la muerte, son sucesos teiiidos por los vaivenes de la
migraci6n.
. . . Una vez que se sale del pueblo la vida cambia. 0 se encuentra novio, o se casa, o se tiene
un hijo. Ya no es la misma que sali6 ...
Dona Guadalupe Santillan
Back home it rains hard. That's why
rivers overflow and bridges fall down.
When our house was flattened, everything
got soaked, totally destroyed, even the
birth certificates.
I was born in San Miguel Aguacate, a
district of Silacayoapan, in the Mixteca
region of Oaxaca. As a child I helped my
parents pull the weeds in the field. Otherwise, I looked after the cows. I didn't last
long in school, because the teacher hit
me a lot, and I would spend a lot of time
hiding under chairs.
I married at age 13. When I turned
17, I left San Miguel, traveling with my
husband to Veracruz and Tres Valles
Potreros to cut sugar cane for Boss
Manuel. I used to cut 120 or 125 bundles
per week, and my husband, 80 or 85.
They paid us 50 pesos for our combined
work. Of course, the money was given to
him. He was the man.
When my parents died, I left that
man. He beat me a lot. I put up with him
because of my parents. But, "It's over," I
told myself- and grabbed my children
and moved to Mexico City, and from
there to Juarez. Along the way I would sell
peanuts, seeds, candies, and apples. One
day my oldest son said to me, "Look mother, let's go to Tijuana. They say there is
plenty of help for poor people there."
And here you have me in Tijuana
telling you all this. Go back? No, I won't
go back. Everything there is very sad. I tell
my children, "If you want to return, go
ahead- to each his own." My life is here.
Doiia Guadalupe Santillan 1
The Mixteca region of Oaxaca still maintains
the humble beauty of many of Mexico's indigenous regions - and also their poverty, erosion,
uncultivated parcels of land, and old trucks that
come and go loaded with migrants. Listening to
the stories of Mixteco women who have migrated
from their community, one sees in their faces
the imprint of these landscapes. Doiia Santillan's
departure from home, though less common than
that of men, is a familiar individual and cultural
experience. Mixteco women do domestic work in
middle and upper class homes in cities like Mexico City, Oaxaca, Puebla, and more recently,
Guadalajara, Nogales, CiudadJuarez, and Tijuana. They also work as street vendors.
For a long time Mixtecos have been part of
the labor migrations to agricultural fields in Veracruz, Morelos, and what could be called the
northwestern agricultural strip of Mexico Sinaloa, Sonora, and Baja California- and even
further to the fields of California, Oregon, Wash-
lThese testimonies by Mixteco women who settled in the
border city of Tijuana are not intended to be a unified portrait of the female migration from the Mixteca region of Oaxaca. In addition to expressing individual and often unique
experiences, they reflect different sub-regions of Oaxaca . .
The majority of the families established in the Obrera neighborhood of Tijuana are from the Silacayoapan district, esp~
cially from the towns of San Jeronimo del Progreso, Santa
Maria Natividad, and Nieves lxpantepec, and in notably lesser proportion from the district of Huajuapan de Leon and
Juxtlahuaca.
U.S. - MEXICO BORDERLAN OS
49
ington, Arizona, and occasionally, Idaho. Mixteco
women use this route in lesser proportion than
the men, and their experience of it differs
markedly, for unlike most men, they usually travel in the company of a family member.
In migration, one's environment is continually changing - a picture that emerges in experiences narrated by some of the Mixteco women
who left their towns to settle for the present in
Tijuana. One's experiences of adolescence,
engagement, marriage, birth, and death, are
shaped by the to-and-fro activities of migration.
To create their culture, Mixteco men and women
migrants have combined urban and rural knowledge; they have spanned short and long cultural
distances. In this versatile, regional, migrant culture, migration is a 'permanent event' that
becomes part of life, not a brief experience that
can be told as an adventure. For these migrants,
adventure is all oflife. In the shortest time, unexpected change can happen.
