And the Alamo is trending. (Sigh). Here is some historic background on the former mission in San Antonio (1of11)pic.twitter.com/J1d5MmlAza
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Juan Seguín however joined with other southern American whites and defeated Santa Ana at San Jacinto, starting Texas efforts to become an independent nation. Rebels yelled ‘Remember the Alamo!’ (6of11)pic.twitter.com/4JXActXpKw
Juan Seguín would become a hero to the Republic of Texas and became mayor of San Antonio. More southern whites moved into Texas looking for a fight and discriminated against Tejanos. They also viewed Seguín as racially inferior (7of11)pic.twitter.com/VNIZ2jPXem
The climate was so bad for Seguín that he and other Tejanos went to fight for Mexico during the Mexico US War. (8of11)pic.twitter.com/4ffazcZGHj
The Alamo become a symbol of myth and frontier bravery. Think John Wayne in the movie ‘The Alamo.’ It was told with an Anglo-centric narrative and Mexican American scholars say the Alamo became a symbol of white nationalism (9of11)pic.twitter.com/nkUHvzRWWh
The story of Tejanos at the Alamo was dismissed. Mexican American children (including myself) were taunted by white kids with ‘Remember the Alamo’ since now the descendants of the original Tejano settlers were ‘othered’ https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=136895819 … (10of11)
Today hundreds of thousands of people visit the Alamo, including some Mexican Americans who take selfies at the Alamo while giving it obscene gestures. Others go and pay homage to Juan Seguín. (11of11) ENDpic.twitter.com/cuGHaEZdL8
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