Stepping out on Cinco de Mayo
Andrew Glazer
Whittier Elementary School students celebrated Cinco de Mayo on Friday by
dancing the La Danza Azteca, Jesusita en Chihuahua and the twist. And
OCC’s Dance Department marked the day with Fiesta Latina -- a show
featuring dances from Cuba, Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, Puerto Rico and
Brazil.
Cinco De Mayo -- which translates into May 5 -- is the day roughly 4,500
underarmed Mexican soldiers fought off powerful invading French forces,
double their size, in the city of Puebla in 1862. Not the day, as many
gringos believe, that Mexico declared it’s independence from Spain. That
was Sept. 16, 1810.
Napoleon III sent his soldiers to collect debts Mexico owed his country.
But Mexico -- it’s treasury bankrupt and debt payments frozen after the
U.S. took over nearly half its territory a decade earlier -- was unable
to pay.
After a two-hour battle, the French were forced to retreat. The tiny
Mexican army beat all odds by defeating what was the world’s greatest
military force.
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