I married at the age of 14. My husband was 35. I did not love the unfortunate man - I was already too grown up,
and he was from another town. But
before, when a man asked for the hand of
a girl and the mother said yes, there was
no question. You had no choice but to
marry.
I went with him to live in his town, but
not for long because he was killed in the
hills. He used to sell dried pepper that he
would bring from Pinotepa N acional. On
his way back, he was attacked on the road
by robbers. So, after 11 months I was back
at home.
I stayed there for a while, and when I
turned 16 an aunt took me to Mexico City
to work. I took care of a woman who lived
alone - I swept, washed, and ironed for
her. When my oldest brother became widowed he came to get me, but my employer
offered to raise my wages, and she gave
him a tip. That's how I ended up staying
longer with her. But then my mother
Laura Velasco Ortiz received her Master's in Social Psycholo-
gy at the Universidad Aut6noma de M exico. For the last six
years she has been studying Mixteco migration to the northwest border of Mexico. She is a researcher at the Department
of Cultural Studies of El Colegio de la Frontera Norte and
author of the articles, "Notas para estudiar los cambios en el
comportamiento migratorio de los mixtecos" and "Migraci6n
femenina y reproducci6n familiar: los mixtecos en Tijuana. "
50
U.S.- MEXICO BORDERLANDS
became ill, and then there was no choice.
I had to return home to care for my
brother's children and my mother.
Doiia Elisa Hernandez
Although the reasons a woman first migrates
are different in each case, fairly constant factors
are her youthfulness and a contact with another
migrant that shapes her future. The majority of
Mixteco women became migrants in their adolescence, just like the majority of all migrants in our
country.
As far back as I can remember, my
parents used to send us to haul water on a
donkey from a distant river. In those days
school was not mandatory like nowadays.
Not at all! One was dedicated to keeping
house- getting up early to make tortillas
or going to the fields to help plant corn.
That was the life there - corn, cows, and
goats. When things went well we harvested
a lot of corn. Otherwise we sold the animals.
My mother worked very hard. When
there was a shortage of corn - as we have
had in recent months without a good crop
- my father would go to yoke the animal,
while she bought or borrowed corn, carrying it on her back for three or four kilometers (two to two-and-a-half miles).
That's how it was until we, the children, grew up and began to make it on
our own. My parents had never gone outside the town. My brother was the first,
and then I followed. He went to Mexico
City to work as a bricklayer, and my aunt
got me a job with a lady in her house. I
was able to visit home regularly.
I finally decided to leave home
because it was very difficult for me. My
mother would have me prepare six or
seven kilos ( 13-15 pounds) of tortillas there were about eight of us in the family
-for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. It was
too much. That's why one day I said, "No,
I won't stay here any longer," and left.
Doiia Paz Vera
In some cases, like that of Doiia Paz Vera,
migration is the alternative of choice, while in
others it is a result of marriage.
At the age of 15 I met a man of 27. He was
a migrant who traveled to and from the
After years of struggling for a
place to ply their trade, Mixteco
vendors cleaned and rebuilt the
fountain in the Plaza de Santa
Cecilia. Today it is one of the
major craft markets for border
tourists in Tijuana. Photo by
Laura Velasco Ortiz
Mixteco women vendors
arrange their display on their
cart in the Plaza de Santa Cecilia
in Tijuana. Photo by Laura
Velasco Ortiz
fields of Sinaloa ... We dated for a year
before I married him ... when I was 17
years old, he went to the United States.
He later returned and said to me, "This
time we go together" ... And we went to
work in San Quintin, Baja California.
Dona Natalia Flores
But migration is also sometimes inherited,
the destiny of progeny. For families with a
migrant tradition, mobility is a fundamental strategy for survival. Children experience their parents' migration as personal and family destiny,
integrating it into their lives as an inevitable part
of the future.
