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Benito Juarez & The War Of The Reform

 

            
            
            
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             Benito Pablo Juarez & The War of the Reform.
             Benito Juarez, a Zapotec Indian, came from the state of Oaxaca. Born poor in 1806 and illiterate until the age of twelve, the nonetheless strove to improve himself, eventually finishing law school and rising in the ranks of the political order in his native state. His predispositions and training were mainstream liberal, and her naturally enough questioned and subsequently attacked the privileged society of Mexico dominated by wealthy landowners and profoundly conservative church. When Santa Anna was overthrown by a Revolution in 1855, Juarez emerged as a leader and was appointed the secretary of justice in the new government dominated by liberals.
             No other figure in Mexican history is more beloved than Benito Juarez. He .
             Rose in Mexican life to become a hero, delivering his country from foreign invader, becoming the quintessential activist for liberal causes. That he was an Amerindian endowed him with even more affection in a country where Amerindian blood ran through more than 90 percent of the population.
             He was orphaned at the age of three and raised by an uncle in a small village, San Pablo Guelato, where Spanish was spoken by very few in favor of their Zapotec dialect. An intrepid spirit governed the boy, and at the age of twelve he took off walking for the state capitol of Oaxaca forty-one miles distant.


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