I migrated when I was 14 years old, about
five years ago, now. I left with my father
and a younger brother. My mother could
not come because she was nursing, and
there was no one else to take care of the
house. It took us a month to reach Tijuana because we left without money. My
father would play the saxophone while my
brother and I passed the hat. I am now
married to a man I met here. He is from
my town back in Oaxaca and works on the
other side, the United States.
Dona Juana Flores
It could be said paradoxically that change is
U.S.- MEXICO BORDERLANDS
51
a constant in these women's experiencechange in residence, life cycle, and historical
moment. These combine to shape the life of a
woman who first leaves home under circumstances that bring together personal reason~,
family ties, and misfortune.
Once you leave your hometown, life
changes. You either find a boyfriend, get
married, or have a child. You are not the
same one that left.
Doiia Guadalupe Santillan
In the course of migration unforeseen events
take place. Guadalupe migrated for the first time
to Mexico City, and later returned to her town,
where she lived for some time. There she gave
birth to a child and after a period again migrated
to agricultural fields in the northwest:
Mter my return home from Mexico City I
took care of my widowed brother's children. I spent seven years raising them
until I married my second husband. I
stayed three years with him and had three
children. My husband migrated regularly
to Culiacan until one day he found another woman and did not return. I was left
alone with my children and my mother,
without anyone to wait for. And so I also
went to work in Culiacan. My children
stayed home with my mother. In the fields
I met another man. I started to live with
him, and together we went to work in
Obregon.
Doiia Elisa Hernandez
Migratory routes of Mixteco women are
shaped by events of the life cycle. For example,
marriage in the life of the young woman who
migrated at 14 to do domestic work in Mexico
City might cause her to choose a different migration alternative, perhaps to northern Mexico with
her new husband, or with her children alone
after a separation. The arrival of children coincides with a return to the place of origin. The
growth of the children again changes women's
migrations. When the children reach adolescence they usually get married, and then the
women seem to stabilize themselves. They settle
for longer periods, and like their parents, care
for their grandchildren while sons and daughters
migrate to California or Baja California.
52
U.S.- MEXICO BORDERLANDS
Constant migration makes 'place of destination' a relative concept- referring to a month
in Mexico City, another in Culiacan, others on
the coast of Hermosillo, afterwards a few years in
Tijuana, or many more in the United States. But
the 'final destination' seems to be a Mixteco' s
own place of origin. This seems the principal
ethnic feature of this migratory movement: the
constant link with the community of origin.
In this venture women play a notable role.
By preserving the home, whether in their Mixteca towns or in intermediate destinations- Mexico City, Ensenada, Tijuana- they make it possible for other members of the family, men and
women, to achieve the mobility necessary for
travel on old routes or new ones. Their keeping
of the home fires includes not only awaiting and
welcoming, but also supporting family members
who remain at home.
Tijuana is one such migrant home base
maintained by women at an intermediate destination. Its location on the Mexico-United States
border allows cross-border mobility for some
family members, especially the men, to travel
between the agricultural fields in northern Mexico and southwestern United States. Mixteco
women in Tijuana, in domestic roles and as wage
earners, support the growth of the largest ethnic
group that settled in Baja California.
Further Readings
Arizpe, Lourdes. 1979. lndigenas en la Ciudad de
Mexico. El caso de las "Marias". Mexico:
Setentas Diana.
Ayre, L. 1977. La poblaci6n mixteca en el estado de
Oaxaca seg;Un el censo de 1970. Mexico: SEPINAH.
Chimal, C. 1990. Movimiento perpetuo:
Mixtecos en California. Mexico Indigena 4
Uan.).
Crummett, M.A. 1986. La Mujer rural y la
migracion en America Latina: Investigacion,
poll ticas y perspectivas. In La mujer y la
politica agraria en America Latina, ed., Leon,
M., et al. Bogota, Colombia: Siglo XXI y
ACEP.
Yaiiez, R. 1985. Puntas de encuentro en una
comunidad mixteca en Tijuana. Migracion
de los mixtecos de Oaxaca a Baja California.
Educaci6n de Adultos 3 (2).